5 Sources for Creative Inspiration

Rodin had Camille Claudel, Fitzgerald had Zelda, and in this modern age, a lot of us resort to Pinterest for inspiration. That’s not necessarily a bad thing, there’s some good stuff there, but sometimes finding original inspiration is challenging. And then there’s the rapidly approaching deadline that can either foster that inspiration or lock it up nice and tight.

So, besides the usual stops of Pinterest, Instagram and Behance on the interwebs, this is where can you get creative inspiration.

1. Travel

My number one passion in life, besides design, is travel. I live to travel the world, and I find it’s my greatest source of inspiration. Being exposed to other cultures and other settings really heightens your awareness of what is around you. That awareness spawns new ideas and gets the creative juices flowing. Furthermore, making yourself take a break and take a vacation is so much better for your creative flow too. When you travel, take pictures of the little things—an interesting street a sign, a menu at a cafe, what people are wearing and file it away. When you’re stumped for an idea, they may trigger a new concept.

My favorite travel spots: Kenya, Paris, Venice and San Francisco

2. Quotes

I love the written word. I’ve always been an avid reader, and before I went to design school, I was an English major. I’m constantly inspired by beautiful language. Often, a great quote will inspire a great design with me. Whether it’s a typographic poster or something completely unrelated, that rush and high of hearing something inspiring will get your designy self moving. I keep an ongoing Word file where I paste in great quotes I hear. When I need a pick-me-up or a great idea, my first love of words is there.

A few of my favorite strings of language:

“Here’s to the crazy ones, the misfits, the rebels, the troublemakers, the round pegs in the square holes… the ones who see things differently — they’re not fond of rules… You can quote them, disagree with them, glorify or vilify them, but the only thing you can’t do is ignore them because they change things… they push the human race forward, and while some may see them as the crazy ones, we see genius, because the ones who are crazy enough to think that they can change the world, are the ones who do.” —Steve Jobs

“You will never be completely at home again, because part of your heart will always be elsewhere. That is the price you pay for richness of loving and knowing people in more than one place.” -Wayfaring.me

“The purpose of life is to live it, to taste experience to the utmost, to reach out eagerly and without fear for newer and richer experience.” – Eleanor Roosevelt

“Miss Jean Louise, stand up, your father’s passin’.” —Harper Lee, To Kill a Mockingbird

3. Target

It doesn’t necessarily have to be Target, but the idea of going into a big store that sells a wide variety of merchandise, is a great place to gain inspiration. A great package design, a label, a pattern on a dress, going out to a store can really help trigger ideas. It’s easy and it’s convenient—sometimes going on an around the world adventure isn’t logical with a looming deadline, so just take a quick trip to your neighborhood store.

4. Magazines

Long before digital portfolio sites, there were magazines. Thankfully, there still ARE magazines. To me, magazines can be more inspiring than combing the web. When I get really stuck, I pull out my old issues of HOW, Communication Arts and my latest obsession, Uppercase. There’s something more thought-provoking to my process with a tangible thing than a phantom image online. Design magazines are great in that they have a lot of annuals that are filled with the best in the industry. It’s a great way to get inspired and push yourself harder with your own concepts.

Favorite Magazines: HOW, Communication Arts, Uppercase, Computer Arts, HGTV Magazine, Food Network Magazine

5. Your Design Community

Designers help inspire each other. I’ve found that our industry has a great amount of camraderie. Yeah, we’re all technically in competition with each other, but I’ve never seen such a tight bond among a profession as in design. We can talk ampersands for hours, help each other out with a constructive critique and love feeding off of each other’s creative energy. Find your local chapter of AIGA and get involved by attending events and meeting other designers. Network online through social media to meet other designers. If funds allow, try to attend a big design conference like HOW Live or AdobeMAX. Besides potential networking opportunities, your fellow designers are a fantastic resource to help get ideas flowing and listen to you vent when the client asks you to make the logo bigger. It’s awesome being part of a creative community and it will make you better at your craft.

Small Bites: March 2

Ugh, someone is having a case of the Mondays. After a frigid, snowy weekend with more snow on the way, I’m a cranky cheetah and desperately need some cheering up. Luckily these creative bites are just the thing to bring a smile to my face on a gloomy Monday.

Photographer Jason Travis is doing a project called “Persona” where he is photographing people and the essential things they carry on themselves. It’s a great way to tell the personalities of people and see just what people haul around in their purses or messenger bags all day. My personal favorite is the guy carrying around the American Tourister flight bag and trademarks book. Reminds me of designer Aaron Draplin.

The predictions are in! Check out the predicted top 10 web design trends of 2015 by The Next Web. I’m glad to see that scrolling sites are still on the cutting-edge, since I just learned how to code those. I’m a little bummed the large background images may be on their way out, but I like that typography is taking a step forward.

The Creative Bloq does a daily post of “font of the day” where sometimes the featured font is free. This week was Fabfelt Script, a delightful retro script perfect for Throwback Thursday.

More free stuff! Designer and photographer Jim Krause, is giving away 10 free wallpapers for your computer and tablet. This HOW Design speaker gives away bright, cheery and a little bit quirky illustrations to grace your next device and bring in a pop of color to your digital screen.

And, finally, the “FYI: I’m a Graphic Designer” video that was making the social media rounds this week. Sadly, our profession is misunderstood by those not in it—it’s thought of as fun, coloring pictures, cute, easy, anyone with a copy of Word and some clipart can do it. Unfortunately, these misconceptions are perpetuated by movies and TV. Someone put all of these clips together to show how designers are portrayed in the media. Made me laugh until I realized how true it is and how hard we have to work for client respect.