Back before any computers, just about everyone that came into the shop where I first worked would eventually walk over to my bench and watch me letter. The boss didn't mind people watching, but he never wanted us to talk to the customers...
or each other, that ate up production time, but people would always say... ya know... I have a niece, cousin, brother or some family member that was good in art. I'll bet they could do that. Can you teach them and I'd nod towards the boss and he'd tell them to bring 'em in and we'd see if they can paint. It was kinda like the first version of '
America has Talent'.
They'd come in and it was always my job to show these adults, kids or whatever... how to letter. When in college, I was going to be an art teacher in the fine arts, but 1/2 way through took up sign painting... so I guess he thought I had a way with teaching.
It was my job to either encourage or discourage these wannabees. I generally had about 1/2 hour to do this. I was off the clock when doing this, but for the most part... I worked piece rate so it didn't matter much. Most of them couldn't even hold a pencil correctly let alone a brush. The control you lose when not holding a tool correctly will impede many strokes of formation of components in lettering. Almost all of them would paint with the brush starting near them and paint a stroke curving away from them into the air. Trying to get someone to pull a brush towards their belly was hard. I didn't care if they couldn't paint a straight line or make two perfect circles in a row, but if they couldn't at least follow instructions.... I knew they'd be a problem. I worked along side of a guy early on where the owner there would stand behind you and if you were pulling or twirling your brush wrong... he'd grab the brush handle and pull it up through your fingers to get his point across. What a mess that made.
Anyway, now some 35 years later... these same people are coming into the shop, they don't ask if their wannabee designers can train and learn.... they just tell you little Suzy is great with this kinda stuff and now we don't have a choice sometimes but to reproduce perfectly ugly made signs for these know-it-alls.
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