Thanks Bob.
I started out as an artist, By the time I was in Kindergarten I realized that it was something I just knew how to do. By first grade, and every grade thereafter, I won awards for my drawings and even a scholarship to a weekly art class. Which I hated, because there were "rules" and we all had to replicate the same stupid picture, which even at the age of 9 I realized was not very creative.
Fast forward through middle and high school, I took every art class the schools offered, won more awards, started mural painting etc never took a typing class because I wanted to be a famous artist.
My dad decided that I should go to the Art Institute because it was a lot less money than Carnegie Mellon, which is where I wanted to go to school. I got straight As through both of the two quarters I took, learning to hand letter and do layouts. All of those classes, in fact that entire course, is now obsolete. I quit because it p!ssed me off that even very mediocre students were pushed through simply because they had the money to pay for class, and there was even one girl who was paid (by welfare maybe?) to go to school and mostly just got high every day.
I got married when I was 19 and had my children young, and was too busy for much artwork. My cousin wanted something painted in his convenience store (I hated to paint, I liked to draw for literally hours with an Ebony pencil or a Rapidograph) but I did it for extra money and that somehow led to me painting signs.
While I knew the rules of typography from art school (the ones I always say here like never use all-caps in a display typeface etc) I was not a sign designer at all and my signs looked like crap. But I met Mike Meyer through an article in SignCraft, which led me to the Letterheads, the Mike Stevens book, and gradually better-looking signs.
I read a lot of books, painted a lot of bad looking but long lasting signs and eventually got better at it. I got a plotter in 1998 and started making vinyl signs too, stretching type to fit because I could until one day I was like "Whoa! This is WRONG" and then I discovered kerning...
:Big Laugh
Over the years I got to know some good designers, like Arthur Vanson, Stevo, Jeff Lang, Bob Stevens, WeaselBoogie, Karen Souza, Bruce Bowers, David Butler, Rick, Neato, Joe Diaz, Jason Nale, etc and learned to emulate them. Between that and painting I eventually developed my own style. I learned to use Corel and that became a huge aid in helping me "see" stuff rather than continually goofing around with thumbnail sketches.
So I have taught myself to become a better designer on my own. The things I've learned from my peers, over the past 28 years, have helped me more than anything I leaned in school. I don't know what I am anymore, but I do love to do layout work. I still don't know color management and will probably never learn it, as I design in black and white and if it needs printing I sub it out, or just paint the damn thing.
Love....Jill