Hey man, good message. I actually always struggled with good sketching. I am not terrible, but never was quite good. I now work in one of the best design studios and still really can't sketch. As long as your drawings are communicating the idea well, and are backed up by good thinking, your are enough.
Thank you so much for mentioning this on your channel. This was my biggest fear before I started studying ID since I didn't know how to draw. Then it came up to the point where idea and final product is more important than aesthetic sketches.
So important to get these reminders, because so often all we see online, and social media are these super detailed sketches and it can be hard to not think that you need to compete with that and achieve that level too… So thank you! Great video :)
Hi, Jimmy. I'm a teen/young 20s career guide. In researching this field with one of my teen clients and I needed to get clarity on this exact topic. The video was really helpful. Thanks for the time you put into them!!
Hi Jimmy! I just found your channel yesterday and it's so helpful to hear you talking about what industrial design entails and how it is to work in that field. I'm sad to see that you aren't uploading anymore to TH-cam but hopefully you are doing something else fun that is taking up your free time :) I've been thinking of possibly going into industrial design since it seems to be the perfect love child between engineering and design. All and all it just seems very creative (but still very logical and grounded), which I like. I am scared though that I won't cut it in the industry (or even get in to a university program) since I suck at sketching. I did some SketchUp projects at a previous bachelor program and really enjoyed that, and think I would enjoy learning CAD as well. I'm just scared that I can't compete with people who are good at everything, like: sketching, CAD, rendering, graphic design or prototyping too. I'm just hesitant to potentially go down a career path in which I will be surrounded by bright, creative and visually talented people, and feel undoubtedly inadequate or not good enough, since design fields are so focused on what you physically can produce, where I feel like I'm better or more interested in the idea creation (generating), the materials, sustainability and the production of the products. I don't know if it's possible to fall into something in this field where I can work more with production / in a team regarding product development, or if I'm just looking at the wrong career :/
@@Kelps_K just one piece of advice from me. Go all in on any carrier that fits your strengths and interests. Attempt to be at the top of your class and actually do it and you will do just fine.
I am a product manager, for some reason I have to get involved design, so I learned sketching idea & design using Procreate, then I pass to my subordinate in my team who has engineering background can realise my design at solid work, then I review the model at solid work ( I learned a bit on my own )…. ;)
I really appreciate your perspective on this topic. I’m an aspiring designer myself and I’m still learning how to draw better. So, thank you for this! How long did it take you to feel confident about your drawings? Has drawing always been a strength for you?
my boss (I'm a student assisting in a small studio) wants me to sketch "quick and dirty" instead of fine and detailed :) which is actually not that easy. i used to draw objects for hours as a teen; spending much time on details & shadows etc; this is the complete opposite!
Totally got me there lol. Hey Jimmy, I noticed something weird on your website. My antivirus blocked it when I try to access it. I still proceeded and saw some crazy error action going on. I felt like I almost got hacked or something.
Hey Jimmy would like to know what happened with DesignLife are you going to continue with it new things are comming What can you tell us about?? Greetings from Mex. Love your work.
Jimmy, I teach ID at a middle school. It would really be helpful if there was some examples instead of just talking about it. Please give visuals. It is kind of like you talk about sketching abilities but then don't use sketching abilities to prove your point.
Hey Stephen! I agree, if I send you my video clip after shooting, could you help add in visuals for me? I have a full time job so don't have much time to add them in myself. Let me know.
@@JimmyHuynhdesign I guess if you are looking for teaching suggestions from a pedagogical standpoint I can look it over and provide suggestions. An overhead camera with you thinking aloud while you work out design issues would be great. In this way you could create an archive of B roll that you could plug in for future videos. If time is really an issue, we all have challenges with time but I think the effort you put in to improve the quality of content will translate into more views in furthering the industry. But it is always easier to just provide a talking head video.
@@StephenPortz thanks for the suggestion Stephen, I truly appreciate you taking your time to write that out. I agree with you, there's always room to improve. I think I've learned after recording b roll, storing it, cutting it up, and placing it in the right location for the appreciate video, is more than enough editing to make me not want to make any video at all. I'm perfectly happy making the videos with just me talking, and if that is not enough for the viewers, you don't have to watch my videos. There are plenty of other amazing TH-camrs who are doing what you're looking for. Check out Sam Does Design, Spencer Nugent, or Sangwon! They give really great demos.
I am from footwear design background and I want to pursue industrial design in master, does I need to know some engineering or background to become an industrial designer.
I’ve never known a successful IDer who sucked at sketching.. I’ve known many who thought they could learn to sketch in college, then wasted tens of thousands just to realize they couldn’t make it in this field.
Hey man, good message. I actually always struggled with good sketching. I am not terrible, but never was quite good. I now work in one of the best design studios and still really can't sketch. As long as your drawings are communicating the idea well, and are backed up by good thinking, your are enough.
Thats good to hear... which studio are you at? :D
Thank you so much for mentioning this on your channel. This was my biggest fear before I started studying ID since I didn't know how to draw. Then it came up to the point where idea and final product is more important than aesthetic sketches.
So important to get these reminders, because so often all we see online, and social media are these super detailed sketches and it can be hard to not think that you need to compete with that and achieve that level too…
So thank you! Great video :)
Hi, Jimmy. I'm a teen/young 20s career guide. In researching this field with one of my teen clients and I needed to get clarity on this exact topic. The video was really helpful. Thanks for the time you put into them!!
Hi Jimmy! I just found your channel yesterday and it's so helpful to hear you talking about what industrial design entails and how it is to work in that field. I'm sad to see that you aren't uploading anymore to TH-cam but hopefully you are doing something else fun that is taking up your free time :) I've been thinking of possibly going into industrial design since it seems to be the perfect love child between engineering and design. All and all it just seems very creative (but still very logical and grounded), which I like. I am scared though that I won't cut it in the industry (or even get in to a university program) since I suck at sketching. I did some SketchUp projects at a previous bachelor program and really enjoyed that, and think I would enjoy learning CAD as well. I'm just scared that I can't compete with people who are good at everything, like: sketching, CAD, rendering, graphic design or prototyping too. I'm just hesitant to potentially go down a career path in which I will be surrounded by bright, creative and visually talented people, and feel undoubtedly inadequate or not good enough, since design fields are so focused on what you physically can produce, where I feel like I'm better or more interested in the idea creation (generating), the materials, sustainability and the production of the products. I don't know if it's possible to fall into something in this field where I can work more with production / in a team regarding product development, or if I'm just looking at the wrong career :/
@@Kelps_K just one piece of advice from me. Go all in on any carrier that fits your strengths and interests. Attempt to be at the top of your class and actually do it and you will do just fine.
The beginning 😭😭😭💔
I joke 👍
I am a product manager, for some reason I have to get involved design, so I learned sketching idea & design using Procreate, then I pass to my subordinate in my team who has engineering background can realise my design at solid work, then I review the model at solid work ( I learned a bit on my own )…. ;)
Always happy to see when you put out more content!
Really clear insights! Thank you!
I really appreciate your perspective on this topic. I’m an aspiring designer myself and I’m still learning how to draw better. So, thank you for this! How long did it take you to feel confident about your drawings? Has drawing always been a strength for you?
Thanks jimmy
thanks a lot maahn...
Great videos Jimmy! You made a lot of great points.
my boss (I'm a student assisting in a small studio) wants me to sketch "quick and dirty" instead of fine and detailed :) which is actually not that easy. i used to draw objects for hours as a teen; spending much time on details & shadows etc; this is the complete opposite!
Yep, the quick and dirty way is the real world practice.
Im glad I watched the rest of the video, I almost shut my computer
Totally got me there lol. Hey Jimmy, I noticed something weird on your website. My antivirus blocked it when I try to access it. I still proceeded and saw some crazy error action going on. I felt like I almost got hacked or something.
thank you
I needed this so much thank you❤
Thank you for your videos, very helpful.
hahahahaha you had me scared there for a while
Hey Jimmy would like to know what happened with DesignLife are you going to continue with it new things are comming What can you tell us about??
Greetings from Mex. Love your work.
Jimmy, I teach ID at a middle school. It would really be helpful if there was some examples instead of just talking about it. Please give visuals. It is kind of like you talk about sketching abilities but then don't use sketching abilities to prove your point.
Hey Stephen! I agree, if I send you my video clip after shooting, could you help add in visuals for me? I have a full time job so don't have much time to add them in myself. Let me know.
@@JimmyHuynhdesign I guess if you are looking for teaching suggestions from a pedagogical standpoint I can look it over and provide suggestions. An overhead camera with you thinking aloud while you work out design issues would be great. In this way you could create an archive of B roll that you could plug in for future videos. If time is really an issue, we all have challenges with time but I think the effort you put in to improve the quality of content will translate into more views in furthering the industry. But it is always easier to just provide a talking head video.
@@StephenPortz thanks for the suggestion Stephen, I truly appreciate you taking your time to write that out. I agree with you, there's always room to improve. I think I've learned after recording b roll, storing it, cutting it up, and placing it in the right location for the appreciate video, is more than enough editing to make me not want to make any video at all. I'm perfectly happy making the videos with just me talking, and if that is not enough for the viewers, you don't have to watch my videos. There are plenty of other amazing TH-camrs who are doing what you're looking for. Check out Sam Does Design, Spencer Nugent, or Sangwon! They give really great demos.
I am from footwear design background and I want to pursue industrial design in master, does I need to know some engineering or background to become an industrial designer.
No! Don’t waste your money on a masters. Get your portfolio looking good and be able to talk through it. Also be able to sketch well!
@@srl0003 I am preparing myself for my master exam, where I can do master at low cost.
❤
I’ve never known a successful IDer who sucked at sketching.. I’ve known many who thought they could learn to sketch in college, then wasted tens of thousands just to realize they couldn’t make it in this field.
I've found that many designers "feel" like they need to improve their sketching no matter how good they actually are:)
@@JimmyHuynhdesign agree!
So glad that it is indeed a clickbait lol
First