@@thafshalmigdad4757 It depends what you want to do and how much money you have. I personally like Adobe because that's what I learned on in college. Illustrator for vector, Photoshop for raster and image manipulation, and InDesign for multi-page print work.
As a graphicdesiger student I can say everything said here is absolutely true! Even When you study graphic design they don't show you exactly how you can be a master, the show you and learn you all the rules of design and everything of knowledge about graphic design, but you (I) have to become masters by yourself. Its up to you if you want to be a master & for me its actually very easy to understand so just want to tell you with knowledge and by yourself mastery is very easy. Just give your best for everyone project and put your self in clients business and see their view. Imagine you are them and do the best work like you would do ut for yourself. Never give clients a project where you are not happy with 100%. Make sure its your best!
This is a super informative video. I like how you managed to do this without making those in the early parts of their design careers look bad. But, instead having it be more educational. Thanks for this video.
For me, the first example with orange website header is just WOW! I watched and clearly understood what you were trying to explain. But then I suddenly caught myself thinking that this example (unintentionally, subconsciously) may force me to think this way: "Always put an image on the left side, because you have seen a master example!". I'm not sure how to avoid such way of thinking.
In this case, if you look at the amateur and pro examples, the image itself makes the navigation bar a bit harder to read (or it did for me). So, I would've moved the image over anyway just to fix that. It also depends on the picture and if that's the first thing you want people to see. The idea was for a drink company, so there would be a logo or label on the bottle. So that's what I would want people to see first (what they were buying). This was the same thing with the chicken ads. If the image wasn't trying to sell something, I'd go with the copy first. Of course, this is all super dependent on the project.
Hi Satori, I really love your videos. Thanks for the consistency. A quick one, a typographical error with spacing "outside" and "of", displayed as "outsideof" as shown on the DHL design frame with the chicken and the egg.
All I can see with some of these graphics is low contrast on some text. That what I can see from an "amateur designer" from an experienced one. If you can't read the copy, is the viewer understanding what the graphic is trying to communicate?
Nice one Tom, I have 3 colours, or should I say tones, throughout my website and as much "space" as possible. Reason being I'm a lazy bastard who likes to have minimal css so all my colours are var() ;-)
What about design process like double diamond or research, brand guide, grid, design principles etc.? I am never shooting blind, I cannot design without any concept. When you know how to.use grid and design principles like balance and contrast or typographical hierarchy final design will be fine. I also think, that the Hen a egg DHL layout was part of marketing campaign, there is more that one designer involved, but whole marketing team.
It's great that new designers are learning graphic design from you, but some of these interfaces have different target audiences, different purposes, different user experience research. And most UI mockups from Dribbble have poor UX.
Hey men. PLEASE HELP. I have a question. How do you deal with clients that are persistent on cluttering your design? Like for example, one of my client said, she wanted all the spaces to be filled in coz it's a waste on printing if I don't put anything on the spaces. She also wanted the text to be bigger. She wanted multiple font faces. And she also gave me purple and grey color. In my mind, that's a total disaster of a design she wanted me to do. As a designer for 4yrs, I can't really do what she wanted coz it will ruin my identity and I hated being directed on my design. But most of my clients are "directors" who wanted me to just do as I told even if the results are totally crap. So what should I do or what should I tell them?
I have a video on this, but in short, it isn't always a good idea to convince them. If they are stubborn to the max then just go with their idea and get paid. However you can try and make your design, put it side by side with their idea, and explain why yours is better. Here are 2 videos that you may find interesting: th-cam.com/video/lCzWwl65w6E/w-d-xo.html th-cam.com/video/BaOPcFEnl7M/w-d-xo.html
I've noticed that each of your videos go through a wide range of colors/layouts/imagery/etc. Chris Do's channel does the same thing, displaying little perceptible consistency between motion graphics in different videos. As someone who designs motion graphics for TH-cam channels I've always found it an interesting choice. Any chance you'd be willing to share your reasons for going that route?
sure.. I don't design the motion graphics in my videos. I wouldn't possibly have time to do such a thing, alongside every other aspect of TH-cam content creation, being a designer, a crypto/stock trader, and the few other things that I do.
The thing is quite often times u'll be required to provide what is called "amateur design" by clients even if u r already at pro or master level. The theory in the video is rather spoken in designers words not the business standard. So u also need to learn how to convince ur clients to go more professional direction as well as trying to get closer to master level as a designer.
@@SatoriGraphics True indeed. My most recent client and I have just fired each other all due to the issue I mentioned in the comment so I'm right now quite nervous on this... Thx alot for reacting anyway. Love ur works. Cheers all the way from Tokyo!
Thank you for your kind words! I'm glad to hear that you enjoy watching the before-and-after design videos, as well as the videos about good and bad designs. I'm always happy to help you improve your skills and knowledge through my videos. I'll try to upload new videos as often as possible. Thank you for your support! :D
Think of this more of how designs can be improved, rather than strict labels of 'pro' 'amateur' and 'master'.
Hi
Sir could u recommend softwares for beginners
@@thafshalmigdad4757😊😊
@@thafshalmigdad4757 learn photoshop illustrator and figma (if you wanna do ui)
@@thafshalmigdad4757 It depends what you want to do and how much money you have. I personally like Adobe because that's what I learned on in college. Illustrator for vector, Photoshop for raster and image manipulation, and InDesign for multi-page print work.
@@SatoriGraphics thank u sir for u r answer
As a graphicdesiger student I can say everything said here is absolutely true! Even When you study graphic design they don't show you exactly how you can be a master, the show you and learn you all the rules of design and everything of knowledge about graphic design, but you (I) have to become masters by yourself. Its up to you if you want to be a master & for me its actually very easy to understand so just want to tell you with knowledge and by yourself mastery is very easy. Just give your best for everyone project and put your self in clients business and see their view. Imagine you are them and do the best work like you would do ut for yourself. Never give clients a project where you are not happy with 100%. Make sure its your best!
I think I am almost in reach of the PRO Designer skills. Thanks a lot for another awesome video. Your videos have helped me to evolve as a designer.
that's really cool to hear, thanks!
Thanks to watching you for years, I can happily say my understanding of all of these is pretty good!
Great to hear that :D
My favourite designer. You've saved my life multiple times
Thanks a bunch! All the best to you and thanks for the regular support
Sir please upload more on before and after, it teaches me so much..thank you
I will look towards making such content yes :)
Thanks
@@SatoriGraphics these are so good to understand how to create better layouts
This is a super informative video. I like how you managed to do this without making those in the early parts of their design careers look bad. But, instead having it be more educational. Thanks for this video.
For me, the first example with orange website header is just WOW! I watched and clearly understood what you were trying to explain. But then I suddenly caught myself thinking that this example (unintentionally, subconsciously) may force me to think this way: "Always put an image on the left side, because you have seen a master example!". I'm not sure how to avoid such way of thinking.
In this case, if you look at the amateur and pro examples, the image itself makes the navigation bar a bit harder to read (or it did for me). So, I would've moved the image over anyway just to fix that. It also depends on the picture and if that's the first thing you want people to see. The idea was for a drink company, so there would be a logo or label on the bottle. So that's what I would want people to see first (what they were buying). This was the same thing with the chicken ads. If the image wasn't trying to sell something, I'd go with the copy first. Of course, this is all super dependent on the project.
just want to say amazing amazing conceptualization, theory education and you are inspiring many designers of these 3 levels
Hey I appreciate that, cheers!
Hi Satori,
I really love your videos. Thanks for the consistency.
A quick one, a typographical error with spacing "outside" and "of", displayed as "outsideof" as shown on the DHL design frame with the chicken and the egg.
Thanks for this amazing video ☺️ It helps a lot...
always happy to help !
Great vlaue, Tom. Thanks for sharing.
All I can see with some of these graphics is low contrast on some text. That what I can see from an "amateur designer" from an experienced one. If you can't read the copy, is the viewer understanding what the graphic is trying to communicate?
Nice one Tom,
I have 3 colours, or should I say tones, throughout my website and as much "space" as possible. Reason being I'm a lazy bastard who likes to have minimal css so all my colours are var()
;-)
I think that .... I have leveled up
💪⭐
Thanks my friend ❤
Your videos are so valuable
I wish the best for you
hey much appreciated, thanks!
❤I love the comparison approach to teaching. Thank you.
Cheers Karen 👌 :)
Pro - follow the rules
Master - breaks the rules
Amateur - Challenge to master.😉
lol :P
❤I love the explanation and presentation of the video, expecting more such tuts
hey thanks for the feedback :D
Beautiful video is always edited beautifully.
much appreciated 👍
Really cool video, thank you!
Thanks a lot Irina
Very useful, thanks !
Cheers :)
What about design process like double diamond or research, brand guide, grid, design principles etc.? I am never shooting blind, I cannot design without any concept. When you know how to.use grid and design principles like balance and contrast or typographical hierarchy final design will be fine. I also think, that the Hen a egg DHL layout was part of marketing campaign, there is more that one designer involved, but whole marketing team.
It's great that new designers are learning graphic design from you, but some of these interfaces have different target audiences, different purposes, different user experience research. And most UI mockups from Dribbble have poor UX.
AND The fun fact is that mature & Pro designs in these examples are designed by Master designer
i just like your these series 💗
thanks for the feedback!
Hey men. PLEASE HELP. I have a question. How do you deal with clients that are persistent on cluttering your design? Like for example, one of my client said, she wanted all the spaces to be filled in coz it's a waste on printing if I don't put anything on the spaces. She also wanted the text to be bigger. She wanted multiple font faces. And she also gave me purple and grey color. In my mind, that's a total disaster of a design she wanted me to do. As a designer for 4yrs, I can't really do what she wanted coz it will ruin my identity and I hated being directed on my design. But most of my clients are "directors" who wanted me to just do as I told even if the results are totally crap. So what should I do or what should I tell them?
I have a video on this, but in short, it isn't always a good idea to convince them. If they are stubborn to the max then just go with their idea and get paid. However you can try and make your design, put it side by side with their idea, and explain why yours is better.
Here are 2 videos that you may find interesting:
th-cam.com/video/lCzWwl65w6E/w-d-xo.html
th-cam.com/video/BaOPcFEnl7M/w-d-xo.html
@@SatoriGraphics this is super nice. Thanks for your rescue men. I really appreciate this.. 😊🙏🏻
I DO love hierarchy! Good video👍🏻
Hello Satori. IS there any video where you give step by step how you start from nothing to the final design for a client?🙏🏿
cool that was informative!
Thank you!
You're welcome as always :)
can you tell my what is name of your fonts use in the video? Thanks a lot!
I've noticed that each of your videos go through a wide range of colors/layouts/imagery/etc. Chris Do's channel does the same thing, displaying little perceptible consistency between motion graphics in different videos. As someone who designs motion graphics for TH-cam channels I've always found it an interesting choice. Any chance you'd be willing to share your reasons for going that route?
sure.. I don't design the motion graphics in my videos. I wouldn't possibly have time to do such a thing, alongside every other aspect of TH-cam content creation, being a designer, a crypto/stock trader, and the few other things that I do.
Thanks for sharing ❤️
Hi, what is the best way to get in touch with you?!
how to code that design?
do you think that a man should be a master of 1 of or in this digital world at least 3-4 skills like video editing, graphic designing and videography.
Master something and pick up supplementary skills alongside it 👌
The thing is quite often times u'll be required to provide what is called "amateur design" by clients even if u r already at pro or master level.
The theory in the video is rather spoken in designers words not the business standard.
So u also need to learn how to convince ur clients to go more professional direction as well as trying to get closer to master level as a designer.
Depends what tier of clients you attract
@@SatoriGraphics True indeed. My most recent client and I have just fired each other all due to the issue I mentioned in the comment so I'm right now quite nervous on this... Thx alot for reacting anyway. Love ur works. Cheers all the way from Tokyo!
I'm just knowing this, so there's one greater than the pro. I think the pro designer is just an intermediate designer🤔🤔
yeah that's basically it. These categories are not rigid, it's more of a way to explain how designs can be better and better
whats the name of that ending track, its fire
Not a single word about contrast in the last one? Looks like even master doesn't know the text should be readable at least 😅
Spoken about contrast many times, but the 4th category was about consistency, not contrast
❤
do you have a q&a video about yourself?
Not for a long time.. my audience are here for education mainly 💪
@@SatoriGraphics yeah. I just wanted to know how long you have been a graphic designer & a few other things
imma amateurish semi-pro
i think i am kinda middle of amateur and pro
First comment 🙂
you got it today Mona 🏅👍
Thank you for your kind words! I'm glad to hear that you enjoy watching the before-and-after design videos, as well as the videos about good and bad designs. I'm always happy to help you improve your skills and knowledge through my videos. I'll try to upload new videos as often as possible. Thank you for your support! :D
5:27 dribbble?
thanks for the vids, I'm gonna have long way journey to be pro designer to break the rules 🥲
lol thanks for the comment 💪