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#1 |
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macrumors member
Join Date: Nov 2006
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How did you start out?
Hello all!
I'm new (very new) to the Web Design scene but am very interested in it and hope to be able to make an 'on the side' kind of career out of it. I was curious to ask around and see where all of you current WD Guru's started, how you learned your skills. Maybe you just played with editors and learned that way? Did you take classes? Read endless tutorials and guides online? Post your little histories! --------- And if anyone's interested here's what I've currently been working on: My site (Freely hosted, don't mind the banner heh): www.CheungDesigns.info Project for client: Cyber Knight Computers Project for club: Team Technique As you can see all my work is fairly simple and amateur, or tear downs of templates. |
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#2 |
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macrumors 601
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Dayton, OH
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I got into web design while working at a computer help desk at my university. People from web design classes kept needing help because the teacher didn't know anything, but how to read from the book. Knowing web design wasn't part of our job, but it came up enough that I decided to start learning. I naively started by creating sites in MS Word (wow was that a mistake). Switched to MS FrontPage for a while and eventually just moved to hand coding. I've tried most of the applications out there, but always came back to hand coding. Currently using BBEdit for my hand coding.
I learned by looking at code from other sites and reading tutorials online. I didn't buy any books until 5 years after I started and don't use them much. If yo have the dedication, all you need is out on the web. Web design has always been a hobby for me, and I only occasionally make money from it, but I have a day job so it's all good, and I do it because I like it, not for the money. For beginning I suggest reading various blogs and making sure you're learning from the latest techniques. Books get out of date fast in the web design world. And frankly teachers get out of date even faster unless they really keep up themselves, which seems to be rare from others I've talked to. Also, making use of a site like this one is great when you're learning. I never knew anyone who does web design so always had to figure out things myself. If I would have had a site like this to turn to when I was learning, I could have avoided a lot of wasted time, but probably did learn a lot in the process of figuring things out on my own, instead of having it fed to me. |
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#3 |
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macrumors regular
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Surrey, UK
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I don't know why I started, but I'm glad I did.
I first started out with Microsoft Notepad, then I found Photoshop and started to "Save for web" and edit with Notepad. Shortly after this it was Dreamweaver/Photoshop. Now, all that's behind me and I use an IDE (Aptana) to develop OOP applications with all design being done in Photoshop, but fortunately not using Adobes sliced html. ![]() 5 years and counting... XHTML, CSS, PHP, JS and Lasso. |
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#4 |
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macrumors 65816
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Tucson AZ
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I learned "old-school" graphic design in college back in the early 80's.
(comps were done with Pantone markers, and layouts were finished using Rapidograph/blueline/paste-up on hot-press board) I'm self-taught in all aspects of computer-aided design, mostly from books and manuals. I've been self-employed as a graphic designer for 11 years. I started designing websites in 1998(or so) using GoLive Cyberstudio, Freehand and Photoshop. I spent the next 9 years using successive versions of GoLive. Last year I purchased CS3 Design Premium and began teaching myself Actionscript 3 (from books and manuals), and now focus mainly on Flash interactive applications and print work. The money is excellent, and there seems to be a lot of demand for this type of work in my area. (in 2006, I had to pass on two potentially excellent commissions because I didn't know Flash)
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2.4ghz 24" iMac (Aluminum); 4GB RAM; 320GB HDD; 250GB external G-Drive; 10.5.7; Adobe CS3. |
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#5 |
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macrumors newbie
Join Date: Aug 2008
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Newbie to MR here. Thought this would be a good place to come out of stalker mode.
![]() I started learning web design during the summer of 98. I had an unrelated internship that summer and my supervisor was out of town for the first two weeks. A higher up told me to just surf on the internet in the meanwhile. I started looking around and realized that I wanted to know how to make an anime fan website. (I was a huge fan back then). Anyway, so I started in Netscape Composer and printed out every tutorial I could find and put the info in large binders. Made my fan page, set up some sites to sell things as an Amazon.com reseller, and just kept busy. Eventually, I just did hand coding in Notepad until I discovered Dreamweaver MX. I'm mostly self-taught by reading books, magazines, tutorials, and studying other people's code. |
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#6 |
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macrumors 6502a
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: California
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Taken from previous Thread: http://forums.macrumors.com/showthre...ow+you+started
By accident. Worked as a business analyst, for corp 500 (I never took a graphic or web class). My friend asked me to make a website for, can you believe it--money! My job got outsourced so I had not job and I started working out of a spare bedroom (with two CRT's and a g4 QuickSilver), getting jobs from craigslist, and started a business all simultaneously. I made some good friends and networked through forums, contracted for a few designers for a bit. One thing led to another, now we have an 2 office locations, 2 employees, 1 full time contractor, 2 part time contractors and half a dozen macs. Good times and gotta love our capitalistic society and the internets! Edit: I also taught intro to web design at the local college few years back at the ripe age of 23 Was good times...One more edit: Don't expect to be handed anything in this industry. You gotta put in your reps, just like any other industry. I took crap jobs, made sites for 200 bucks and ate top ramen and tostadas for my first year in business. I paid my dues though Take advantage of lower end jobs, because it builds experience and portfolio items. However, don't be taken advantage of. You'll at one point get screwed over, mine as well start on the little jobs And you know, all the designers that get pissy on these forums when people ask for small little graphics help, that's where I started. I'd spend 15 minutes helping improve a logo, 30 minutes to help make a banner. When all the guys who were "to cool" to make banners and where typing in their responses, I was building my portfolio and skill set. That experience is priceless when you first start out. However, I can't stand the people who walk in here and want free logos! Go figure.
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C H I C O H O S T I N G Content Management Solutions - M A V I E O Design Studio Last edited by ChicoWeb : Aug 11, 2008 at 05:22 PM. |
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