Top 3 Greeting Card Portfolio Tips
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Greeting Card designs by Advocate Art illustrators Amanda Shufflebotham, Kathryn Selbert, and Victoria Nelson.
Top 3 Greeting Card Portfolio Tips Teacher: Amanda Hendon, Advocate Art Global Manager
Today, we are sharing Advocate Art’s Top 3 Tips for Greeting Card Illustration. These tips come directly from Advocate’s Global Manager Amanda Hendon. Amanda has been working in the greeting card industry for over six years with clients such as American Greetings and Hallmark. These tips come from her years of experience working with clients and helping artists develop their greeting card portfolios.
1. Play to your strengths It seems like an obvious thing to say, but knowing your own strengths as an artist and greeting card designer is integral, and similarly, making the most of those strengths. If you’ve had clients love your beautiful watercolor flowers for Mother’s Day cards, it certainly doesn’t hurt to make more of them! Of course, you don’t want to pigeon hole yourself, but if you’ve had a design sell well and have many clients ask after it, it behooves you to make more similar designs. To summarize: explore and create new designs, but know that you don’t always need to reinvent the wheel – if you’re a watercolor artist, you don’t also need to become a master of vector art.
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2. Explore less popular occasions Whilst a well designed birthday design will usually sell, it’s also important to keep in mind there are many underserved occasions in the greetings world, and because of that, clients have a very hard time finding relevant designs. These occasions would include: Chinese New Year, Diwali, St. Patrick’s Day, Hanukkah and Rosh Hashanah, Baptism, Communion, and Confirmation, and in general any design for a masculine buyer. Because there’s a general lack of designs for these occasions, making a few designs or a range for them means you have a higher chance for a sale – there’s simply less competition.
3. Keep on top of current trends The greeting card market has it’s tried and true’s (you can always rely on bunnies for Easter, for example), but it’s important to be aware of what’s trending in the greetings world and pop culture at large. Greeting cards pull their trends from the worlds of fashion, home decor, and even viral trends; so if you see on TikTok and Instagram an explosion of frog memes, it wouldn’t be a bad idea to work a frog into a card or two! Whilst designs should always primarily reflect icons and motifs for their occasion (Birthday cards and cake, for example), you can work in trendy aspects through message carriers, palettes, and additional trendy icons.
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