In support of #AIGAatHome, we have launched the Colorado Creatives Series, an opportunity to celebrate and showcase local creatives in our area. Our Colorado Creatives will share a little about their creative process, some of their most worthwhile investments, current reading lists and more. Enjoy!
Richard Ljoenes, Aesthetica Creative
He, Him, and His
My studio is in my house in a converted garage so things haven’t changed all that much for me during these past months, with the exception of a 4-year old assistant who’s now always around to “help” out on my designs.
My main area of work is book covers so I typically always have 2-3 manuscripts to get through. Currently in the middle of a couple novels and a non-fiction book on Autism. As far as listening goes I enjoy a lot of podcasts these days, some faves are Reply All, Being Freelance, and Looking Sideways. Music-wise I’ve surprised myself lately getting into classic metal stuff, Sabbath, Metallica, etc.—a genre I’ve never really been into. I’ve been steering clear of the telly for a couple months (of all the times to choose a TV sabbatical!), but looking forward to dip into the latest Ozark season among other things.
Nothing that hasn’t already been said by others, but… Use the extra time. Rethink your process, do the stuff you never find time for. Do projects for yourself or start working on that pitch idea you’ve had in the back of your mind for a decade.
Not a direct failure of mine, but my last full-time gig came to end when the company tanked (or went on an indefinite hiatus, anyway). Sudden unemployment was a bit of a shock, but this is what led me to open my own studio—something I very well possibly never would have had the guts to do. Now I question why I didn’t do it years earlier.
Among other lessons is not to take on more work than you can handle. In my third year (after finally getting a website up) my business started going really well, but after two mediocre first years I didn’t dare say no to a single project, and quality suffered in some cases. Some of those clients didn’t call again. That was a tough lesson, but a very necessary one. Never sacrifice quality for quantity.
After working off the dining table for the first three years of my company, setting up a proper studio has made a world of difference in productivity and feeling inspired. The missus is starting to tolerate my face again too
Being a former smoker I have a terrible oral fixation, and have had hundreds of pens explode in my mouth when chewing on them over the years. I have now discovered (after one too many IKEA builds) these tiny wooden dowels that I have quite the surplus of, which turns out is an excellent chew-toy for myself. If no-one is around I may pretend they’re a cigarette.
WORK-WISE: I’m a perfectionist and a procrastinator and the combination of the two is a slow-burning hell. I try and never let this affect clients’ deadlines (well, almost never), but it surely has affected the work/life balance thing. So I’m working on ditching the procrastination aspect. Starting tomorrow.
LIFE/HEALTH-WISE: I’ve been a runner for most of my life, and the last five years (ok, decade) I’ve realized I really hate running. Moving to Boulder last year, there was an awful lot of hype about hiking—something I’ve always kind of made fun of as an exercise (we don’t even have a verb for that in Norwegian, it’s just called walking). Anyway, much to my surprise, I love it now and try to make it up to Mt. Sanitas every day.
I turn into a barbarian and consume a Costco size bag of gummy bears.
Right now I’m working on covers for a couple Norwegian novels from my homeland.