Popular illustrator Lee Crutchley is no stranger to creative blocks. Whether he's working for a corporate client or creating his own art, Crutchley has faced that blank page (and tablet screen) more times than he can count -- and through trial and error and sheer force of will, he's come up with a range of lively prompts, activities, and challenges that help to shift the perspective and get those creative juices flowing again in new and surprising ways. This upbeat, interactive, and very cool book will be any creative person's best friend -- filled with inspiration, humor, wisdom, commiseration, and help whenever the reader needs it most.
Taking 'back to basics' to a new level, Crutchley wants readers to immerse themselves, creativity in its purest form. In answer to the procrastination nation is a new technique, and creative method: The Art of Getting Started.
A new product, a new service, a new company, a new division, a new anything - where there's a will, Kawasaki shows the way with his essential steps to launching one's dreams.
THE CLASSIC BESTSELLING GUIDE TO LAUNCHING AND MAKING YOUR NEW PRODUCT, SERVICE OR IDEA A SUCCESS.
Discusses how to make a living at being a full-time artist and how to get started selling your art.
'you can't always be fixed, but you can always grow.' A raw and honest look at hurting, healing, and finding beauty amidst the chaos of life.
It's incredibly satisfying, knowing that others enjoy your art enough to purchase it. This book will help you experience that sense of satisfaction. Whether your goal is to make a...
Learn to Burn offers 14 step-by-step projects for making decorative gifts-from coasters and picture frames to bangles, decorative plates, and door hangers-illustrated with clear how-to photographs.
Huang wanted to make a piece that was truly day-to-night: In sunny hours, the LEDs are hidden °om sight. But when it's dark, the garment transforms into an ethereal, spectral light show for the body.
This new edition of Getting Things Done will be welcomed not only by its hundreds of thousands of existing fans but also by a whole new generation eager to adopt its proven principles.
Not that cruises can't be adventures (just ask David Foster Wallace or the Unsinkable Molly Brown), but booking a passage on a freighter is a little less, well, cushy than your standard island cruise. No one's getting paid to pamper you ...