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Post a Comment On: Animondays

"Carpe Diem!"

9 Comments -

1 – 9 of 9
Blogger Elliot Cowan said...

Nice post.

In a perfect world, of course, we'd all be working and producing terrific work on the side.

November 2, 2009 at 6:20 AM

Blogger Alisa said...

Well put, Dave. I've come to love my "down-time" between projects when I get to put time and creativity into my own work. More artists need to take the incentive you mention with their own art. Yes, your own work is just as important, if not more so, than paid work!

November 2, 2009 at 12:43 PM

Blogger allen mez said...

Great post David. All too often, paid work is difficult to get inspired by. I hope more animators will take advantage of the economically driven down time to create the kind of work that taps into the original reason they chose this art form.

November 2, 2009 at 1:15 PM

Blogger Mike Rauch said...

The big challenge will be holding onto this lesson when jobs are plentiful again. If you can do that, you'll be well positioned whenever the next downturn hits.

November 2, 2009 at 2:05 PM

Blogger David B. Levy said...

Good stuff, all.

Dayna, thanks for sharing the link and reminding about Stephen Mead's contribution. He's great! Everyone should check out your cool game.

I find this an interesting topic because when I enjoyed full time work I really believed that I was giving it my all on my personal projects at the same time... but, really that wasn't possible. At least not the way I'm able to devote to them now.

I love how at-home-freelance allows me to be creative with how I break up my day. It has taught me to make each minute count so I can jam in as much as I can between 7:30 AM and 6 PM. I try to preserve up to two days a week just to tackle personal projects.

November 2, 2009 at 2:29 PM

Blogger Mike Rauch said...

Dave,

Two whole days a week specifically to your own projects! Nice. It would be interesting to hear sometime how you schedule your work on a daily, weekly, and long term basis.

November 2, 2009 at 3:44 PM

Blogger David B. Levy said...

Hiya Mike,

I've been asked this a lot lately. My secret is waking up at 7:30 or 8, eating a quick breakfast, heading to the gym, having a coffee and starting my work day at 10AM or earlier. Then I just focus on the most pressing priority. There's usually short deadlines and long term deadlines. My short term deadlines are the due dates for the sesame shorts, and a long term deadline might be for a book I'm writing. I squeeze a day or two a week of work on the long term deadline stuff and carve out the rest for personal projects. It's not an exact science, but it works well enough.

I usually eat lunch within 10 minutes so that doesn't rob too much time. And, I don't spend hours a day surfing the net or checking facebook. My main goal (which I sometimes achieve) is stopping work each night at 6 PM. Often I'll work a full day on the weekend to make all this work.

November 2, 2009 at 4:23 PM

Blogger Elliot Cowan said...

http://animondays.blogspot.com/2008/12/10-commandments-of-working-from-home.html

November 3, 2009 at 6:20 AM

Blogger Eunice Kim said...

This makes so much sense to someone fresh out from school and fresh in New York-- on my second week of internship already...

Wow. I especially second your response to Mike Rauch, because that schedule resembles much to my own during my last year at RISD-- although, I did take my extremely LONG breaks for the sake of my own sanity. And now, I don't get to take the LONG breaks because of the internship.

In terms of social life, the only difference now is that I make effort to keep in contact with "my people," my good friend from the animation department.

Well, that fifth year was a good training for this, I would say. And it was also my best time at RISD.
But yes, the new tough cookie fresh out of the oven says, on behalf of her class of 2009, it is still... quite hard though we hang on firm.

November 4, 2009 at 10:54 AM

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