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created When you can't find work in your industry of choice, what did/do you do to pay bills?
on 07-09-2012 05:30 PM
Of course, one wishes they could work sunrise to sunset on personal training and portfolio work, but unfortunately that doesn't pay the bills, especially as the months go by.
I'm just wondering what sort of jobs you took in order to get by, especially if you managed to get jobs perhaps not completely unrelated to art. As well as if you were able to land a job that didn't burn you out completely so that you could still manage to get personal work done in your spare time.
I've had to do a lot of QA work in the past, and unfortunately that doesn't lend itself well to having a lot of free time. Not to mention the burnouts from working so long and then you have zero energy when you get home.
Or perhaps, everyone here has managed to find work in time, since you're all pretty talented.
Last edited by Soul_of_Solace; 07-09-2012 at 05:47 PM..
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, spline,
125 Posts,
Join Date Aug 2010,
Location San Francisco Bay Area
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I did web-design and small programming jobs in the past. Thanks to that our pipeline now features some user friendly web interfaces
Not sure if there's many other jobs that complement more artistic roles such as modeling though. Good luck - and don't give up!
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, dedicated polycounter,
1,630 Posts,
Join Date Sep 2009,
Location Virtuos Games @ Shanghai
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I took some contracts in the product illustration industry. lots of work out there if your willing to leave your comfort zone.
www.thumbtack.com has some stuff on it
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, polycounter,
888 Posts,
Join Date Dec 2010,
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I remember someone mentioning night shift security guard being a pretty good job. Better than minimum wage, lots of slow time to draw in a sketchbook.
While doing that try to land some remote freelance jobs with indie developers and places like Liquid Development and/or Shadows in the Darkness to get some professional experience.
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, veteran polycounter,
2,520 Posts,
Join Date Feb 2009,
Location Hawaii
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I was turning tricks around the highway corner for a penny, before being called into a secret organization which hunted vampires and giants. My natural talent in certain areas got me the nickname of the Stake-ist.
And I don't see many Vampires or Giants around now, do I? You're welcome.
There's a very good chance that I experienced MORE problems, then all the internet put together in the area of 3D. Talk about being original for once...
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, veteran polycounter,
4,501 Posts,
Join Date Apr 2011,
Location Canada
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^^I believe the first part of that
...unless they were sparkly vampires...
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, card carrying polycounter,
2,474 Posts,
Join Date Apr 2009,
Location Vancouver BC
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Freelance. Can be a can of worms though. And you need savings as a buffer.
Always keep a decent wad of cash saved! I've only just begun to do this.
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, polycounter,
778 Posts,
Join Date Nov 2010,
Location London, UK
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After I got laid off from my first job I worked at Target and worked a lot of really random short term jobs off craigslist and a little bit of freelance I could get, really sucked but had to do what was necessary
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, polygon,
725 Posts,
Join Date Sep 2008,
Location Austin, Tx
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Standing on street corners in fishnets...
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, triangle,
355 Posts,
Join Date Nov 2009,
Location UK
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I work in IT for the government in Ottawa. Mon thru Fri hours and when things get slow I surf PC and model on my laptop. It's a great stepping stone but surrounded by 3 grey cubicle walls sucks the creativity out of me.
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, triangle,
397 Posts,
Join Date Aug 2011,
Location Ottawa, Canada
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I tried to keep whatever I did art oriented. So I did some custom airbrushing during the year I was laid off. Helmets, motorcycles, rc cars, etc. Kind of fund doing more tangible work, but it was tough.
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, polycounter,
782 Posts,
Join Date Aug 2009,
Location Atlanta, Georgia
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I don't know if anyone has any experience with this, but I'm actually looking to get into wwoofing (basically working on an organic farm in exchange for a place to stay and food) and hopefully starting remote freelance on the side.
"Not all those who wander are lost"
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, triangle,
301 Posts,
Join Date Nov 2011,
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I worked IT jobs - eventually I got a cushy position watching over a mac based network from noon till 9pm, I usually only had 1-2 hours of actual work that needed to get done in my shift so I spent the rest of the time working on art.
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, Moderator++,
6,718 Posts,
Join Date Oct 2004,
Location Austin, TX
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I do design work for phone book ads right now. The work is easy and the pay isn't bad for this part of the US. The bonus is it's a standard 9-5 and they even got me a tablet, so I'm drawing on breaks and I've usually got enough juice left when I get home to work on modeling and sculpting. I also do some light freelance, but it's been a few months since I was on a project.
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, triangle,
347 Posts,
Join Date Sep 2011,
Location Iowa
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I worked on getting a sugar momma.
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, polygon,
549 Posts,
Join Date Jan 2011,
Location Raleigh NC
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I worked at a restaurant.
I saved on having to buy food, so that's a plus.
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Here's my work history so far
Subway 2008-2009 making minimum wage for a year
Dairy Queen 2009-2010 making minimum wage for a year
Interned at a cg studio that did various work for 3 months in 2009 unpaid
Small Business DSL Tech Support for Centurylink, made $11 an hour 2010-2011 for a year.
Currently work at an internal help desk for Discover Card, making a little under 30k a year.
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, polycounter, lvl. 13,
7,071 Posts,
Join Date Jul 2009,
Location Columbus Ohio
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I've been working as Lighting/Comp artist for about 7 months now, 6 months at one studio, one month at a new studio.
Wages are comparable to modeling and it seems i can move over to the modeling department with some ease (only been at this specific company for about a month now, was at another one on a 6 month contract)
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, polygon,
740 Posts,
Join Date Jul 2010,
Location Vancouver, BC
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I spent over 5 years in college and beyond working at a call center for an alarm company. It was mind-numbing but easy work and the pay was good compared to other weekend/part time jobs during school, and it was certainly motivation to work on my portfolio after work every night.
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, dedicated polycounter,
1,563 Posts,
Join Date Aug 2006,
Location Irvine, CA
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I sold books to people who only knew what book they wanted by the color of the cover. (A lot of books are blue, this description is unhelpful).
I also fed baby tarantulas and scorpions for under minimum wage. And mopped dog kennels (these were my favorites)
Now I model trains and train accessories for a railroad training center, until next month, when I will accept my fate folding t-shirts at the mall.
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, null,
24 Posts,
Join Date Mar 2011,
Location Kansas
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Joseph Silverman
I try not to hang myself for a living. I get about minimum wage.

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I know how you feel, I have been at Target for 4 years. I have just about had enough..
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, polycounter,
860 Posts,
Join Date May 2011,
Location Fort Wayne, IN
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I'm currently working for Activision...as localization tester. ;) It's actually nice enough, playing games for a living, and localization testing is (imo) better then normal QA testing. And it's nice to take a break from thinking work-3D/portfolio-3D and just doing fun-3D. 
Anders K. Nielsen - Environment Artist - LinkedIn
"It is wrong always and everywhere for anyone to believe anything on insufficient evidence."
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, polycounter,
999 Posts,
Join Date Nov 2008,
Location Dublin, Ireland
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I used to work as a mailman, the pay was shit and the work was mind-numbing.
The same routine every day, it sucked ass. :|
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, line,
66 Posts,
Join Date Feb 2010,
Location Netherlands
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worked doing insurance admin and then marketing and design for web before making games
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, veteran polycounter,
3,903 Posts,
Join Date Feb 2007,
Location UK cheltenham
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