Some examples from my inspiration folder

Some examples of items I've collected in my inspiration folder

Sometimes I have a clear picture of how I want to approach a new project.  Other times, it’s open-ended, leaving me without a clear themed direction for the graphic design or instructional design. For a long time, I have kept a simple, nondescript manila folder in the bottom right drawer of my desk.  In it, I collect Sunday circulars, postcards, direct mail flyers, etc., for when it comes time to create a new layout, color scheme, theme or graphic design.  This is akin to interior designers or HGTV-wannabes collating a stack of tear-sheets from magazines.  This is a technique that I learned way back in undergrad when I was print-publishing-and-packaging major.

Even farther back in high school when I was on the yearbook and newspaper staff, we collected headlines from magazines and newspapers that we could reuse.  We used scissors and glue and pasted the headlines into manilla folders.  So whenever we were hard-up for a headline—that is, one that didn’t sound like we were desperate for a headline—we went through the folders.  It was and still is a great technique.

Not long ago, I had a teacher recommend to me that she gets her students to collect really good adjectives and puts these either on notecards on a key ring or in a spreadsheet.  Whenever the kids need to write descriptive paragraphs or just use better adjectives, she gets them to pull them out.

More recently, I’ve begun to collect cartoons and images that I would like to reuse in my instruction.  I use Jumptags to collect my bookmarks, and it also allows you to save images (plus, video and HTML code, too).  So, particularly, now when I’m looking for an image to communicate an idea on a slide or in instruction, I’ll save it into my bookmarks, too.  Just in case I’d like to reuse it or use it as a source of inspriration.

In addition, a few of the blogs that I subscribe to regularly post unique sources of inspiration for designs, such as skateboard designs, photography and typography.  Here’s a list of a few that I am inspired by:

But here’s a few instructional design, development and elearning blogs that I also use for inspiration:

Where do your inspirations for graphic design, message design and instructional design come from?  Leave some comments and share, please.

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