What We’re Seeing at Crossroads Film Festival

Darren

Design Partner

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It’s time for the 12th Annual Crossroads Film Festival in Jackson, MS. Creative Distillery designed the printed program guide (PDF Download) appearing as an insert inside last week’s Jackson Free Press. While I spent a couple days looking at the films’ synopses in work mode, this weekend I’ll be checking out some movies in relax mode. Judging from the guide, here’s what I’m most looking forward to:

Friday, April 1

Friday evening is a tough call, but I’m really intrigued by God of Love (Oscar-winning Best Short Film) and Der Sandmann. If you’re into music, the Music Video Showcase was really cool last year and I only expect it to be better this year. Later that night, I hear that the ‘Backwash’ series of web videos is hilarious, and stars a bunch of hilarious people, including a bunch of alumni from The State, which I used to watch on MTV.

Saturday, April 2

I’m really looking forward to the “adult” animation block at 11:15, even though it’s a little early for me on a Saturday. It’s also running against Chris Nolen’s Liver Mousse music doc, which I have unfortunately been to busy to check out (yet). At 6:30 is ‘La Hora Cero,’ which is a foreign action film made by a University of Southern Mississippi graduate. This is the movie I’m most looking forward to in the whole festival: “gritty, fast-paced heist film.” Yes, please. However, I’m bummed that I have to miss ‘Buck’ because I should take the opportunity with my wife out of town to see a cowboy documentary. I’ll check it out on Netflix later. I’ll hang around the same screen to see the sci-fi block, ‘22:43’ & ‘The Find.’

Sunday, April 3

Let’s be honest: on Sunday, I’m probably going to watch an Atlanta Braves daygame and catch up on work. BUT the Barefoot Documentaries are always worth seeing, and the JCDC short documentary later on that evening is very, very well done. I’ll see if the Feature Winner is something that I’d missed.

It’s going to be a great weekend of movies. Hope to see you there!

New Work: Ice Cream single art for Mike Garrigan & Mark Kano

Darren

Design Partner

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We created artwork for the iTunes single “Ice Cream,” a cover of a Sarah MacLachlan song by two of my favorite musicians, Mike Garrigan and Mark Kano.
Read Mike’s thoughts on the single on his blog and follow the link there to check out the single on the iTunes store.

Ice Cream Single

How to Be Self-Employed, #1: Finding a Work-Life Balance

gillian

Communications Partner

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work-life balanceI have a habit of saying I will never work another traditional 9-to-5 office job again, and I mean it. I have no good reason for this attitude: I never had a mind-numbing commute, I don’t have any Office Space horror stories about places I worked in the past and I actually remain close friends with many of my former co-workers.

I simply love being self-employed. I love working from home while working remotely with the Creative Distillery team, and I love having control over my own schedule and projects.

Of course, not having a 9-to-5 job doesn’t mean sleeping until noon and taking off for happy hour at 3 (sadly). It often means working late, working weekends and knowing that your laptop is always there for you to do just a little bit more before closing it for the night.

I think what a lot of us work-from-home folks struggle with is knowing when to stop. The lines are so blurred between job time and play time that it can be challenging to find the right work-life balance. I’m still learning how to be self-employed and not going too far toward either extreme—spending way too much time doing laundry and watching Beverly Hills, 90210 marathons instead of working, or spending way too much time slaving away at all hours instead of taking advantage of my flexible schedule. This blog series will focus on what we are learning as we go…

Tips for Keeping a Good Work-Life Balance

1. Work at a desk (in an office if possible).
I am just starting to do this, after years of working all day at the kitchen table, then moving my computer when it was time to eat dinner. Now I have a desk in a room with a door and a window, and I find that I am a lot less distracted throughout the day. Plus, there is a clear divide in the spaces I use for work time and for relaxation time.

2. Get dressed.
In real clothes. Not sweat pants. Not pajamas. I just don’t feel productive or presentable unless I actually get dressed before I start work. Also, it’s embarrassing if your neighbor or landlord or cable service provider drops by your house at 3 p.m. and you’re still in rumpled, oversized sleepwear. I unfortunately know those looks of pity from personal experience.

3. Set general work hours, but be flexible about them.
In general, I get up around 7 or 7:30, exercise, shower, get dressed (see above), eat breakfast and drink coffee while I read the news. Then I start working around 9 or 9:30 and try to finish up by late afternoon or early evening. That said, one of the best things about being self-employed is that I can be flexible as long as I get everything done. Sometimes I will work late one day so I can savor a long, leisurely lunch with friends in the middle of the week, or I will put up with a few insanely busy weeks so I can go on a trip without being chained to my laptop.

4. Build social contact into your day.
I’m an extrovert, and I do miss the buzz and chatter of an office, not to mention the company during coffee and lunch breaks. Google Chat and Skype meetings help keep me from losing all of my social skills, but real, in-person interaction is important to me. I seek out opportunities to be around others during my workday, whether it’s using the wifi in a library or coffee shop for a few hours or organizing a co-working day with friends who also work from home.

Do you have any tips on how to be self-employed while striking a good work-life balance?

thislocation Multidisciplinary Arts Event

Darren

Design Partner

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photo by Melody Moody

Last weekend we got to check out the ‘thislocation’ performance we’d earlier done a poster for. It’s been traveling Mississippi with the Front Porch Dancers and Jamie Weems & the Strange Pilgrims. The dancers have created performance art set to music composed by Jamie Weems. Each piece of music is meant to evoke a world city. Melia and I agreed that Barcelona’s pieces were our favorite.

There was a great crowd in Hal & Mal’s big room mixed up of dance and music fans.

Special thanks to Melody Moody for the super-cool event photograph.

Watch for Droppin’ Knowledge

Darren

Design Partner

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Darren at Clinton High School

Recently, Clinton High School teacher Tempress Holly invited me to speak to her Computer Graphics 2 class about newsletter design. We talked about grid, hierarchy and letting the content dictate the design. The students had lots of questions about life as a working designer.

It’s great for high school students to get exposure to the world of graphic design. My first exposure to design was my Graphic Design 1 class my sophomore year of college.

Tempress is a great teacher who works hard to give her students opportunities to work on real-life projects.

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