Would you want to show your self 3D? Right here is a few recommendation from the specialists
Artist Eva Cremers and Territory Studio founder David Sheldon-Hicks share their top self-teaching tips, covering everything from YouTube tutorials to client projects
Artist and designer Eva Cremers counts brands like Nike, Pull & Bear and the New York Times among her clients – but in 2019, 3D design was hardly on her radar. She had originally studied graphic design, but after graduation received a surprising invitation to do an internship as an art direction in the London studio ManVsMachine. Before starting, they asked her to learn some 3D basics so she could understand how projects worked, and Cremers took her first steps towards a career.
"I had three months before I went to London and I literally spent it behind my computer recording as much as possible," she recalls. "This is where it started. I was lucky enough to be able to spend three months with no additional job. I spent day and night behind weird Cinema4D YouTube tutorials."
Cremers is completely self-taught in that she has gone from the very beginning – when she said she felt totally overwhelmed – to the point where she received commissions from big brands and did her 3D experiments regularly on her nearly 20,000 followers on Instagram released. So how did she do that? Initially, Cremers said she Googled beginner tutorials – there are many online – and "clicked and viewed everything."
Above: Images by Eva Cremers for a travel Portland campaign; Above: Abstract pictures by Eva Cremers