• It bears repeating: according to the handbook for designers Iʼm currently reading, the two main reasons for designers becoming incapable of doing their work, are

    1. mental health
    2. back problems.

    If you ask me, your dear proprietor of Code and Canvas, the after-hours tumblog about this and that, these issues are caused by self-neglect.

    Maybe collecting more data on health in the workplace, especially as self-employed designers is a good idea?

    I have some notes on how to set up my workplace ergonomically, and a few others about how to avoid feeling like shit.

    Iʼll see where these notes lead to, say in six months from now.

    Source: My after‑hours blog on Tumblr Code & Canvas

  • Vorgründungszeit beginnt. Danke an @bdg_de @fb_gestaltungundmedien_diploma @wochenorientierte_zeitplanung @tilostaudenrausch (der sich nicht taggen lässt, weil wir nicht einander folgen, was meine Schuld ist 😅) und @ariane.konzepterin für die beste Unterstützung und Transformation vom Amateur zum Profi.
    #kommunikationsdesign #freiberufler #gestalter
    Source: My Instagram account Mario Breskic

  • The staying power of services like Goodreads has impressed me. It is 2025 and despite certain other projects, it is still around.

    I decided to use it, signed up, got my own vanity url, added the next 9 books I want to read after finishing Bernays’ Propaganda (which is a very good book for graphic designers and communication designers, I think).

    I have decided to see my work as a graphic designer as entrepreneurial: I need to nurture contacts, mutual respect, I need to invest in my own education, and I need to maintain myself as professionally as I can.

    Source: My after‑hours blog on Tumblr Code & Canvas

  • Spent a few free minutes here and there to slowly work through my Instagram bookmarks. My goal is to save each one locally, tag each in Adobe Bridge for ease of use, and to add these to my visual library I’ve been building since, let me see–June 2024.

    Eventually, I will work through all of my social media bookmarks and actually stop using these altogether. There is enough space on my laptop for my own, and I think when you tag things yourself, they end up making sense to you.

    Kind of like how you set up your own workshop.

    Source: My after‑hours blog on Tumblr Code & Canvas

  • codeandcanvas:

    codeandcanvas:

    Understood the value of separating a production from a development environment in regards to my own website.

    Following a tip from a very good friend, it is a good idea to have a website without tracking on it if you, like me, are still just running a personal website, rather than a commercial one.

    So, I’ll do it like this: I will keep my personal website as is while I will keep working on my new website, using a different url to the one I am for my website.

    So, when I am done with the new, I can just switch.

    Fingers crossed, I don’t have all my books with me, so I’m playing this by intution alone.

    Using Plesk and my backups, I could easily roll back my changes to a day prior to what I did today.

    I am sort of digging how clean I made my website in regards to it doing any kind of tracking.

    I might keep this for my fraidycat people, instead of throwing it away: when I do the switch, I think I want to have a failsafe version of my website around. Like putting it into failsafe.mariobreskic.de or even old.mariobreskic.de (safe.mariobreskic.de sounds semiotically best, I just realized), doing some easy mirroring of content between the future new website and the one without tracking.

    Why do I want this? My good friend, I want out of my own behavioural loop of creation and oblivion: I want creation now, only, the oblivion comes later anyhow.

    I have this thing, where I work on something, always.

    Source: My after‑hours blog on Tumblr Code & Canvas

  • codeandcanvas:

    Understood the value of separating a production from a development environment in regards to my own website.

    Following a tip from a very good friend, it is a good idea to have a website without tracking on it if you, like me, are still just running a personal website, rather than a commercial one.

    So, I’ll do it like this: I will keep my personal website as is while I will keep working on my new website, using a different url to the one I am for my website.

    So, when I am done with the new, I can just switch.

    Fingers crossed, I don’t have all my books with me, so I’m playing this by intution alone.

    Using Plesk and my backups, I could easily roll back my changes to a day prior to what I did today.

    I am sort of digging how clean I made my website in regards to it doing any kind of tracking.

    I might keep this for my fraidycat people, instead of throwing it away: when I do the switch, I think I want to have a failsafe version of my website around. Like putting it into failsafe.mariobreskic.de or even old.mariobreskic.de (safe.mariobreskic.de sounds semiotically best, I just realized), doing some easy mirroring of content between the future new website and the one without tracking.

    Why do I want this? My good friend, I want out of my own behavioural loop of creation and oblivion: I want creation now, only, the oblivion comes later anyhow.

    Source: My after‑hours blog on Tumblr Code & Canvas

  • Understood the value of separating a production from a development environment in regards to my own website.

    Following a tip from a very good friend, it is a good idea to have a website without tracking on it if you, like me, are still just running a personal website, rather than a commercial one.

    So, I’ll do it like this: I will keep my personal website as is while I will keep working on my new website, using a different url to the one I am for my website.

    So, when I am done with the new, I can just switch.

    Fingers crossed, I don’t have all my books with me, so I’m playing this by intution alone.

    Source: My after‑hours blog on Tumblr Code & Canvas

  • I’ve come to the next iteration of what I am doing, so let me write those things down.

    I’ve worked through my digital library of graphic design pdfs. These pdfs were all acquired during my graphic design study, some even afterwards. All of these books (leaving out the ones I could neither obtain legally as a pdf, nor as a book, without seriously paying way too much) came from study material during my study.

    And I have worked through three‑and‑a‑half semesters of reading material in preparation for what is next: me reading all these books.

    To make this work in a way which helps me become the best graphic designer I can be, I have used Adobe Bridge to add keywords to these pdfs, with each class having its own keyword.

    And there are books which are far more often referred to as in‑depth reading material than others: these I see as either very basic or very important, a difference which at this point makes little sense to make, I confess. Some of these books have four to six classes referencing them, while most belonging to one or two.

    And what I think is fairly unique about my study at my alma mater is, that some books are required reading material, with sort of like a guide of which chapters to read. So I’ve marked those in Adobe Bridge with a rating of five stars, in order to easily find them.

    With having said all of that, the next few weeks will be spent a little differently than the ones before this what I now realize is a milestone for me: now that I have created the order I need, I will spend more time on reading and applying the knowledge read, which in turn makes me return to an older system of keeping track in public of what I am doing­—to post less often.

    I expect to change how I use my social media accounts in the future as well: to treat social media as a serious marketing tool for my own work. I think that will come with how serious I treat this process ahead of me.

    And, you ask, what are these books I have mentioned?

    They are about working scientifically, entrepreneurial management, online marketing, a book about visual information and communication, screen and interface design, a book about digital photography, media design, and finally a book about design foundations.

    I think you can mix your own post‑degree study with these bits of information.

    And sure enough, it has been a year since my degree, this is just the next thing I need to do in order to become an entrepreneur.

    See you next time!

    Source: My after‑hours blog on Tumblr Code & Canvas

  • “The excitement of the artist at the easel or the scientist in the lab comes close to the ideal fulfillment we all hope to get from life, and so rarely do. Perhaps only sex, sports, music, and religious ecstasy—even when these experiences remain fleeting and leave no trace—provide as profound a sense of being part of an entity greater than ourselves. But creativity also leaves an outcome that adds to the richness and complexity of the future.”

    Source: My after‑hours blog on Tumblr Code & Canvas

  • So, I recently got into thinking about how mental loops represent the ends of the mind, where thoughts loop back on themselves.

    And I have been thinking about what deserves my energy, too.

    Today, I went ahead and undid each block and filter for quite a few accounts on quite a few websites (with the exception of two disgusting people, because they can rot in hell for all I care), because I realized that this is basically treading water: to put in the work to see or not see other people’s posts on websites kind of feels like a neverending hassle, in hindsight.

    You see, I’m a person, and since you are a person too, I think we have a lot of things in common, chief of which is that we are limited in very specific ways: as persons, we need sleep, water, calories, vitamins, essential amino‑acids, and none of these things are negotiable. Then come joy, beauty, good people around us. Also, not negotiable. We deserve to feel good.

    But if we just stay at the level of calories, imagine using your limited amount of calories on something which doesn’t benefit you. Now, you might be right in saying that you do that a lot, that we all do that a lot, so I will concede that you are right: we do use calories to do things that do not benefit us.

    But imagine the following, if you are already in this mindset of disgruntledness: that on top of these things you don’t enjoy doing, you would have to do also other things which don’t benefit you, but which really cut into your brain’s available sugar for the day.

    Imagine you need to see and read stuff you neither want to see and read. And then imagine that you are being told that, well, if you don’t want to see and read what does not interest you, you need to put in the HOURS to filter, block, curate and fine‑tune what someone else has decided you get to see. Don’t blame us, they say, you must do better instead.

    And now imagine how many delicious apples, refreshing drinks of water, whole assortments of healthy nuts and leafy greens that would take, over and over again. To achieve what exactly?

    I’ll tell you: to make whatever these people claim to have been tailored for you and your interests your sole interaction with the medium you are using, and making you look forever for the flaw, the one thing you have missed in your filtering curating dilligence, and add that to the list you keep adding things to every single day.

    I say, no wonder nobody talks anymore. I say, no wonder nobody wants to interact anymore, when there are two things fighting for your attention, and you only have the one attention to give.

    The first thing is who you have given your attention to, friends, lovers, artists of a thousand walks, who, by some twist on RSS you can now read about.

    The second thing is who you are being forced to look at, countless “For You”s which all just waste your breakfast in calories and good stuff.

    So, if you are sick of that, avoid both the algorithm and its curation, find your people yourself (and pay for a good vpn and adblocker, so you don’t have to curate either of them yourself, either, ever, and ideally forget about ads and your software keeping you sane), and direct your energies towards things you actually care about.

    And never follow idiots. This is what I would say, assuming that we are both persons, you and me.

    Look at what people pay you for your work. And then look at how much time you need to create what these people then call your “bubble”. I don’t see them buying you breakfast, for seemingly fine‑tuning their garbage, while in reality just making you look at a whoooole bunch of ads.

    Rise above the noise. Be a person.

    Source: My after‑hours blog on Tumblr Code & Canvas

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