
Which do you prefer blind contest or public?
#24
Posted 07 September 2012 - 01:54 AM
#25
Posted 16 September 2012 - 04:35 PM
The public contest maybe is a best way for learning from other designer’s experience, skills… and mistakes. The amount and quality of experience and skills we can share… makes us humans. The fear for being copied â€â€I believe is a sign for lack of confidence. There is an insoluble contradiction behind it: art creation (despite all the personal, private, it may look), is a social process. No less social than the learning process. And earnings from that creation… are private. There are you, and no-you irreducible in regarding the money.
I have not contested yet. But I hope I will participate in both, public and blind. I love illustrate… our thinking is our echo from reality, our illustration of the world.
"Illustrate ergo sum."

#30
Posted 28 September 2012 - 09:54 AM
The brief should be clear and to the point and the prize equally worth our time & effort.
#31
Posted 03 October 2012 - 03:34 AM
#32
Posted 03 October 2012 - 08:26 AM
I very much agree with this approach: if rating points are only given close to the end, it does prevent last minute entries thus keeping the competition "clean". Good point!
#33
Posted 04 October 2012 - 03:34 PM
Honestly I think it really depends on the ch. I feel like I've taken too many shots in the dark with blind contest because the CH brief is well too brief. Or they say one thing and actually wanted something completely different. Though I do like that they prevent copy cats I really do like to have a general feel of what style the CH wants in the general sense of font (serif no serif, script) and colors, and for that I like public contests. I just had a really good experience in a contest where the CH rated their top twenty near the end with all the same amount of points that way designers had a feel of what they were looking for but it prevented too much copying.
That is a pain I know all too well. Although I prefer blind over public, there are times where I feel the CH and myself are just going in circles; it can get frustrating when you really don't have a sense of what is expected.
#37
Posted 19 December 2012 - 10:54 AM
So public or not, copying is a matter of ethics and moral and the a person should avoid this immoral act for his or her reputation. But chance for creating the best design that suits the needs of the CH is more in public contests.
#40
Posted 03 January 2013 - 02:01 AM
I had a poor experience with a blind contest. The CH had a brief that stated a preference for a logo with an icon. I submitted a text-style logo early on -- no icon -- because it worked. For the entire duration of the contest, I had the top-rated design, and the CH kept saying how much she loved the simplicity. Then, suddenly, she wasn't so sure about the font -- she was afraid it may have been too "common," but she liked the icon-less design. So, the last day, she changed the brief and actually uploaded a jpg of a design where she had basically recreated my work and asked for designers to submit icon-less designs similar to her upload. She had no idea what she wanted when she wrote the brief, but after working with me, she was able to narrow her focus. Since the contest was blind, no one knew that she was asking others to essentially plagiarize my work. If it had been a public contest, that never could have happened.
Public contests keep everyone honest. Sure, sometimes designers get tunnel vision when others' work is in front of you, but I try to submit early on to avoid that problem. Generally, if a contest already has more than 20-30 designs submitted, I usually don't even bother, because in my experience, the first designs seem to influence a CH's mindset. Also, by getting my first design in early, I avoid any claims of plagiarism by another contestant.
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