My office. Or rather, where I actually work.

When someone asks what my workplace looks like, I expect them to imagine something specific. A large desk. A decent chair. A monitor. Maybe a few sketches tacked to the wall. Something that looks like a studio.

I do have a studio. It exists, it has its square footage. But if I had to say where most of my illustrations are created – I'd have to point to the couch.

For years, I couldn't quite accept this. I associate the couch with rest, with TV shows, with idleness. The studio is associated with seriousness, with craftsmanship, with a deserving place for a creator. Yet it is on the couch, with an iPad on my lap and an Apple Pencil in hand, that the sketch, composition, and first layers of color are created – essentially everything that is most important in an illustration. I go to the studio later. At the very end. To finish the commission on a computer with a large monitor, check colors, and prepare files.

So the studio is – to use a cinematic metaphor – an editing room. Important, but not where the story happens.

It helped me stop thinking of my workplace as something that had to look a certain way. An iPad doesn't need a desk. It doesn't need special lighting or an ergonomic chair. It needs a charged battery and a moment of peace. The latter, of course, is the hardest to organize – but that's a separate issue.

I have illustrator friends whose studios look like warehouses – stacks of sketchbooks, boxes of pens, paper samples, old prints. I understand that. There's a certain richness to it, evidence of years of work. I don't have that. Most of my professional history sits on a hard drive.

I don't know if this is good advice for someone just starting out – because perhaps it's better to build a real workspace, with ritual and space. But if you discover that you think best on the couch or at the kitchen table – that's not a sign you're doing something wrong. That's just your office.

Digital art poster

Plans

However, the studio has its plans. In the room where for years there was mainly equipment and empty space, I want to arrange something like a gallery – an open studio to which I will invite clients. Not an exhibition in the institutional sense – no halogen lights, white walls, or descriptive plaques. Rather, a space where works hang as they would in a home. In the warm light of a lamp. Without the distance that every official exhibition creates.

This is a place to discuss commissions, but also to show what an illustration really looks like – printed, framed, on a wall. Because between a file on a screen and a poster in a room, there's a difference that cannot be described. You just have to come and see.

Okay, now that I've written about it, it's high time to finish this renovation!

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