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Hardrockangel — So you want to do commissions?
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Commission info & TOS || Commission queue



A basic guide to setting up commissions

When it comes to commissioning, there is so much that needs to be decided, arranged and thought of that it can all appear a bit daunting at first.
However: when following a couple of basic guidelines, setting up commissions really is not as hard as you think!

If you find the article informative, please it.

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First things first
So you have decided you want to start doing commissions. That's great!
The first thing to do is to determine what you want to offer.

Do you want to offer drawings, or designs?
Will you be coding journal-skins for people, or will you be pixeling?

Take a look through your gallery and try to determine what you do best and what you like to do the most.
Because that will most likely be what you'll be offering.

  • TIP:
    Stick to what you're good at.
    Don't promise what you can't deliver when someone is paying you for it.


Now that you've most likely decided what you want to do, it's time for the next step.

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Payment & payment methods

Time to start writing up a price-list! But how much can or will you charge for a piece of your work?

A good way of going about this is to ask yourself the following:
* How good are your drawings?
* How many hours do you spend on a single drawing?

Chances are that if you just started drawing, you can’t ask the same price as someone who’s been doing it for years and does a better job at it.  

Don’t over-price, but also don’t under-price yourself!

Ask a couple of people you know for an estimate and for some advice. That way, you’ll have a broader view and you’ll be able to write up a price-list with more information.

Now is also the time to decide whether you want to be paid in advance, paid after the work, or paid in segments.
This is pretty much up to personal opinion, though most artists prefer payment in advance.
That way, when a client suddenly cancels the commission, you still get some payment for the work you've already put into a drawing.

Something to also keep in mind is that if you can't do the work, or if the client is not satisfied with the commission, is that in some cases you may have to refund.
Try avoiding this by doing your very best with every single picture and don't spend what you were paid before completing the commission.

Also: no rushing and definitely no sloppy sketch-deliveries when you were asked for a painting!


Moving on to payment methods, you have the choice between the two most used methods on deviantART: points or Paypal.

* Points are deviantART’s on-site currency and may be purchased here . Once purchased, they can be donated or, in this case, used to pay for a commission.

* Paypal is an online service that allows you to safely pay and transfer money over the internet.
Information on how to set  up a Paypal-account: www.squidoo.com/paypalsetup

Right about now you should be having a lot of information. Time to move on to the commission journal!

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Setting up your commission-journal

To let everyone know you’re taking commissions, it’s a good idea to have a commission-journal.
There, you can notify people of what you can be commissioned for and for how much. It's also a good idea to keep a list in your commission-journal of who you are currently working for and how the commissions are progressing.

I’ll try to dissect the commission journal point by point and link to a couple of examples afterwards.

But first of all:

* Commissions: open/closed?
Are you taking commissions or not?
This is important since it lets people know whether or not they should contact you for information.

* Amount of commission slots available: ?
How many commissions will you be taking at a time?
How many slots have already been filled?

Don’t bite off more than you can chew and keep it reasonable.
When starting out, I suggest keeping 3 commission slots.
You can always add more later on when you're accustomed to being commissioned.

The next thing to do is specify what you can be commissioned for. Include samples for each type of art you are offering and make sure to show your best works. After all, you want to get people interested, no? It’s also usually in your best interest to include a list of what you can / will do and a list of what you can’t / won’t.

TIP:
Keep your lay-out simple and orderly.
No one wants to dig through a wall of text in order to find what they’re looking for. The easier your journal is to navigate, the better!

You can always add a list of completed commissions at the end of the commission journal to show what you've already done.
A plus is that it also shows people you finish your commissions and that you are trustworthy.

A couple of examples of commission journals:
example ~ example ~ example ~ example

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Getting your name out there.

On this part I will be brief, though it's also something important that most people forget. Let people know you're taking commissions!

* Put a link to your commission-journal in your signature.

* Put a link to your commission-journal in your most recent journal and keep it there for as long as you're taking commissions. Nothing is worse than to have to dig through loads of journals in order to find the commission journal.

* Advertise it in the projects -forum for commissions you do in your free time.

* Advertise it in the job services -forum if you are wanting to take your commissions seriously and treat them as you would a real job.

And if all goes well...

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I am being commissioned; what now?

Ask for details about what the client wants of course!
Also set up a clear set of rules in Terms of Service (ToS).

* If the client is not satisfied, will you re-do the piece?
If yes: how many times?
If no: do you refund?

* When you finish the piece, how will you deliver it?
See below for various methods of delivering said piece to the client.

* Do you give progress-reports?
If yes: how often?

* Will the client be able to change his/her mind?
If yes: will there be extra cost?

There are a plethora of things that can be discussed to avoid complications later and I hardly listed them all. But I think you get the general idea, no?

When the commissioned piece is finished, you need to show the client, of course.
How you will do this all depends on what you have agreed upon with the client, but a couple of options are:

* Uploading it to deviantART and linking it to the client.

* Sending it by e-mail.
I recommend making a separate e-mail account for commissioning only.
Make sure people know about it and that they can contact you there

* Sending a copy / original in the mail
Keep the cost of sending things in mind and be sure to notify beforehand if the shipping will be included in the price or not.

This list is not exhaustive, of course.


IMPORTANT:
Do not send out the full-res, unwatermarked copy of the commission if you haven't been paid yet.
In cases of payment-after-commission, send a low-res and watermarked proof of the commission being finished.
You can send over a higher-res version after confirming you have been paid.

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Last but not least

Have fun with it!


And then all that rests me to say is: good luck!


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* A couple of related tutorials *



Skin by SimplySilent

Related content
Comments: 1287

SrneckaArt In reply to ??? [2017-08-12 18:46:27 +0000 UTC]

Mostly same on the FlightRising game. But you can still manage to find those people! State it clearly in you art thread/profile and search for costomers willing to pay in the real currency. Offer also an alternative in the game paid-currency, but to be same/more expensive than if they paid you with real money. 

I lift my in-game currency price to match the real money cost. I still got commissions in the in-game paid currency sometimes.

Search for random players who seem to be an adults and message them with an offer.

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thegreatsix In reply to ??? [2017-08-04 06:15:49 +0000 UTC]

Thank you very much for this!  I've been considering doing commissions for a long while now and this is very helpful!

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

Shiba-ChanXD [2017-07-27 23:37:40 +0000 UTC]

It too complicate 

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

StarlightBlueDreamer [2017-07-27 01:08:58 +0000 UTC]

I am thinking of starting up small point commissions, sort of a way to start me off you know so I can work more and progress to bigger commissons and this will help me a ton! Because I have never done commissions before and you know don't want to make mistakes on how to do it but also wanna have fun doing it! ^^ Working on what I'm going to commission right now! Thank you for making this it helps me out a lot

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M3hE1i-19 In reply to ??? [2017-07-26 18:02:01 +0000 UTC]

I tried making my commisions simple like you said
fav.me/dbhr1i4 anyone wanna give an opinion or commision me? XD

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

SantasElf666 In reply to ??? [2017-07-03 07:41:50 +0000 UTC]

I don't think I'm ever going to do commissions..

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

racemaster7 In reply to ??? [2017-07-02 11:23:06 +0000 UTC]

I found this very helpful as I'm about to start doing commissions. I'm also thinking of doing a request piece as a "practice" commission.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

Killproduct In reply to ??? [2017-06-30 20:26:45 +0000 UTC]

I've just thinking on doing commission and looking for a good "tuto" ! Thank you so much for sharing this and a bit of your experience to a newbie like me ♥ ! Now I get what it like :3 !

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

CaptainFuz In reply to ??? [2017-06-30 17:08:00 +0000 UTC]

Thank you! This was super helpful!

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

kayanne21 In reply to ??? [2017-06-22 09:09:17 +0000 UTC]

Thanks so much for this. It's so helpful.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

kenny-is-dead114 In reply to ??? [2017-06-20 21:38:11 +0000 UTC]

I've got a couple of questions; if someone commissions me to do something with a character from a franchise, can i do that legally? And are there any payment methods other than DA points or PayPal?
This has been super helpful, thanks!

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

EmoMeme-o In reply to ??? [2017-06-20 13:49:19 +0000 UTC]

uhm so someone commisioned me through the commision widget, and the points were deducted from thier account. I finished the drawing and sent it to them. and in my earings it says "clearing in 14 days", so do I get the points in 14 days??

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Sluierstaartje In reply to EmoMeme-o [2017-06-25 16:09:01 +0000 UTC]

Yeah it takes around 14 days for them to 'activate'

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

EmoMeme-o In reply to Sluierstaartje [2017-06-26 16:44:48 +0000 UTC]

ok thx

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

dmixdraws In reply to ??? [2017-06-20 10:08:59 +0000 UTC]

how can you show the pictures? I'm confused...

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

Blossomfart004 In reply to ??? [2017-06-14 15:34:49 +0000 UTC]

Helpful, thank you so much! 

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

ArcaneAsh In reply to ??? [2017-06-11 19:17:39 +0000 UTC]

what about taxes? and the legality of this? im new to all of this and i'd love to start doing commissions but im a newbie

👍: 0 ⏩: 2

JWatkinsArt In reply to ArcaneAsh [2017-07-19 04:23:45 +0000 UTC]

Late to the party, but I thought I'd butt in here.

Taxes matter.
If you're going to be making money with your artwork, keep track of what you're making. 
The tax laws differ from state to state and country to country. I'd suggest doing a little research about the tax laws specific to where you live

A good tip I could give you is to keep a careful record of what you make. The last thing you want is to be audited and not have records.

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WaywardHorizons In reply to ArcaneAsh [2017-06-15 22:42:42 +0000 UTC]

(I am not the author, but I can probably answer your questions.)

  • I don't think taxes would apply to point commissions or normal money commissions.
  • It's legal if you provide what they asked for (or at least something that reasonably provides what the commissioner asked for), or if you didn't, it's legal if you refund or redo the work. However, if you don't provide what they asked for and don't refund/redo the work or flat out don't make anything, then that's illegal.

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AmazingSphelon In reply to ??? [2017-05-24 14:42:49 +0000 UTC]

Thanks for your insights I'd say, this may help me quite some time and I'm just getting started to grasp
into the concept itself. But I think I better make guts asking this naive question.

Do people rarely complain about high commission prizes regardless of style? (I very understand if people do complain about low commission rates
because they're very concern on your prize and the value of how you do your work) and if they do they perhaps that's where I have
to be prepared for and perhaps (maybe) ignore customers like them and it's weird tough scenario.

I 'm a new artist on DA so thats why I haven't open up for early commissions at this time so I have to find the right timing.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

GenieArnneVBagayana In reply to ??? [2017-05-14 05:14:54 +0000 UTC]

Thank you so much! This is really helpful!    

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

Aiko-Hirocho In reply to ??? [2017-05-06 15:46:38 +0000 UTC]

I think my art is not good enough yet...
i do commissions because yeah i need the money...

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

Six-0-6 In reply to ??? [2017-05-03 17:16:00 +0000 UTC]

When you post a commissioned art, is it alright to add your signature or no? 'cause I was told that the commissioner has the right to keep the art they paid for, but not claim it as their own.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

Aiko-Hirocho In reply to Six-0-6 [2017-05-06 15:45:51 +0000 UTC]

I personally sign them, so...
it has nothing to do with watermark, but at least signing is ok?

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

Six-0-6 In reply to Aiko-Hirocho [2017-05-06 16:38:32 +0000 UTC]

Oh okay. Thank you so much for answering! 😊

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Aiko-Hirocho In reply to Six-0-6 [2017-05-06 16:39:00 +0000 UTC]

your welcome (:

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

dontmineit In reply to ??? [2017-04-30 00:08:31 +0000 UTC]

Thank you for this! I was planning to start doing commissions and needed some internet help!

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

Hannah-chan1 In reply to ??? [2017-04-29 14:59:29 +0000 UTC]

Since i don't do digital art and do traditional, can i still do this?

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

Neko-san1234 In reply to Hannah-chan1 [2017-05-29 14:45:48 +0000 UTC]

You can most certainly do commissions as a traditional artist! Once the piece is finished, I would suggest scanning the art--that way you can post it on dA or tumblr and link it to the client, or you can re-print it on sturdy cardstock, wrap it in protective plastic, and mail it to the client. The important part here is making sure you have a good scanner that can accurately scan the colors and lines you use in your piece. 

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Hannah-chan1 In reply to Neko-san1234 [2017-05-29 15:35:34 +0000 UTC]

Aw thanks!

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BlackDaggerArtist In reply to ??? [2017-04-23 19:19:19 +0000 UTC]

Can I ask something? I wasn't really able to find it on any tutorial, but when I'm creating my PayPal account and wanting to use it for commissions and that kind of stuff to recive money what kind of account should I create: Bussines Account or Personal Account?

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

Lye-chii In reply to ??? [2017-04-16 15:06:31 +0000 UTC]

Hello, I found your tutorial really helpful How do you deliver your finished piece? Do you just like send the high res file like jpg or its raw file in psd?

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

albonatious In reply to Lye-chii [2017-05-19 18:28:03 +0000 UTC]

Personally, when I finish something, I send the .png. That way its a higher resolution and doesn't have the fuzziness a .jpg has. and its smaller to send than the .psd. 

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

Lye-chii In reply to albonatious [2017-05-21 14:21:54 +0000 UTC]

I see, thanks

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

albonatious In reply to Lye-chii [2017-05-21 19:59:59 +0000 UTC]

No problem!

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duptitung In reply to ??? [2017-04-14 08:05:35 +0000 UTC]

how do you deliver a commissioned digital piece? do you print if out and then deliver it or you send them the digital files(psd, jpeg, etc)? 

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

Mudana-dokuso In reply to duptitung [2017-04-17 23:24:36 +0000 UTC]

send it via digital files, much cheaper and easier

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

Mr250 In reply to ??? [2017-04-09 22:23:47 +0000 UTC]

Thank you! I wanted to get started with commissions and this helped greatly!

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Hollytee In reply to ??? [2017-04-09 04:00:30 +0000 UTC]

that was helpful

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

Thunder-B In reply to ??? [2017-04-06 05:22:20 +0000 UTC]

Can someone see my gallery and tell me if I should take comissions please? I'm really looking forward to this, but don't know if it's too soon.

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scn71402 In reply to ??? [2017-04-01 20:36:11 +0000 UTC]

I think that people who commission usually don't have enough guts or honor to learn to draw themselves, so they find experienced artists and pay them enormous amounts of money just to get things done. Tutorials exist for a reason. Also, if you will learn to draw by referencing the commissioned artwork, which many people will say that the person is stealing the art and in all that opera, it might give some boost to your learning progress. This is why I don't commission myself - instead I look up for tutorials and try them.

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tarte-milk In reply to scn71402 [2017-04-05 22:40:11 +0000 UTC]

that's incredibly ignorant, honestly. I appreciate other artist's styles and I want to support them, and I'd love to get art of my characters or stuff to kind of add to a collection. Not everyone overcharges for art, and not everyone that commissions someone can't draw what they want drawn. 

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scn71402 In reply to tarte-milk [2017-04-12 09:25:59 +0000 UTC]

I am glad that you appreciate the artist's styles, but my point is, that, relying just on commissions to get art, instead of trying to learn to draw and trying to draw the picture itself, is something that will set your art experience back. Because who draws, is actually the one who you are paying to, not you yourself.

However, I also wonder how the artists who are being paid for commissioning, did learn to draw themselves.

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Meltyowl In reply to scn71402 [2017-04-03 04:06:26 +0000 UTC]

Usually people just want their character drawn in another artist's style. It's not justifiable to generalize it like that. Additionally, art created from solely tutorials and not years of experience doesn't have the same level of quality. Commissions are what keep a lot of artists from starving. :/

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scn71402 In reply to Meltyowl [2017-04-12 09:22:13 +0000 UTC]

Whenever we try, and succeed/fail at it, we actually get experience. Tutorials are in fact also a part of trying. I know people want their characters drawn in another's style, another reason why people commission might be because they're too lazy to learn to draw themselves, but to be honest, I only wonder, did the commissioning artists develop a style themselves, did they get inspired by other artists, did they use tutorials themselves or did they learn just by trying and failing without use of any references etc. I have absolutely nothing against commissioning, it's just I think that relying only on commissions to get art will not influence your art experience, since all you do by requesting a commission is paying money, instead of holding a pen in your hands and drawing it yourself. Artists themselves, who commission, just stick to what they are best at, instead of trying anything new.

Also, since many people consider trying to reference the art that you commissioned, or get inspired by it, as "stealing", this is another reason why commissions are only for people who are either respecting the artists too much so they literally cannot learn to draw themselves out of fear of being accused of "stealing", not just for those who are too lazy to learn to draw.

You become an artist, not are born as one.

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Meltyowl In reply to scn71402 [2017-04-13 18:05:01 +0000 UTC]

Being inspired off art is not stealing. Being inspired entails you work aspects of other art styles to eventually create your own. Copying it exactly is indeed stealing though. There's a difference. A beginner artist learns from tutorials, referencing and the works. But the art, like I said, that comes out of that isn't often satisfactory if you're trying to build a character portfolio. Also saying that most artists that commission only do what they're good at is a misinformed generalization. That implies they only do commissions and most don't. Most draw every single day and some at every opportunity, be it in notepaper corners, sketchbooks. Even if you're doing commissions you're learning as you draw; mastering lineweight, colour pairing, staging, pose, etc. 
That being said, like learning anything, learning to make art is NOT easy. It's not fair to slander people who cannot draw or simply don't have time to learn by calling them gutless, lacking in honour and lazy. Get off your high horse. I've never heard anything more ignorant. Do you think a company CEO draws up his own logo? They hire someone for that. By your logic, the CEO should just search up "logo tutorial". It won't come out with the same quality. The CEO won't know how to properly make his way around the program, aesthetic staging, colour theory. But he needs his logo to be professional. A lot of people feel this way about their characters as well. When they're displaying their character portfolio, they don't want to show people their shite art they drew up after learning art for a week. They want quality art to show and they perhaps will work their way up to that level but that doesn't take weeks or months. It takes YEARS. Not only that but it feels good to see someone else apply their style and ideas to your character. I make commission art but I still like to pay for art from others. Not only does it give my characters style variety but it gives back to the community. If that seems like gutless laziness to you then you are really dense.

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Anaryo In reply to ??? [2017-03-30 03:33:51 +0000 UTC]

I have a question, should I add my signature to a commissioned drawing? or should I post it without it?  

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DELTADRAGONN In reply to Anaryo [2017-04-03 09:47:40 +0000 UTC]

Probably add your signature, but don't make it huge, just in the corner or something.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

Anaryo In reply to DELTADRAGONN [2017-04-09 18:33:45 +0000 UTC]

I see
Thank you XD

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DELTADRAGONN In reply to Anaryo [2017-04-10 05:15:39 +0000 UTC]

No problem

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