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LOS ANGELES HYPNOSIS BLOG - THE MOST COMPREHENSIVE RESOURCE FOR HYPNOTHERAPY IN LOS ANGELES

Twenty Ways To Overcome Creative Blocks

For a creative professional, a creative block isn’t just frustrating — it’s potentially career-damaging. When you rely on your creativity to pay the bills and build your reputation, you can’t afford to be short of ideas or the energy to put them into action. Struggling for (new) ideas? It happens to the best of us - so here are twenty proven tips to see those inspirational juices flowing again.

Hypnosis To Overcome Creative Blocks Los Angeles

01. Tap into your subconscious

"Strange things happen in a semi-sleep state, when your subconscious takes over," says Shotopop's Casper Franken. "Wake up and write down whatever was happening before you forget it."

02. Get it down on paper

Write your main ideas down in columns, and list absolutely everything that comes to mind. You can mix and match the lists for unusual and original combinations.

03. Always carry a sketchbook

"A visually loaded word or phrase can jump out from a passage of text, or a song," proposes London based designer and illustrator Craig Ward. "Be sure to sketch those ideas down when they come."

04. Don't be afraid to step away

Completely open briefs can be the worst for causing creative block. Try to distance yourself from the project; take a break and come back to it with a clear head.

05. Finish what you've started

"There's no such thing as a bad idea: the creative part is in seeing it through to completion, and turning dreams into reality," argues Mr Mills, creative director at ustwo.

06. Put some fun in your creative place

"Sterility leads to an empty void of nothingness," adds Mills. Always try to inject some color and life into your creative place, and don't run it like a clinic or a prison.

07. Don't retread your steps

"Inspiration is intangible: you can't do it on purpose," believes illustrator Alex Trochut. "If you just try to reproduce how a good project happened in the past, you'll never get the same result."

08. Look in unlikely places

Go and do something else entirely. You'd be amazed at where new ideas are hiding out. They're often where you would least expect them to be.

09. Expect the unexpected

"The best ideas don't need to be sought out at all; you just have to train yourself not to swerve out of the way when they jump out in front of you," remarks Jon Forss, co-founder of Non-Format.

10. Explore other creative disciplines

Inspiration can come from anywhere. Look beyond other artists and designers: photography, fashion, film, poetry, for instance.

11. Expand your mind

It's like mushroom picking: you wander through the magical woods of inspiration and see a big, beautiful mushroom. Pick it, make a delicious meal, and if your friends like it, go into the woods for more.

12. Go against the flow

Try to approach every brief with the opposite of what everyone else would do. It might not be the direction you choose in the end, but it can help to avoid cliched scenarios.

13. Take notes on life

The best ideas often come when doing completely random, uncreative tasks. Jot them down as they come to you, or snap a photo of things that catch your eye.

14. Grab some 'you time'

Working on too many projects at once can stifle your creativity. If you're feeling burned out, take some time to yourself and turn everything off for a couple of hours. Or a couple of days.

15. Don't be bound by the brief

On smaller jobs, less information can sometimes be better to avoid forced influences. "Your solution might open the client's eyes to new things," points out Jeff Knowles, founder of Planning Unit.

16. Broaden your horizons

Immersing yourself in particular arts or cultures that you wouldn't normally be interested in could lead to interesting mixed-context inspirations, so get involved.

17. Push the boundaries

Experiment in your personal projects or, if you haven't got the time or energy after a hard day's work, go off on a tangent for an hour while working on an actual project.

18. Get a fresh perspective

View things from different angles. Some upside-down lettering in a stack of papers or a scrunched-up sketch can create unusual shapes and spark off new ideas.

19. Sleep on it when you can

"Try not to think and do on the same day", says designer Jessica Hische. "You tend to sort the good from the bad naturally, and occasionally come up with some really off-the-wall things overnight."

20. Shake up your surroundings

Try different working environments to keep things fresh. Sketch at home or on the train, refine final work in your studio, and brainstorm in coffee shops, for instance.

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