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I didn't finish college, so I'm not sure what advice to give. Ha!
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Christian Gosling San Jose.
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No idea. Just keep an hourly rate for yourself (estimate how long the project will take, and how much you think you need -- consider the value of your expertise / electricity / etc), then give the client a fixed / round number.
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Mint is cool if you can afford it.
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Fixed. Just a preference
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HTML5 is markup (how websites are structured), CSS is style (how it looks). There's no "best" language because all of them work hand in hand, along with Javascript, PHP and other web languages. I suggest you study what it actually is first before diving into creating the code itself. I'm sure you can Google most questions you may have about web development, no need to ask me.
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High school class 6 years ago + additional 6 years worth of view source perusing.
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Everyone can do illustration, not everyone can learn and integrate code with design well.
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I don't know exactly how much it costs, you can call them at the number posted on their website.
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Relentless attention to detail. Designing the little things nobody else sees. Constant improvement, every new work is better than the last.
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Any print shop that can do sticker on sintra boards. We usually have stuff printed at intermatrix.com.ph
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You can find success either way. Pick whichever .com domain name is easier to get / remember.
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Post your work online, try to practice, improve, experiment.
If your work is good enough, you will have an audience, and when you have an audience, you'll have clients.
Christian San Jose’s Bio
Creative Director at @HSThree + @CreatePH


