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How illustrator Kaitlin Brito protects her creative practice to avoid burnout and improve her paid work

By

Katy Cowan

6h ago· 9 min readen

Summary

Profile of Kaitlin Brito, a Peruvian-American illustrator who has worked with major clients like Google, Disney, and The New York Times. The article explores how she protects her creative spirit and "pure making" practice to avoid burnout, maintain artistic integrity, and ultimately produce better paid work. It covers her creative process, her approach to drawing with black ink pens as a commitment device, and how she finds inspiration in everyday objects like beans and thrifted trinkets.

Source

Creative BoomHow illustrator Kaitlin Brito protects her creative practice to avoid burnout and improve her paid workcreativeboom.com

Key quotes

· 3 pulled
Hitting that wall looked like me sitting in front of my computer, just staring at it, not being able to do anything.
I draw with a black ink pen so I can't turn back — there's no erasing, no undoing. You have to commit.
The magic is in the everyday things — beans, thrifted trinkets, the way light hits a window. That's where the sparkle lives.
Snippet from the RSS feed
The New Jersey illustrator on hitting the burnout wall, drawing with a black ink pen so she can't turn back, and finding the magic in everyday things like beans and thrifted trinkets. Kaitlin Brito m...

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