Well, you can be a graphic designer at a print company, which really translates to typesetting. You can be a junior graphic designer. You can be a typesetter.
My uncle is a graphic designer (mainly Christian themed designs) and he does T-Shirts, he has done Church webpages, Tattoo shop webpages, just got the contract to design the new Oklahoma Art Museum page. He really has a broad spectrum of work. He is contracted throgh a larger graphic design company, but gets to pick and choose his customers and what he works on.
Well, you can be a graphic designer at a print company, which really translates to typesetting. You can be a junior graphic designer. You can be a typesetter.
a huge list of graphic arts jobs!
http://www.salary.com/careers/layouthtmls/crel_narrowbrief_SM03.html
My uncle is a graphic designer (mainly Christian themed designs) and he does T-Shirts, he has done Church webpages, Tattoo shop webpages, just got the contract to design the new Oklahoma Art Museum page. He really has a broad spectrum of work. He is contracted throgh a larger graphic design company, but gets to pick and choose his customers and what he works on.
Graphic Designer
Multimedia Designer
Higher Education
Publications Designer
Book Publisher
Web Designer
**Museum Art Director
Communications Specialist
Corporate Setting
(from first link)
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Publishers including:
Magazine
Periodical
Book
Directory
Newspaper
Design firms
**Advertising agencies
Publishing houses
Business form companies
**Publicity firms
In-house creative departments
**Large retail stores
**Nonprofit organizations
Government agencies
Universities
**Self-employed (freelance)
(from 2nd link)
**often overlooked…