Re-charge Your Creativity by Getting Out of the Office

We’ve all been there. You’re star­ting a brand new pro­ject. You’ve out­li­ned the requi­re­ments and lis­ted the fea­tu­res in various ways. You’re sit­ting and sta­ring at a blank docu­ment in Pho­toshop, or a blank page in your sketch­book, and your mind is also com­ple­tely blank.

Crea­tive bur­nout hap­pens to all of us. As a crea­ture of habit, I tend to get into a rou­tine and stick to it. After seve­ral weeks of sit­ting in the same chair in the same office day after day, I can feel the crea­ti­vity slowly ebb.

The ans­wer is to get out of the office (or whe­re­ver it is you usually work). It doesn’t mat­ter if it’s for a few hours or a few days, but a regu­lar change of envi­ron­ment is essen­tial to kee­ping your crea­tive edge.

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Regu­larly get­ting away from your fami­liar rou­tine can pay big divi­dends by refreshing your pers­pec­tive. If you sit in the same chair every day, your eyes tend to rest on com­for­ta­ble, fami­liar objects. As soon as you move out to the back gar­den, or the cof­fee shop, your eyes will have a whole new palette of sti­mu­lus. It’s not only visual; that rose bush in the gar­den, or the low hum of con­ver­sa­tion and music in the cof­fee shop can give your nose and ears a fresh pers­pec­tive as well.

In the case of public spa­ces, you have the added advan­tage of pos­sibly mee­ting and tal­king with new peo­ple. Some­ti­mes, just being near enough to overhear some con­ver­sa­tion can give you new pers­pec­tive on a design problem.

I came into design from a pho­to­graphy back­ground, so one of my favo­rite things to do to spark crea­ti­vity is to take my camera out and seek out pat­terns, tex­tu­res, colors, inter­face ele­ments, or wha­te­ver stri­kes my fancy. Doing this in the real world ins­tead of on the web gives the whole pro­cess a much more orga­nic feel.

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I like to plan seve­ral trips with my wife during the year where we go find a small town, stay in a bed and break­fast or hotel (an Inter­net con­nec­tion redu­ces stress for me on these trips). Then, we just spend two or three days either hiking local trails, or wal­king the streets and brow­sing shops in the town. During these trips, I always try to see things as much as pos­si­ble through  the lens of my camera. It narrows my focus and helps me iso­late inte­res­ting design ele­ments. Inva­riably, I return from a wee­kend trip with a fresh pers­pec­tive and a rechar­ged crea­tive battery.

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