Become a Capable Designer in 90 Days
Three months of focused learning gets you to the point where you can take on real design work — freelance, in-house, or for your own projects.
Free for 7 days. No credit card required.
No credit card required
Your Plan
Foundations
Weeks 1–4
Build Skills
Weeks 5–10
Portfolio
Weeks 11–14
The Plan
90 Days plan
18 tasks across 3 milestones — 8–12/week
Month 1: Foundations
Weeks 1–4- Complete a comprehensive design principles course
- Master Figma fundamentals and build 5 practice projects
- Study typography deeply: pairing, hierarchy, and readability
- Learn color theory and create 10 original color palettes
- Analyze 50 professional designs and document what works
Month 2: Applied Skills
Weeks 5–8- Create 3 complete brand identities with guidelines documents
- Design a multi-page website (homepage, about, pricing, blog)
- Build a mobile app UI with 8+ screens and a prototype
- Design print collateral: posters, business cards, packaging mockup
- Learn to present and explain your design decisions
Month 3: Portfolio & Launch
Weeks 9–13- Create 2 additional portfolio projects in your preferred niche
- Polish your 8 best projects with case study write-ups
- Build a professional portfolio website or Behance profile
- Get critiques from experienced designers and iterate
- Start applying for freelance gigs or junior design roles
- Create a personal brand identity for yourself
- Set up social media presence showcasing your design work
- Plan your continued learning path and specialization
Obstacles
What gets in the way
Common challenges and how to overcome them
Challenge
Thinking you need to be naturally creative or artistic
Solution
Design is 80% learned principles and 20% aesthetic judgment. Typography, layout, color theory, and hierarchy are systematic skills anyone can learn. Taste develops with exposure — study great design daily.
Challenge
Tool overwhelm — too many apps and features to learn
Solution
Start with one tool (Figma is free and industry-standard). Learn 20% of features that cover 80% of use cases. Master fundamentals before exploring advanced features. You can learn other tools later.
Challenge
Comparing your work to professionals and feeling inadequate
Solution
Every designer started where you are. Focus on your progress, not others' finished work. Recreate designs you admire to learn techniques, then apply those techniques to original projects.
Challenge
Not knowing what to design for practice
Solution
Use design challenges (Daily UI, Sharpen.design) for prompts. Redesign apps or websites you use daily. Create designs for fictional businesses. Personal projects (wedding invites, social media graphics) count too.
Challenge
Getting stuck in tutorial mode without building original work
Solution
Follow the 1:3 rule — for every tutorial you watch, create 3 original designs applying what you learned. Your portfolio should be original work, not tutorial recreations.
$52K
Average starting salary for graphic designers
8–10
Portfolio projects needed for your first job
3 mo
To learn fundamentals with daily practice
23%
Growth in demand for digital design skills
FAQ
Common questions
Start with Figma — it's free, runs in the browser, and is the industry standard for UI/UX and general design work. It covers 90% of what beginners need. Add Adobe Illustrator or Photoshop later if you need print or photo editing capabilities.
Yes. Most working designers are self-taught or learned through online courses and practice. What matters is your portfolio, not your credentials. A strong portfolio of 8-10 projects is more valuable than a design degree.
With consistent practice (1-2 hours/day), most people can take on basic freelance projects in 3-6 months and be competitive for junior roles in 6-12 months. The timeline depends on your focus area and portfolio quality.
Learn broad fundamentals first (typography, color, layout), then specialize based on interest: brand identity, UI/UX, social media graphics, print design, or illustration. Specialists typically earn more than generalists.
No. A laptop with a trackpad is sufficient for most graphic design work. A drawing tablet helps for illustration but isn't needed for layout, typography, or UI design. Start with what you have.
Study 3-5 great designs daily (Dribbble, Behance, Awwwards). Ask yourself why they work. Practice recreating layouts. Your eye develops through exposure and analysis — it's a trainable skill, not a gift.
Explore
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Build a Morning Routine
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For Designers
Ready to learn graphic design in 90 days?
Describe your goal. AI builds your personalized plan with milestones and daily tasks.
Free for 7 days. No credit card required.