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Digital Art

— Creating art with tablets, styluses, and software
64 members Created Feb 2026

Digital art and accessibility: tablet setups for limited mobility

twitter.com/user/status/123456789

I've been doing digital art as a side income alongside a full-time job for four years, and I want to be honest about the logistics because the 'quit your day job and make art full time' narrative doesn't reflect most artists' reality.

The time: evenings and weekends, maybe twelve hours a week of actual productive drawing time. This limits the volume of work I can take on and means I have to be selective about commission types — longer timelines, higher value work rather than many quick pieces.

The income: it supplements my salary meaningfully. In good months it covers rent. In slow months it covers groceries. It is not and likely will never be a full salary replacement at my current rate and volume. That's acceptable to me.

What works in this model: clear communication with clients about my availability and timeline. I tell every client upfront that I'm not a full-time artist and my turnaround is longer than they might get from someone who is. Most clients who need the kind of work I do are fine with this.

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