Since, I've been on this forum, I've read over and over again about all these people who have done something else before becoming a
sign person. Perhaps more than one job or vocation.
So, what have you done before entering into the
sign industry ??

This is a bit long but I hope you enjoy it. I was a 26 year old housewife with an 1 year old and a 2 year old when my husband decided he didn't want to be a husband and father anymore, so he left. I had no education beyond high school and I had worked on and off as a waitress. I had to go on welfare. I had no skills and no hope. While on welfare, a program was offered as a "retraining" to those who had been out of the workforce for more than 5 years. There was a lot of aptitude testing and placements in different industries to see where your skill set was. Apparently I had "some" artistic ability as I had a steady hand at toll painting. LOL! Really? One of my placements was in a
sign shop. I was hooked. Like everyone else, I never paid much attention to
signs or how they were made or mounted. Never mind the design aspect and the impact of color, shape and font. A
sign just got me to where I was going. The government at the time would offer an employer half my wage while I was being trained. First day there the boss told me "I haven't gotten the paperwork done yet. Come back next week". This went on week after week. Finally in frustration she told me "I don't have time for this. The job doesn't exist"(at the time I had no understanding of peak season). I went home and cried. Then I went back and said "Give me the paperwork. I'll do it". At the time, vinyl and plotters were fairly new and most images were drawn by hand. My boss was an old school hand painter or as the trade was called then "a
sign writer". I came in at a very interesting time, when changes in the industry were occurring at an incredible speed. I left the industry for awhile to work for a big corporation (cleaning the screens for screen printing was making me sick) and hated every minute of it. I went back and made a deal with another employee that I would do everything for the screen printing except cleaning the screens. I was back doing what I loved. Today I own my own shop with 4 full time employees, a spray booth, 2 large format printers and all the other fun stuff we use in our industry. I still don't consider myself an artist. I employ artists. But I love every aspect of the business, especially running it.