From The Archives

Stay Up Late

One week after I graduated from college in Ohio, I moved to New York with my new wife Dorothy and began working as a design assistant at Vignelli Associates. It was 1980, and I was the lowest employee on the totem pole. Working in a design office in those days was different. I never touched a computer. As I recall, the office didn't even have a computer. In fact, we didn't have a fax machine.

I spent most of my days putting thinner in rubber cement and taping tissue paper over mechanical boards. Every once in a while I would get to do a mechanical myself, usually following the direction of one of the more experienced designers. I was working in New York City for a designer I idolized and I was the happiest person on earth. It so happened that we got an apartment that was three blocks-literally, a 135 second walk-from the Vignelli office. Work started at 9:30 a.m. I usually got up at around five minutes to 9 and still had time to pick up a doughnut on my way in.

Dorothy, on the other hand, had a corporate job downtown, in the World Trade Center to be precise. She had to wake up before 6 to be at work at 8. I literally slept three hours later than her every morning. Every night Dorothy would go to bed at around 10 p.m. I was still wide awake, and our apartment was so small it drove me crazy. I had a key to the office. So I got in the habit of tucking my wife in every night and going back to work to start another shift, which often would last from 10 to 3 in the morning.

This went on for four years. Anything I've achieved in my career I credit today to those four years. I loved working late at night. I worked on office stuff, and I worked on personal projects. I played music really loud and drank Mountain Dew. I would design anything: invitations for my friends' parties, packaging for mix tapes, one-of-a-kind birthday cards, and freebies for non-profits.

When Massimo Vignelli noticed I had extra time during the day, he started giving me extra work. Things that would have taken two days only took one, thanks to the night shift. The more work I did, the faster I got, and the better I got. It never occurred to me to ask for overtime. 25 years later, nearing 50 with three kids (and the same wife), I can't tell you the last time I was awake at 3 in the morning, intentionally, at least. So my advice to anyone starting a career as a designer? Stay up late while you can. It pays off.

Michael Bierut
Partner, Pentagram Design New York
  1. link to this comment by Michael Holdren Mon Oct 10, 2005

    This is a great post Mr. B., as I have just entered my thirties and have discovered lately that it has become more difficult to stay up late working on my craft.

  2. link to this comment by Brian Wed Oct 12, 2005

    Yes, thanks. This is inspiring. Man, I need to find a job to love and do the dew. :]

  3. link to this comment by Daniel Schutzsmith Tue Oct 18, 2005

    I completely agree Michael! I have always found that my best ideas can be attributed to the late night experimentations I have done. I basically taught myself the Flash application through late night learnings and now I am a professor at SVA!

  4. link to this comment by christopher Stets Thu Oct 20, 2005

    Michael,

    Like most in this profession, we are given rare opportunities, thank god for the DEW, I too gratuated from Design school in Ohio and went to Chicago, and the 2:00 AM pizza and Dew are life savers

  5. link to this comment by Richard Sat Oct 22, 2005

    Good article. It's a double edged sword though. As a freelance designer, I find it important to try and control the late nights. It's great for the creative mind, but less good the next day for the cool analytical aspects of running the business.

  6. link to this comment by Danielle Miller Mon Oct 24, 2005

    As a graphic designer, microscopist and night-owl just about to graduate college, I know how valuable late nights can be. If it were not for my ability to stay up very, very late, I think I would constantly feel like I was behind in every aspect of my life! Sometimes I need to be in lab doing prep work for my microscopy work (I work with microscopes) because certain procedures take long hours and like to occur at odd hours. There are also the times I cannot sleep because the creative ideas for whatever project or freelance job I am currently working on only like to come to me late into the night. Why this occurs, I do not know. I truly think some people are just wired differently so that their neurons actually fire (function) more efficiently at night! I sure am delighted, however, to hear I am not alone. I am constantly criticized for staying up and wasting valuable "sleep-time," but when a creative urge hits a designer like myself... well, I just have to jump on it to make sure it doesn't fade away into the night (literally). Thank you for the encouragement in your experiences- I feel very confident that I will be prepared for what the future may bring for me!

  7. link to this comment by paul alexander Wed Nov 02, 2005

    Great story! It is currently 12:40 a.m. and I have many projects to do but here I am reading. Oh, how great it is to be young!

  8. link to this comment by Michael Holdren Thu Nov 03, 2005

    Funny thing...

    It just occured to me recently why I like staying up late at night working on my craft... because I feel like I'm stealing time.

    Extra time: not for my clients, not for my wife, not for my financial security, but for me. Selfishly.

  9. link to this comment by Kathe Wed Jan 25, 2006

    I remember those days but I'm worn out now. Twenty five years of working full time, no breaks except for surgery and a few weeks for births of two daughters. I'm pooped. I have some interesting and creative plans for my retirement.

  10. link to this comment by Michele Brophy Tue Feb 07, 2006

    My last year of college all of my roomates thought I was a ghost. I would be up for days at a time, only stop home for a shower (if that) and some food, that I would take back to campus with me anyway. Funny, as exhausting as those nights were, it is true, I found myself the most intensly motivated as I have ever been.

    Ironically, a year later, I now work for a news station and work the 2p-10p shift. I still have some freelance jobs that I can't seemed any motivation for during the day. I think I am going to have to go back to the late night shift and start working on it after work. Reading this articles and reviews made me realize. "Hey, I'm 22. I can hang!" To the night owls, now and then.

    mb

  11. link to this comment by Paula Wed Jun 27, 2007

    Hi,
    Reading these posts made me remember my first few semesters of Graphic Design at college, when my roommate and I would stay up until all hours doing - and redoing - our projects to present in class the next day. We found that the night shift at the copy center was our best bet to get clean prints made, they had nothing better to do than run copy after copy until we were satisfied. All of that night work helped prepare me for a life spent between graphic design on tight deadlines and film producing on tight budgets, so I guess it was all worthwhile!

  12. link to this comment by mitch m Mon Dec 08, 2008

    I'm only in high school and I procrastinate so I have to stay up to do my work. I'm doing that tonight. I love staying up late. I feel I have my most creative focus and spiritual experiences when I am up late. I feel I have no constraints, no cycles, no patterns of the day. But sleep is good for your health. So I'm split between the two. Sleep helps build back neurons in your brain that have gone away. Sleep is just as needed as eating for keeping our physical and astral body balanced. So what is the compromise? When you have 8 or 9 hours of sleep, you can really take on anything. When you have little sleep it's harder to function as the most you can be. I'm trying to search around for how to use sleep most efficently, how to make your sleep 'count' for more, etc. If anyone can help me out (and has a myspace) message me on the myspace with the URL I provide. Thank you!

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