Professional designers do not work randomly — they follow structured practices and processes that have been refined over decades of design culture. Understanding how contemporary designers work, including the methods, media, materials and conventions they use, is essential for both analysing professional work and developing your own design practice.
Design practices encompass the full range of activities a designer engages in to address a design problem and deliver a solution. These include:
KEY TAKEAWAY: Practices are not linear — contemporary designers move back and forth between research, ideation, testing, and refinement throughout a project. This iterative approach is central to professional design.
When practising design, professionals choose from a range of methods, media and materials:
| Method | Description | When Used |
|---|---|---|
| Freehand sketching | Quick hand-drawn ideation | Early ideation, brainstorming |
| Technical drawing | Precise, scaled documentation (orthogonal, isometric, perspective) | Architecture, product design |
| Digital drafting | Computer-aided drawing (CAD, Illustrator, InDesign) | Final resolution, print production |
| Photography / image manipulation | Capturing and editing visual content | Communication design, editorial |
| Model making / prototyping | Physical or digital mock-ups | Industrial, environmental design |
EXAM TIP: When analysing a designer’s work, identify the specific methods, media, and materials used and explain WHY those choices suit the context and audience. Saying “they used digital methods” is less effective than “they used digital illustration to achieve scalability across both web and print formats.”
Conventions are agreed-upon standards and formats within a design field. Using conventions correctly communicates professionalism and clarity:
Contemporary design practices differ from those of the past in several key ways:
| Past Practice | Contemporary Practice |
|---|---|
| Largely manual (hand-lettering, paste-up, film) | Predominantly digital production tools |
| Single-medium focus (e.g., print only) | Multi-platform, cross-media outputs |
| Slow iteration — changes were costly | Rapid prototyping and digital revision |
| Limited client collaboration | Continuous feedback loops with clients and users |
| Designer as sole author | Co-design with stakeholders, users, specialists |
STUDY HINT: When studying a contemporary designer for Unit 3, document the specific practices, methods, media and materials they use. Look for evidence of their process in interviews, behind-the-scenes content, or published case studies. The VCAA loves when students connect specific evidence to broader points about practice.
A hallmark of professional practice is documenting the design process — keeping records of:
- Inspiration sources and mood boards
- Annotated sketches and concept development
- Client feedback and revisions
- Testing notes and user feedback
This documentation demonstrates design thinking and is also expected in your own VCE design folio.
VCAA FOCUS: The study design emphasises being able to describe and compare practices across fields. Practise writing: “Designer X uses [method] to [purpose] because [context].” This structure works well in short-answer exam responses.