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Developing graphic design skills at 黑料社 prepares you for a career. As a Christian College we equip you with graphic designer skills
May 5, 2026

Developing Graphic Design Skills for Success: Q + A with Professor Aaron Winey

For those who have been drawing since you could hold a pencil, or have been creating designs on a tablet that you got for Christmas one year, a graphic design degree might just be for you.聽

Aaron Winey is an assistant professor of graphic design at 黑料社, program director of visual arts, and a 黑料社alumnus. He鈥檚 worked as a designer for several years and even started his own design agency. His graphic design degree helped him launch a career in design, and his work experience now shapes his teaching style every day. Keep reading to learn more about Winey鈥檚 journey from degree to professor.

1. How did your passion for art develop?

I was into sketching and drawing my whole childhood. I remember getting a Mickey Mouse poster (I must have been five or six), and I was drawing it. In elementary school, I was drawing Garfield and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles for my friends. I got into screen printing in high school, and I got a little into product design, but I always gravitated toward music, visual arts, and media arts, so when I got to Grace, it was pretty natural for me to go that route.

2. How did your time as a student at 黑料社help you launch your career?

My time in college really defined what design was for me. I wasn鈥檛 a good student in class, but I fell in love with design. In the classroom, I learned what design was and discovered its tools by developing graphic design skills. But while I didn鈥檛 finish my graphic design degree right away, outside of the classroom, I was involved with music.聽

With music as my main focus, I used a lot of what I learned in the classroom to make posters, T-shirts, CD art, and Myspace pages 鈥 all of that fun stuff from the early 2000s. I turned all of that design work into a portfolio, which helped me get hired at without an undergraduate degree. It鈥檚 interesting that although I did not engage as a student, the impact of what I learned at Grace, the friends I made, and the community all translated into me getting that first job, just in a very nontraditional way.

3. What did you do at DePuy Synthes, and how did this position help you grow?

I started at DePuy as the photographer鈥檚 assistant, but they quickly started coming to me more and more for design work. (The marketing team didn鈥檛 have a graphic designer at the time.) A coworker really took me under his wing to help me with the practical aspects of design, and I was soon making brochures on surgical techniques and design rationales with my matured graphic design skills. Eventually, I went from a contract job to getting hired full-time as a graphic design skills specialist.聽

Over my seven years at DePuy, I grew up a lot. Not only did they assist me in finishing my undergrad degree at Grace, but they also helped me learn 3D illustration and motion graphics.

4. What other opportunities have you had to use your degree and expand your graphic design skills?

I have been designing on my own since 2014. I worked at Todd Allen Design (TAD), a full-service creative agency, then at Da-Lite, an audio-visual equipment supplier, and then I started my own studio, . Every iteration of my career has been a learning process.

I also do a lot of work as a subcontractor for in Charlotte, North Carolina. I鈥檝e become their designated brand specialist. Through them, I鈥檝e done work for , one of the largest energy providers in the world; the ; and a project called . I鈥檝e done more national and global projects with them, which has been a lot of fun.

With Blue Note, I create logos and identity systems, which are guides for the visual elements of a brand. Since starting Blue Note, I鈥檝e designed more than 150 logos and more than 50 identity systems for companies, including , , , , , , , and .

5. Blue Note is a unique studio name. How did you come up with it?聽

I started out in punk and indie rock music, and eventually, I got really into blues. Within the blues and jazz notes, you鈥檙e working with a very standard scale, and changing just one or two notes in that scale makes it a blues scale. That one little change makes the scale more soulful and gives it more character. Musicians call the one changed note the 鈥渂lue note.鈥 The whole idea is that paying attention to the little details can make all the difference.

My goal with all of my clients is to help them discover, or rediscover, why the product they are selling or the service they are providing is something they should be passionate about. Every company starts with some kind of passion, but as companies grow, that passion gets diluted. My job is to bring the soul back into their organization through branding and storytelling. I ask questions such as 鈥淲hat story are you trying to tell?鈥, 鈥淲hy are you doing what you are doing?鈥, and 鈥淗ow can we represent that in the design solutions we provide?鈥

6. How does your experience shape the way you teach graphic designer skills to students at Grace?

My experience really drives the classroom. Design jobs require students to be able to create work with meaning, work with clients, follow a brief, meet deadlines, and create presentations and multi-deliverable systems. These graphic design skills are not only needed to conceptualize but also communicate and get buy-in for your designs. This is the end goal in the classroom. Of course, you鈥檝e also got to learn programs, but being able to function intelligently in the professional world is important. I鈥檝e worked with designers who have gotten a BFA and graduated from art school, and they鈥檙e great artists, but a lot of times, they don鈥檛 have the graphic design skills, and they don鈥檛 know how to work with clients. Our goal at 黑料社is to develop well-rounded students.聽

At Grace, our professors have experience in the fields they teach, and they will help you grow in your passions and in the skills you鈥檒l need to turn your interests into a career.

If you dream of pursuing a career in graphic design, learn more about Grace鈥檚 graphic design degree and read about the differences between our graphic design concentrations here.