Last week, I came across an article in www.99U.com, a great publication about ideas and how they happen. This is the story behind the 'typical' ski area trail map, the traditional design, and the man who so uniquely makes it happen. The article also emphasizes attributes of general unique career niche's, and key points that orient toward success. The author is senior writer for 99U.com, Matt McCue.
Enjoy! Joyce
After reading the article, let us help you pick the best resort for YOU; and we'll help you make it the best ski-vaca EVER! Pick your resort survey
Monet of the Mountain: How a Ski Maps Painter Owns His Niche Market by Matt McCue
Chances
are you’ve seen a James Niehues painting before, but you didn’t know it. His
canvas is the ski trail map, which is often overlooked for its artistic value.
But since 1986, Niehues has created more than 240 different maps for resorts on
five continents including Aspen Highlands, Sun Valley, Vail, Whistler
Blackcomb, and Big Sky.
For this upcoming ski season, the 70-year-old has designed the trail map for the newly-combined Park City and Canyons ski areas, now America’s largest ski mountain.
Niehues’s mastery of a single métier may sound familiar. One day you design something relatively obscure for a client, and they recommend you to a colleague. The referrals snowball until pretty soon you’re the go-to book jacket, wedding invite, or font designer, whether or not that was your intent.
So how do you thrive in a small (but lucrative) market niche? Niehues [pronounced “Knee-Hews”] takes his approach to the extreme—he designs nothing but the best ski maps in the world. And he has succeeded in this endeavor for the last 30 years by adhering to the following key tenets that are just as applicable to any creative looking to dominate their niche market.
Befriend the Current Master
Niche artistic fields are small and likely already owned by a few major creative players. Take the ski map industry. There are roughly two dozen large ski resorts in the U.S. and a ski map redesign is a relatively rare occurrence. The industry can only really support one cartographer.
So follow Niehues’s lead and don’t try to immediately compete against the current masters. Instead, look to them for guidance. They are valuable resources who have both artistic knowledge and a firm understanding of how the business works.
A one-time advertising designer, Niehues was 40 years old and unemployed in the mid 1980s when he decided to try his hand painting landscapes. The most prominent landscape painter in Colorado at the time was Bill Brown, who did ski maps. “I love puzzles and it was intriguing to take the mountain terrain and show it as a trail map,” says Niehues. Brown had a monopoly on commissions at the time, so Niehues reached out to Brown and asked if Brown needed any help.
Brown actually did need an extra set of hands and because Niehues had expressed interest, he had Niehues touch up a few of his existing maps. When Brown decided to leave the field shortly thereafter, he passed his jobs on to Niehues, including one to illustrate Winter Park’s Mary Jane mountain in Colorado. “It was one artist to the other,” says Niehues. “That’s the way I’m going to be when someone else comes along.”
Niehues eventually converted the Mary Jane illustration into 35mm slides that he sent to every U.S. ski resort marketing manager. He added a note that read: “A quality illustration reflects a quality ski experience.”
The sales pitch worked. Vail, the largest resort in Colorado, called to set up a meeting. “I remember the Vail marketing manager saying ‘You’re the man,’” recalls Niehues. “I turned around to see who he was talking to and then I realized it was me.” With an assignment from the most prominent ski resort in the U.S., Niehues was off and running on his own.
Adapt to the Medium
The more unique the field, the more distinct the creative process. Truly embracing a niche also means being adaptable with your creative process. Be brutally honest with yourself and don’t be afraid to use special tools or adjust your technique to fit the medium. Niehues, for instance, realized he needed a prop plane and an arm sling.
He begins most trail map projects by taking a flight over the mountain and photographing the ski area from above. Back at his basement studio in Denver, he uses the photos to create a full-sized black and white trail map sketch.
Niehues sketches out the Park City Mountain map based on the image of the mountain.
Once the rendering is approved by the resort, Niehues projects the sketch onto his painting board and traces a pencil outline of the projection. Then he paints. Larger geographic features, like the sky, snow and shadows, are airbrushed.
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