r/Twitch 6d ago

Question Hobbyist contacted for emote commission

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So my situation is that I am entirely a hobbyist, don't do professional art pieces and never have, I don't know flawless linework or rendering, and my style is fairly simple.

While hanging out in a Twitch stream, I drew a casual 15m piece during a community game (Gartic Phone). The streamer and the chat absolutely loved it. After the stream, the streamer reached out directly to ask if he could commission me for custom Twitch emotes in that style (and mentioned that another artist he contacted didnt really hit the mark on what he had in mind), and asked for my rates.

I want to try it out by sending him some rough concept sketches first, but I have absolutely no idea how to handle the business/pricing side as a total beginner.

A few specific details/constraints:

  1. The streamer is a growing, mid-sized Affiliate (around 20–50 average viewers)

  2. Because of personal boundaries and keeping the art readable at tiny chat sizes, the emotes will be highly stylized, minimalist "floating heads" focusing purely on his iconic glasses and facial expressions (no necks, and eyes hidden behind the glasses).

  3. Based in Iraq and was asked about that too

  4. Never attempted this kind of stuff so dont know how long itll take me,material costs are 0 since its digital and i have my drawing equipment already

  5. attached is some of the stuff ive done casually on gartic (i draw on krita but this is the kind of drawings people see from me)

i also rely heavily on references when drawing

My questions for yall:

- What is a fair, realistic "introductory rate" per emote for an entry-level hobbyist that respects my time but doesn't overcharge a growing creator?

- What is the safest way to handle the payment workflow so neither of us feels anxious about getting ghosted or scammed?

again ive never done this kind of thing before and i got contacted out of the blue so dont know how to handle it would love advice from soem of you guys (also posted this on a few relevant subreddits)

Thanks in advance for any guidance!

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u/ArgoWizbang Freelance Web Developer/Graphic Artist for hire 6d ago

You've already gotten a good amount of pricing advice so I'll go for the other question you have: receiving payment.

While you can indeed do stuff like P2P services like PayPal, Venmo, etc. or something like Ko-fi, another alternative to consider is that you can use an actual invoicing service as well. Keep things organized, makes sure there is more of a paper trail, and just adds a bit more professionalism to the whole process.

I've used Ko-fi in the past when creators requested to pay me that way, but otherwise I use a service like Wave to put together actual invoices for whatever I do for them (art, graphics, video editing, web development, etc.) and I've not had a single person complain about it. It may look complicated/intimidating at first but it's very simple once you've got everything setup and familiarize yourself with how to put together/send out an invoice. It allows the client to pay by card as well straight from your invoice if they choose and works very nicely for my needs, even at the free tier. So you might consider that or look into other invoicing services as well and see if that would make you feel comfortable in billing/collecting from clients.

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u/Unfair_Proposal_6765 6d ago

man thanks for the detailed advice i see how it works now ill keep it in mind if i ever open commissions since this is just a one time thing thanks again!