Illustration is one of the most creatively expansive and personally expressive careers available to visual artists—and one of the most diverse in its commercial applications.
From the pages of children’s picture books and editorial magazines to the concept art pipelines of video game studios and animation companies, illustrators contribute to an extraordinary breadth of industries, media, and storytelling traditions.
The Applied Arts Illustration diploma at Edison College is built around this breadth—preparing graduates to navigate multiple illustration fields simultaneously, rather than locking them into a single narrow market.
In British Columbia, illustrators work within the NOC 52120 occupational group alongside graphic designers.
This program is available online across Canada and in person at Edison College’s Victoria campus—and the illustration career itself is inherently location-independent, with client relationships built digitally and work delivered remotely across national and international markets.
Graduates of the applied arts illustration diploma are prepared for a wide range of illustration fields — with the program’s multi-topic curriculum deliberately designed to build competency across several distinct markets simultaneously, increasing the range of viable income streams available to each graduate. You can have the following job roles after graduation.
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Editorial Illustrator (Magazines, Newspapers, etc.)
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Book Cover Illustrator, Infographic Illustrator, etc.
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Children’s Books & Publishing
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Picture Book Illustrator, Board Book Illustrator
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Comics & Sequential Art, Comic Book Artist, etc.
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Graphic Novel Illustrator, Card Game/Deck Illustrator, etc.
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Entertainment & Concept Art
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Concept Artist (Video Games, Film, Animation — Entry-Level)
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Environment / Prop Concept Illustrator
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Textiles & Product Design
Illustrators work in some of the most independent, self-directed, and creatively fulfilling professional environments of any visual arts career — with a strong cultural tradition of remote and freelance practice:
Publishing Houses & Book Publishers: Editorial and children’s book illustrators work with Canadian and international publishers through agent representation or direct commission relationships. Canada has a strong children’s book publishing community — with publishers including Groundwood Books, Annick Press, and Orca Book Publishers (based in Victoria) actively commissioning Canadian illustrators. Victoria’s Orca Book Publishers in particular makes the Greater Victoria area a genuinely relevant local anchor for aspiring picture book illustrators.
Magazines & Editorial Media: Editorial illustrators work with publications across Canada and internationally, creating imagery that interprets written content for magazines, online media, newspapers, and digital platforms. Relationships with art directors at publications are built over time through portfolio submissions and professional networking — skills covered directly in the program’s Professional Practices course.
Video Game Studios & Animation Companies: Concept artists and visual development illustrators work in the pre-production pipelines of game development studios and animation houses — the same B.C. studio community that employs 2D animators. Vancouver and Victoria’s growing game development sector provides accessible local access to this employment pathway for graduates building concept art portfolios.
Advertising & Brand Studios: Commercial illustrators work with advertising agencies, brand studios, and in-house marketing teams to create visual content for campaigns, packaging, and branded materials — typically on a project-by-project freelance basis.
Textiles & Product Design: A distinct and often overlooked market for illustrators — fabric design, surface pattern, toy design, art prints, and ephemera represent income streams that operate parallel to mainstream publishing and editorial work. The program’s Illustration Topic: Alternative Practices course prepares graduates specifically for these adjacent markets.
Independent & Remote Practice: Illustrators work in studios, offices, or from home — with many operating their own businesses, some working alone, and others collaborating with agencies of hundreds of designers in multiple offices around the world. WorkBC The illustration career is among the most genuinely location-independent creative professions available, with client relationships built and maintained entirely through digital portfolio platforms, social media, and professional networks.
Compensation in illustration varies widely depending on the field, the client, the illustrator’s experience level, and the use rights attached to each commission — with freelance practice representing both the primary income model and the greatest range of earning outcomes.
In British Columbia, illustrators and graphic designers (NOC 52120) typically earn between $22.12 and $59.00 per hour Job Bank, with B.C. and Ontario among the higher-paying provinces for creative professionals in this occupational group.
WorkBC reports average annual earnings for graphic designers and illustrators in B.C. of approximately $66,420 WorkBC — a meaningful income target for established illustrators with a developed client base, strong portfolio, and multiple active revenue streams.
Nationally, illustrators and graphic designers typically earn between $20.00 and $52.88 per hour Job Bank across Canada, with compensation reflecting the significant variation between entry-level project work and established professional commission rates.
Freelance illustrators negotiate hourly rates or flat fees based on client type, project scope, and use rights — meaning that an illustrator working across editorial, picture books, and concept art simultaneously can develop multiple independent income streams that collectively exceed what any single employer relationship would provide. ALIS
The freelance and self-employment model is deeply embedded in the illustration profession. About a third of workers in this occupational group in Canada are self-employed Glassdoor, with earnings growth tied directly to portfolio quality, professional reputation, and the breadth of fields an illustrator can serve. Graduates who establish themselves across two or three of the illustration fields covered in this program — editorial, children’s books, and concept art, for example — are in a significantly stronger income position than those who pursue a single market exclusively.
Studying from another province? The illustration career operates across national and international client relationships regardless of where an illustrator is based. Ontario (Toronto) and British Columbia (Vancouver/Victoria) are the largest markets for Canadian illustration employment, but the remote-native nature of the profession means graduates from any province can pursue opportunities nationally and internationally. Graduates are encouraged to consult the Government of Canada Job Bank for current wage data specific to their home province.
Sources: WorkBC — NOC 52120 | Government of Canada Job Bank — Illustrator BC | Government of Canada Job Bank — Canada