View allAll Photos Tagged Designing

Photograph taken during the 'Designing the Archive' joint ICA / ASA / ARANZ / PARBICA conference, Adelaide, South Australia.

Professional Web Design and Development

www.YourFreePage.net

13844 Roscoe Blvd.

Panorama City, CA 91402

818-627-2083

 

Burbank Profesional web designing

Designing the Professional: Addressing the question, "Once I get my degree, how do I get a life?

Photograph taken during the 'Designing the Archive' joint ICA / ASA / ARANZ / PARBICA conference, Adelaide, South Australia.

Kenneth Smith, Senior Research Scholar; Director, Mobility Division, Stanford Center on Longevity, Stanford University, USA at the World Economic Forum - Annual Meeting of the New Champions in Dalian, People's Republic of China 2015. Copyright by World Economic Forum / Sikarin Fon Thanachaiary

on my ancient pc laptop. I've managed to distill irony yet another level removed, which will probably reduce the number of people who get it even more. Oh well. This is running Windblows '98, it's like working buried by gauzy clouds of fog & cotton. Slowly, slowly, slowly... will have test stitch-outs by end of day, hopefully. Using motifs from a dingbat font I designed many moons ago.

Photograph taken during the 'Designing the Archive' joint ICA / ASA / ARANZ / PARBICA conference, Adelaide, South Australia.

AGHATECH is a Web Designing Company which offers beautiful and afforable web designing and Web Development, Graphics Designing, SEO, SEM.

Photograph taken during the 'Designing the Archive' joint ICA / ASA / ARANZ / PARBICA conference, Adelaide, South Australia.

Yvonne Li, Founder and Chairperson, International China Ageing Industry Association, Hong Kong SAR; Young Global Leader at the World Economic Forum - Annual Meeting of the New Champions in Dalian, People's Republic of China 2015. Copyright by World Economic Forum / Sikarin Fon Thanachaiary

Photograph taken during the 'Designing the Archive' joint ICA / ASA / ARANZ / PARBICA conference, Adelaide, South Australia.

24 March 2008

 

This is me uninspired.

Had no clue what to do for my sp today, so this is what I was really doing when I came home from work, designing.

 

Working UNDER the influence of Filmposters from the Golden 20s: Designing a Poster for MOMENTUM

Photograph taken during the 'Designing the Archive' joint ICA / ASA / ARANZ / PARBICA conference, Adelaide, South Australia.

BCG Digital Ventures

Photos: Susan Shankin

January 17, 2018

Photograph taken during the 'Designing the Archive' joint ICA / ASA / ARANZ / PARBICA conference, Adelaide, South Australia.

Photograph taken during the 'Designing the Archive' joint ICA / ASA / ARANZ / PARBICA conference, Adelaide, South Australia.

Photograph taken during the 'Designing the Archive' joint ICA / ASA / ARANZ / PARBICA conference, Adelaide, South Australia.

designing research

The last week of May 1958 may go into the records as the Week of the Designing Woman. This was the decree of 600 retail fashion executives, whose votes for the Sporting Look Award and the Designer of the Year Award were revealed last Wednesday at SPORTS ILLUSTRATED’S third annual American Sportswear Design Awards dinner at the St. Regis Hotel in New York. For the first time, all the winners were women: Bonnie Cashin and Rose Marie Reid tied for the Sporting Look Award, and Jeanne Campbell was designated Designer of the Year.

 

The 300 notables who gathered at the dinner to hear the results of the secret balloting indicated by their applause that they were entirely pleased. The more so, apparently, since both of the winners last year were men — Sydney Wragge and Bill Atkinson.

 

In keeping with the theme of the dinner, the America’s Cup Fashion Pageant, a special award was given to Harold S. Vanderbilt, a guest of honor at the dinner, whose J-boats thrice defended the America’s Cup successfully against British challengers.

 

Also introduced was SPORTS ILLUSTRATED’S newest trophy. This is a sculptured wire dressmaker’s dummy, backed with sport’s traditional laurel wreath of victory. It was the work of Sculptor Sidney Smith and, despite the tradition of Emmys and Oscars, it is as yet unnamed. The citation for the Sporting Look Award, which goes with the gold trophy, reads: “To the women’s sportswear designer who, by his or her creation of a distinctive mood, has continuously contributed to the American Sporting Look.” The citation for the Designer of the Year Award, which goes with the silver trophy, reads: “To the women’s sportswear designer who, during the past year, has made the most significant contribution to American sportswear through a specific collection, idea or innovation.”

 

Mrs. Reid and Mrs. Campbell were at; the dinner to accept their awards in person, but Miss Cashin, who will receive a duplicate gold trophy and citation, was notified in Brussels, where she is busy with her favorite sport, “barnstorming.” In this case, Miss Cashin’s barnstorming was to last six weeks and to take her to India after a tour of Europe.

 

The winners were chosen by the retailers (who must sell the fashions the designers design) from 24 candidates nominated by a committee composed of: Elizabeth Fairall (chairman), Nan Duskin, Hector Escobosa, Andrew Goodman, H. D. Hodgkinson, Arthur Madison, Lawrence Marcus, Dorothy Shaver, W. G. Simmons, William C. Stetson, Elliot Walter and SPORTS ILLUSTRATED’S Fred R. Smith.

 

For a closer look at the winners, turn the page.

Yvonne Li, Founder and Chairperson, International China Ageing Industry Association, Hong Kong SAR; Young Global Leader at the World Economic Forum - Annual Meeting of the New Champions in Dalian, People's Republic of China 2015. Copyright by World Economic Forum / Sikarin Fon Thanachaiary

Yvonne Li, Founder and Chairperson, International China Ageing Industry Association, Hong Kong SAR; Young Global Leader at the World Economic Forum - Annual Meeting of the New Champions in Dalian, People's Republic of China 2015. Copyright by World Economic Forum / Sikarin Fon Thanachaiary

Photograph taken during the 'Designing the Archive' joint ICA / ASA / ARANZ / PARBICA conference, Adelaide, South Australia.

Participants competing in Designing with Edibles at the HortPark during Community garden Festival, Festival of Edibles 2017.

Kenneth Smith, Senior Research Scholar; Director, Mobility Division, Stanford Center on Longevity, Stanford University, USA at the World Economic Forum - Annual Meeting of the New Champions in Dalian, People's Republic of China 2015. Copyright by World Economic Forum / Sikarin Fon Thanachaiary

designing research

The Future. Unknown and unknowable. Or is it? No one can predict the future with certainty, but what steps can we take to design the kind of future we want and need? How can we use human ingenuity to design and influence the future? What are we doing now and what will the consequences be?

 

Whether we’re doing it intentionally or by accident, every day we are contributing in some way to the future of our city, our community, and our world.

Photograph taken during the 'Designing the Archive' joint ICA / ASA / ARANZ / PARBICA conference, Adelaide, South Australia.

Photograph taken during the 'Designing the Archive' joint ICA / ASA / ARANZ / PARBICA conference, Adelaide, South Australia.

Kaboom.org is partnering with the Taylor Bend Family YMCA to design and develop a playground and outdoor fitness area for adults on October 5, 2013.

Photograph taken during the 'Designing the Archive' joint ICA / ASA / ARANZ / PARBICA conference, Adelaide, South Australia.

Photograph taken during the 'Designing the Archive' joint ICA / ASA / ARANZ / PARBICA conference, Adelaide, South Australia.

Photograph taken during the 'Designing the Archive' joint ICA / ASA / ARANZ / PARBICA conference, Adelaide, South Australia.

From the exhibition

 

Tokyo 1964: Designing Tomorrow

(August to November 2021)

 

Tokyo 1964: Designing Tomorrow explores the pioneering design strategy and lasting legacy of the historic Tokyo 1964 Olympic Games, the first to be held in Asia, which are often seen as a turning point for Japan.

This exhibition shows how a group of young Japanese designers and architects harnessed the opportunity presented by the 1964 Olympic Games to reframe the country’s profile and tell a fresh story to the world. Their ground-breaking designs are important as they have informed the design principles of all subsequent major international sporting events.

Many of the exhibits are on loan outside Japan for the first time. There is the chance to see the first ever sports pictograms, the original Games posters and the award-winning Tokyo 1964 symbol designed by Kamekura Yūsaku which is still as fresh today as when it was first presented to the world. There is the original architectural model of the gracefully constructed Yoyogi National Gymnasium by Tange Kenzō, as well as uniforms worn by workers at the Games, medals, tickets and medal ceremony kimono.

Visitors to the exhibition can also discover a number of world firsts that Tokyo’s hosting the 1964 Olympic Games allowed: the construction of the bullet train (Shinkansen) between Tokyo and Osaka, the emergence of ‘hi-tech’ infrastructure in the wake of rapid economic growth, television broadcasting by satellite, precision timekeeping and the first use of the word ‘Paralympic’.

[Japan House]

 

Photograph taken during the 'Designing the Archive' joint ICA / ASA / ARANZ / PARBICA conference, Adelaide, South Australia.

Photograph taken during the 'Designing the Archive' joint ICA / ASA / ARANZ / PARBICA conference, Adelaide, South Australia.

Photograph taken during the 'Designing the Archive' joint ICA / ASA / ARANZ / PARBICA conference, Adelaide, South Australia.

A peek at my design process for the current pair of socks. A sketch on graph paper to flesh out the general idea, and a proto-chart underneath. Swatching is ongoing.

One of the key roles that I play in all Kansas communities is that I always make the "extra effort" to "rescue" people with alrernate lifestyles. I am personally a bisexual nonconforming male and people in Kansas, unfortunately, are pretty much still in the dark when it comes to dual sexualities, male, female, or otherwise.

ACRL announces the publication of "Designing Training" by Melanie Hawks, the fifth entry in the ACRL Active Guides series. Focusing on the needs of the adult learner, "Designing Training" will help librarians and library staff plan training sessions for takeaway value, learner engagement and learning transfer.

 

"Designing Training" is available for purchase in print through the ALA Online Store and Amazon.com; and by telephone order at (866) 746-7252 in the U.S. or (770) 442-8633 for international customers.

1 2 ••• 15 16 18 20 21 ••• 79 80