View allAll Photos Tagged designprocess
Now, building on that second pass, I've drawn a rough plan on grid paper. Each square represents four feet. I'm looking at the connections, and thinking about the quality of the spaces.
The department has been building up a library of design related reference books over the last few years. Pupils are encouraged to make use of these books on a regular basis. The photographs here demonstrate the tremendous wealth of content contained therein.
The sequence has been shot in such a way that the cover of the book is shown first and a few sample pages are included to give the student an idea of the content the book contains. Pupils may then approach staff and request a short term loan.
Foto del proceso de diseño del pack "Urban Sports" de la tienda online de tipografias y packs de lettering Lettering Shop.
A design exhibit held at Burnkit, a Vancouver design house. Prototypes examined the importance of production models, how although they are rarely seen by anyone other than the creator, they serve an integral part in the creative process that leads to the most effective final product.
A design exhibit held at Burnkit, a Vancouver design house. Prototypes examined the importance of production models, how although they are rarely seen by anyone other than the creator, they serve an integral part in the creative process that leads to the most effective final product.
A design exhibit held at Burnkit, a Vancouver design house. Prototypes examined the importance of production models, how although they are rarely seen by anyone other than the creator, they serve an integral part in the creative process that leads to the most effective final product.
Foto del proceso de diseño del pack "American Restaurant" de la tienda online de tipografias y packs de lettering Lettering Shop.
A design exhibit held at Burnkit, a Vancouver design house. Prototypes examined the importance of production models, how although they are rarely seen by anyone other than the creator, they serve an integral part in the creative process that leads to the most effective final product.
A design exhibit held at Burnkit, a Vancouver design house. Prototypes examined the importance of production models, how although they are rarely seen by anyone other than the creator, they serve an integral part in the creative process that leads to the most effective final product.
Today I picked up a stylus for my iPad (so I can refine my drawings in Drawsome as well as avoid getting grease on the screen from my pudgy sausage fingers) and this book on creativity by Jonah Lehrer.
I've been reading it during my subway commute, and I really like it. It doesn't tell you how to be creative, but rather explains the psychological and biological/neural science behind how we think. The inventors and innovators described in the book are real, but Lehrer definitely treats them as novelized characters with quirks and personal histories than scientific or academic figures you'd cite in a research paper. It's also filled with little brain teasers that make you pay attention to every detail and every word.
Overall, the book pretty much summarizes the design process -- from idea to research to prototype to finished product -- something that was repeatedly hammered into our brains during our masters studies at Parsons The New School For Design.
It's a fascinating read, and if I were ever to teach design on a collegiate or post-collegiate level, I'd make this required reading.
A design exhibit held at Burnkit, a Vancouver design house. Prototypes examined the importance of production models, how although they are rarely seen by anyone other than the creator, they serve an integral part in the creative process that leads to the most effective final product.
The department has been building up a library of design related reference books over the last few years. Pupils are encouraged to make use of these books on a regular basis. The photographs here demonstrate the tremendous wealth of content contained therein.
The sequence has been shot in such a way that the cover of the book is shown first and a few sample pages are included to give the student an idea of the content the book contains. Pupils may then approach staff and request a short term loan.