Category: <span>Life</span>

There is a fantastic article over on Get Finch, Dear Designer, You Aren’t That Special.

I confess I don’t spend as much time as I ought thinking about my profession, I often just do.

I think that the senior designer that I have the privilege of working with is a great example of humility in design. She has a patient understanding that incorporates meaning and creativity without obsessing and getting caught up in her own idea of what is good while still producing solid and atheistically beautiful work that communicates exactly as intended.

After having worked as a designer in a studio for 9 short months I feel as if my design has grown mostly in its depth of understanding of purpose. Certainly I’ve learnt some handy shortcuts along the way – but honestly these are things you can learn by watching youtube. Being in the studio environment brings a new experience of possibility and idea and approach. I think my design in my time so far at Blick has tightened up and lost some of the extraneous waffle.

I don’t consider myself the type of (stereotypical) creative, where raw talent is aesthetic and artistic (I wish!). It definitely more about creating order. I struggle a little with the reality that I’d rather write a list than draw a picture – it doesn’t seem right. But I can still do this job and I think do this job quite well.

I love the fact that design is about communication and in many ways about order (or controlled chaos). The aesthetic stuff is a glorious bonus. The fact that you can design a business card with 5-odd different finishes (eg. embossing, foiling) and not have it come out frumpy aunty amazes me.

In the studio this week we have up a quote about Creativity being about making connections with things that are seemingly unconnectable. This in itself connects deeply to my view of the Kingdom of God and I guess leaves some avenues open for me to consider where some of this stuff – these skills – these things I am trained in, fit in to connecting the seemingly unconnectable throughout my life and world.

“Design is not a chaotic expression, it’s a measured approach to creation.”

Something I didn’t understand when I left uni about working in design is about how much time factors into the work-life of being a designer. Creativity on command is the black x against reason but the reality is that jobs have timelines and budgets. As you learn to measure time and work to a schedule you learn to measure your own design. How much is too much? When do you pair back? Where do you start? Throwing an idea on paper (or screen) is useless unless there is intention and thought behind why something is where it is. This kind of design in many ways suits me, despite at times being frustrating and restrictive.

Yet. Working in an environment where there is people to throw ideas at, to get realistic and honest feedback means that this design, this order gets manipulated enough for the space to grow creativity (as it is typically understood). I caught myself the other day where I had let go of my typical ways of approaching designing for a particular format, I tried something braver than my usual habitual ways – the design was freer and better for it.

There are two things that are wonderful for design. Constraint and the recognition that design is as much about the people and space around you. We need to be aware in order to work out these obscure connections and make them seamless.

Another great article: 4 Types of Creatives

Design Life

Sunshine is my quest.
-Winston Churchill

Having just seen The Kings Speech for the second time you get the Churchill quote. I do not enjoy watching movies for a second time in close succession but this would be an exception to the rule. Firth, Rush and Bonham-Carter are brilliant. See it.

You need light to see (see, there’s the theme, hey hey). You also need good vision to see, which is not something I posses thanks to some handy genetics which trumped out in the lens arena. I do recall my shock the moment I found out trees had actual form from long distance and weren’t just a blurry green blob. I’ve gone through a few pairs of glasses since age 10. Not all grand winners, some of them quite embarrassing. I wear contacts occasionally now and I would consider laser surgery if I had the money.

It’s interesting really how glasses have the potential to influence someones identity. I’m not sure if I would exactly feel lost without them (if there were some other solution to seeing – I would definitely feel lost without them if there wasn’t!). I’m not sure if confidence levels, and esteem are wrapped up in glasses – surely there is some kind of subconscious implications there. There’s naturally the nerd/smart thing that comes with glasses but if I’m not wrong, glasses aren’t always benefactors of this assurance for everyone (And is being a nerd something to be assured of!?) for some surely glasses are another mask – like others make up or costume, hat or attitudes that are used intentionally or otherwise to cover up the truth of someone or colour the truth of someone.

See and be seen. Where is the light not getting in?

This post is part of the 100 Theme Challenge

100 Theme Life

Here is Edward Bear, coming downstairs now, bump, bump, bump, on the back of his head, behind Christopher Robin.
A.A. Milne, Winnie the Pooh

I am fairly narcissistic and quite a bit of a nerd and so a lot of my life is out there online, it still feels odd to write an introduction – it was odd to write the About page way back whenever I started blogging (and however many revisions have gone on since then), but if you think about it Introductions are awkward and it’s fairly universal.

Job interviews are introductions, as are first dates, meeting ‘the parents’, a first day at a new school or university, moving home, public speaking… all awkward.

There have been a lot of introductions in my life. Make what assumptions you like. But since we are starting out, here is a meme. Which is a cheaters way of blogging and I really shouldn’t (as that is quite against the point of this exercise)

Name: Rebecca

Married: 3yrs and a few days to Geoff

Kids: No

Religion: Christian (although I generally roll with one of those mantras about it being more about relationship than religion however there is still merit and value in tradition (some) and liturgy (also some))

Whereabouts: Melbourne, Australia

Grew up: Solomon Islands

Family: Parents + twin + 2x little sisters + inlaws

Job: Graphic Designer

Drink: Coffee, Gin & Tonic, Tea (other things too)

Eat: Food (pies, lamb shanks etc… hearty food is best)

Guilty Indulgence: Terrys Chocolate Orange, Hot Jam Donuts… Gilmore Girls

Do: write, photograph, read, read, read, hunt for bargains, design, cafes

Love: God, Geoff, The Hobbit, sleeping, thinking, reading, friends, blogs, vintage bargains

Yes, that was sufficiently a post to demonstrate bump, bump, bump and the awkwardness of introductions. If there’s anything else you wish to question or have me expand on, here I am (as I have already explained): slightly narcisstic and a nerd and so will readily reply to your comments.

This post is part of the 100 Theme Challenge

100 Theme Life Lists

It’s January and the Christmas tree is still up, the lounge room however wall has changed colour and I’ve at very least sorted a few things out but the garden is a jungle, I haven’t cooked for myself in several days and so on…

There are a few things I would like to improve on this year.

  • Have more people over
  • Get vaguely fit/eat healthier and more varied foods
  • Watch less television
  • Spend more time talking with Geoff
  • Deal with the backyard/garden
  • More time with God (actual decent time)

Nothing revolutionary. Quite sedate, standard things really. Which is what would be truly nice for this year – after a year of so much change and newness.

Totally stealing from Ann Voskamp and her post about ‘Naming the Year‘ I have chosen the word Communion. I did actually sit down and pray (terribly briefly) about what it should be – but looking at that list up there and from what I can gather, this is what keeps resonating. The list after all is very much about connecting with other people and with God and with my surroundings, and for someone who lives far too much life in her head, I think this is something I should be thinking about.

I do feel rather disconnected from the depth of life that used to be so obvious and present.

I hope to write here more. But I hope to write here less if it means I am spending my time more richly.

“Maybe communion is just a way of waking up to reality of real living” – Ann Voskamp

Jesus replied, “Anyone who loves me will obey my teaching. My Father will love them, and we will come to them and make our home with them.” – John 14:23

Blogging Christianity Life Relationships

Three years ago Geoff and I got married. It was a super hot January, very unlike this one. This time Geoff is in Mumbai and I am in Melbourne – we have done a lot, changed a lot, tried a lot of jobs, churches, houses… These have been the best three years of my life, certainly not the easiest (which I can attribute to life’s craziness) but the best, because of Geoff.

Life Relationships