Category: <span>Uni</span>

Oh have I jumped back with glee into the blogging scenario! No posts, I have simply been strapped for time.

September-October is a nasty one for university students, with homework that seems to escalate to match the climax of a year.

To count, I really don’t theoretically have that much due, sure I keep discovering bits of my 20th Century History stuff that I haven’t done – thank you to quick typing and the ability to crap on and still sound half intelligent! I have a book to design for Form and Structure (Indesign class eg: typesetting/layout) – I am using Henry Lawson’s Bill the Ventriloquist Rooster and due to my miserable last assignment I’d like it to be very up to scratch. I have a photo book to piece together- I’ll eventually think about that one. And a design brief to write/research to do, which is a 2 person assignment that I’m frankly not all that worried about.

There are times where it is really nice that my fingers have the gift of the gab.

Thoughts are in the churner about all manner of things, but this is not a promise of posts to come, nor an apology in advance, it is just a comment a little self reminding.

Things I forgot to mention (or was holding out on) over the past little while, some of it wedding related:

a) Anita, Geoff’s sister is engaged to Stuart and their proposal story is nothing short of an epic. Congratulations to them both! I like Anita lots and I think Stu will be good for her (and she for him).

b) We found and bought bridesmaid dress material, shoes and I’ve also gone and gotten invitation paper, these last few weeks have been very productive

c) My cousin Jaclyn got engaged a while back and is getting married soon, I caught up with her today and we got to talk weddings ‘realistically’.

d) I really like the people at my uni. It seems they’re an honest bunch. I left my usb stick in a class room and actually got it back the following day. Ahh the exemplary nature of Swinburne.

e) The girls I hang out with at uni are great fun and well worth a mention, I’m rethinking my once proposed, “Get through uni and have just acquaintances to get you by”, they’re far too good quality for that, pity they live all so far away.

f) I’ve discovered quite like watching Rugby League.

Life Uni Wedding

Today marks the submission of the al-la crappiest assignment ever.

To be fair, my concepts were good but I did not leave enough room for application. My city poster was decidedly unfinished and I am relatively disgusted with myself because I HATE handing in anything half baked. Oh I tried, believe me, but the whole thing wasn’t working and I went about trying to fix it this morning. Bad move.

Will I pass it? I think I might, simply because a good percentage of the class hadn’t recognised that it was due today, but as my tutor informed me (and really, she is really nice and I like her and she’s great because she challenges us), “It’s not really ‘A’ material.” I did have a dream the other night about her telling me off for how disorganised I am, but that’s not to hold against her at all. This one is all my fault.

Time to employ some more time in the uni arena.

Uni

smallergologo.jpgWhile I sit here listening to the intriguing sounds of Angus and Julia Stone, let me see if I can reproduce some of another days thoughts that missed any paper..

On Friday I had the great privilege of sitting in on a meeting at work with real life designer Jeremy Muijs I believe his business’s name is Hatch.

You read all of these books and some how by osmosis pick up these understandings around branding and what is effective, but it is really great to have someone give some concrete examples that are right there in your face and give a bit more gut to being.

Don’t get me wrong – I have a good deal of respect for books such as Lovemarks possibly because the same ‘effective branding’ concept of drawing emotions over rationality that is described in Naomi Klein’s No Logo, but I’m never going to be a hooha feeler talker. Designers seem to be an emotional bunch.

Let me explain.

As a general rule my cold cut rationality (or at least the front I present) steers from even uttering the word ‘feel’. I use the word ‘think’ even if I should use the word ‘feel’. And believe me, I do think about and take notice of this stuff.

Despite the word ‘feel’ coming up a lot, I was quite excited coming out of there and really happy to recognise that design does light the fire in my belly.

I go to a uni with a whole stack of highly talented designers (even if we are still first years) who can produce beautiful pieces, but what I would love to see is a practical conceptualisation about what actually works and how it drives business and intertwines with marketing. It truly is all linked. Perhaps this is why I loved system design so much last year?

Here comes the next problem, it appears to me – and I could be wrong – but to be in the position of actually getting where you are significantly impacting the position and culture of something through design, you need to be sitting somewhere where you are… okay, bloody good and perhaps have a few wallop names under your belt.

I know there’s the whole – ‘you’ve got to work your way up and get experience deal’ but it’s a fraction daunting and generally frustrating getting there. You’re producing work but can’t get that culture or something into it.

Prime example is the logo I’m doing for rebranding my workplace, true, I’ve never really done a logo before and sure it’s okay, but I don’t know if I fully believe in it and that disturbs me (just a confidence thing?).

Future speaking, part of me would love to be the casual ‘at home’ designer who freelances, is her own boss, works enough to enjoy it and to make enough and yet still isn’t driven by her work, but the other part would love and thrive off the culture of the sophisticated edge of the design world. Granted, they seem a little snobby sometimes (we can ignore that bit), a bit quirky (some of that is all right) and wear these funky clothes (that’d be nice by I seem to be a fraction lacking in the fashion sense arena)… Maybe I can combine the two and find a satisfactory Bec combination.

Here’s my theory, being good in the design world (besides the being good bit) requires confidence. That’s what it hangs off.

Let me stick with my ‘Art at uni’ theory. If you can talk about it, talk it up, and explain it (even if you’ve done it the night before) you’re 90% there.

Right. So confidence?

Do I have that? Sometimes. Mostly no. Sometimes I’m good at pretending. There is a definite need for my communication skills (and general personableness) to go up several notches it’s something tangible that I can define and work on.

The reality is that I’m good at design but I’m not brilliant – I don’t think I’m being modest, just truthful, so I might have to pull some more feasible strings to get there.

I think I’m okay with aiming for that medium between freelance/hot-shot. I want to be really good at what I do but I want the enjoyment of it to drive me and not hunger of getting that next big client (but damn it would be exciting) or working in the fanciest firm around.

On an even more extreme (and a little pathetic) note, part of me would love to take the safe option of returning all my design work from an email-anonymous front, but it’s not really that beneficial to character.

Design is more than producing something that serves a base level role of just being good enough, treating it as such is about as ugly as crawling the web for a generic swirly logo you can attach your name to and calling it your brand, it’s about communication and thinking way outside the box and beyond the Adobe Suite into culture and psychology and business and life and even in a funny way, theology.

You wouldn’t believe how much design makes me think about God.

Maybe that’s why I like it.

Culture Design Life Uni

My usual 8:30am status of sitting online (for a class) was disrupted this morning by an excursion to Heide Museum of Modern Art. Kellie met me at Box Hill nice and early, and we got on the right bus.

Had you been driving around the Manningham area this morning you would have seen two rather purposefully walking but confused girls.  We managed to get off the bus WAY too early and spent a while on the phone trying to work out where we were. The next bus was excessively late. We made the 10:00am timeslot 45 minutes late. Missed half of the tour and still got the thumbs up from our tutors. Stressful – a little.

It was a really good experience to share. Nothing like getting to know someone better when you’ve got nothing else to do but talk and speculate on the location of some hideous-to-find specialist art shed. (Oh should I take that back?).

It was quite an interesting exhibition although I do not think that modern art at it’s purest will ever be totally and completely in my heart – some yes, the rest I am happy to leave in every other beach house that hasn’t quite been renovated.

Uni

pear1ap.jpgI’m studying photography (again – I did it at Deakin as well) this semester and am having great fun. My two tutors cover the grounds of commercial and photojournalist practice and are amusing to watch interact. We have class in an actual studio and we are using flickr of all things to share everyone’s photos – which is a brilliant idea, beats 3hr classes of sitting through everyone’s photos, *coughDeakin*

This week’s focus (teehee) was on Camera Control – so aperture, shutter speed, panning etc.

Here are a few examples that I was quite happy with – some of the others I’ve taken are about the most boring photos ever, but served the ‘activity’ purpose… it’s difficult to find fast moving objects that aren’t cars when you are limited for time!

The top one was about aperture control, the second is using panning to convey movement. And I’m too embarrassed to share the rest because they suck (Well – not embarrassed, more just that it would be a waste of time).

pan1.jpg

Photography Uni