Tag: <span>Design</span>

Visit Sacred Space and while I’m on about wandering around the prayer/quiet thing, Jacob over at Sensus Divinitatis is starting a series on quiet times, which I still maintain is a crap name.

And then there’s this funky little java ap to make beautiful word clouds, Wordle

And wow. This guy is selling ‘his life’ on ebay… I’ve often wondered what it would be like to just up and move to somewhere entirely new with no-one you knew.

Thanks to Hammo, pretty sure two of those links came via you.

And lastly.

The Kingdom of God is like Dragonflies

Christianity Create Design

wattlebirdsToday I discovered that my neighbourly (and I really do literally mean neighbour) op-shop is selling earth-greetings cards, it’s a peculiar opshop in that it sells some new things as well as standard opshop things. Earth Greetings is Interesting in it’s philosophy, I not 100% sold on all their designs, but some of them a quite lovely, and hey – it’s Australian based. That’s another win on the environmental factor.

Design Op Shop Sustainable

I have made a few interesting observations about design the past few days, and wonder at times if I am walking into a obsolete career.

The other day I pulled out out wedding photos in order to finally do something with them and wound up facing the reality that the cheapest means of an album was a coffee table photo book, like those that Iphoto produce. I found Iphoto somewhat limiting – probably because I haven’t upgraded my mac to Leopard yet, but got put something similar called Blurb. Thus far I am fairly impressed, we shall have to see what a completed book looks like, but the cost and the design software is clean and fairly impressive.

But there you have it, designed photo albums for anyone with half a bolt of computer know-how’s finger tips. There are templates for layouts and lots of them, and lots of them are quite nice. Yes it is still limited. (There are ways to get your own layouts into the software, I intend to explore that avenue).

The simple fact is, anyone can make a photo book.

In the few photography classes I’ve taken, photographers either bemoan the coming of the digital age because it takes generic photography further from their hands or they celebrate it and the capacity it opens up for ease/scope and the need for photographers to display a greater level of skill.

Photographers still make money and for the most part they still take better photographs.

It is the same for designers. You can go and make your photo book and perhaps you will be happy with it and perhaps you have some skill or eye for it, but for the most part the sample books out there – the ones people have created and paid to have printed look like absolute crap. What surprised me most was that many professional photographers books look just as ridiculous.

If you don’t know what you’re doing, at the very least read up on design, or for or goodness sakes pay someone to do it, or even get your arty-eyed grandson to help you.

And ladies, it might be fun to make a wedding album and you might not care if it’s not super professional but please, please, please do not use pink text over a photo… or pretty much anywhere, however much you like pink. It’s difficult to read and screams tacky.

Create Design Wedding

Here is my somewhat recent essay on Design and Sustainability (After having not written an essay for quite some time and finishing it rather quickly – I am reasonably satisfied). I have to follow this soon by interviewing a designer about the same kind of thing.

*It has since been marked, I did alright, not wonderfully (all the more reason NOT to copy my work)… a bit short on specific examples.

I could’ve approached this more practically but chose to focus on thought and idea based strategies. Thackera was a set text, the rest I scrumaged for.

Before the random visitor decides to copy what I’ve written and submit it themselves, this essay is thoroughly © Rebecca Matheson 2008.

Strategies towards designing for environmental sustainability

Designers are increasingly acknowledging the importance of identifying and maintaining a standard of environmental sustainability in their work. As thinking goes more global, and environmental issues escalate, the prevalence and influence of design needs to step up to match the concerns. Communication design is no exception. Although less dominant in terms of tangible product or architecture, communication and graphic designers engage with materials and machines which in turn affect the world. Designers have at their hands the means of conveying strong messages about change, these messages need to link in with the consistency of their own lives in the hope to inspire contagious thought and action to improve standards of how humans treat their world. Strategies involve acknowledging those around us, our context, our role in the system of things and forward thinking.

In the complexity of today’s world, designers need to forget their one-man, one-woman show and remember that the process and the outcome is defined by many. Thackera encourages designers to, “Foster new relationships outside our usual stomping grounds” (2006, p.8). There is importance in engaging with others to understand the bigger picture. The bigger picture takes into account the consequences of choices in design, Susan Szenasy affirms this in her realisation, “It became clear to me that we needed to talk about the ethical implications of Descartes’s cogito ergo sum principle of a man-centered universe and contrast it to a more communal, collaborative approach in which social justice is at least as important as individual well-being.” (Szenasy, 2003) She talks about building a new world view that is inclusive over individualistic. To define anything new it is import to present some kind of vision to inspire collective thought, “If you want to build a ship, don’t divide the work and give orders, teach them to yearn for the vast and endless sea.” (Thackera, 2006 quotes Antoine de Saint-Exupery p.25), this pushes beyond just the borders of just motivating those who consider themselves designers and involves a greater collective of individuals and groups.

With this mind shift is an emphasis on values and manifestos with the conviction that, “Ethics and responsibility can inform design decisions without constraining the social and technical innovation we all need to do.” (Thackera, 2006, p.7). This presents itself in agendas such as The Natural Step which maintains that we can open the funnel between resources and demand, through innovation and creativity. (Natural Step, 2003) This in turn calls on the talent of designers to begin to solve these environmental problems. It is the small decisions and innovations that make headway into getting somewhere and influencing sustainability.

The methodical approach to thinking more holistically in response to environment and design is to begin to ask questions about how human systems are interacting with natural systems, inclusive of ecology, economy and culture, “People create change by looking at the past to find better ways of doing things in the future: by transcending the boundaries of the social systems they’ve created.” (The Designers Atlas of Sustainability, 2007, p.201) decisions on both small and large scale projects along with education and awareness, contribute to understanding and action that does have impact on the environment. This also calls into account responsibility, what is local and what is global and general respect for the earth, “The graphic designer will need to understand materials, their contents, their end impacts and the full life cycle of their design objects as to not further damage our biodiversity and increase the depletion of our important natural resources.” (Benson, 2003) This may be as simple as what design studio Hershey Cause did by reducing a little used 750 page Institute of Medicine report to a simple and useable 24 pages. Communication Designers are now beginning to question materials, and are thoroughly researching their printers techniques. It is simple to say there is regard for environment but there is a vast difference in how far this plays out.

Beyond materials stretches a holistic approach to design where simplicity becomes a significant and deciding factor. Eva Anderson emphasises the importance of ‘Simplifying Design (and your Life)’ through her long standing investigation of eco design. Rising problems of environment affected by consumerism and excess consumption point towards the inverse to bring about positive environmental change. The Gaia approach, “Everything is connected to every thing else” (Anderson, 1998, p.267) practically dictates that the small decisions, influence the greater scheme of things. Excessive design means a higher use of resources and the production and transportation to bring those resources home. “In isolation, these small acts seem inconsequential. But as the small changes accumulate over time and frequency, they have the potential for lasting sociological and ecological transformation.” (Anderson, 1998, p.271)

Simplicity brings with it the thought of lasting design. What design will exist and serve its purpose so well, that the continued request for more and better things fails to even show? Durability and the elimination of a ‘timed product’ with a life expectancy bring a further dimension to communication design and induce greater thought before a final product is produced, marketed and sold. Ed van Hinte in talking about design and time, presents his book as an example, “This book (click here) is the result: a luxurious, distinctive little publication bound in embossed gold foil, with an exquisite binding that exudes care and preciousness. You’ll want to keep it – which is exactly the point.” (Steffan, 2006, p86) If we pour timelessness into our design the suggestion of, ‘just don’t design’ no longer eliminates the designer’s craft. It is important to put thought into simplicity and durability, in this way design can persist with a conscience into a world with a delicate environment.

Through the employment of careful thought, simplicity, and regard, designers can begin to engage globally and locally with their customers and their resources. Suddenly systems draw to the forefront of design and each piece is not a standalone but a small part of something much bigger. The inspiration of designers who consider the environment and share their learning needs to continue in conversation, through designs themselves and across generations so that the past is not forgotten and the future of design will persist. Environmental issues are ever present, yet by changing our thinking and modifying our actions we can progress toward a less damaging approach to what has more recently become a significant cause of concern.

Bibliography/References

Image Source

Design Uni

Some design links for you today.

I cannot believe I haven’t talked about it before (I seem to recall doing so but it must of been in an online tute, because blog search results reveal nothing). I am in love with this building – the Lourve Museum in Abu Dhabi. I am pretty keen on getting there some day. The light play is amazing!

Rebound Books – My sister Laura gave me one of these for my birthday, it has the cover of The Silver Sword, a book I loved when I was younger. They use recycled denim paper for the pages and contain the occasional actual page, exciting.

Core77 – I came across this searching for something with a ‘skin’ for an online class. It is an industrial design focused online magazine/blog. Plenty of curious and beautiful things.

Design