For our 5th project we were told to form a group that we would then complete project 5 with. The group I am in consists of four women who all focused on jewelry in their earlier assignments. Two of us focused on rings while the other two focused on necklaces (myself included). Originally our group was debating which of our items we should design our kiosk around. Because this project is more comprehensive than the others, and we have a little more experience on what sort of objects illicit the strongest design concepts, choosing the object took much more time than when I initially selected my object at the beginning of the semester. For a while we focused on doing some sort of ring, and were debating weather to build a kiosk around Eliana's South American gold ring, Wenquing's clock ring, or an entirely new ring, such as a black Camile ring I had at home. After giving it a lot of thought, conversation, and design brainstorming though, we decided to head in an entirely different direction, we decided to design a kiosk around a watch. But not just any watch, a sports watch. However, none of us owned a sports watch, strictly speaking, and Eric informed us we must actually own the object we are designing around. Thus we ended up selecting my Breitling watch by defacto, as I was the only person in our group wearing a watch, and it loosely fit our sporting requirement. Breitling is a high-end sporting watch, specifically targeting diving and aviation, but it is marketed as a high end sport watch, suitable for many activities. It has a higher price point, somewhere in the $3,000-$10,000 dollar range depending on which watch you purchase. Below is a photo of my watch, so you can get a visual idea of what our group is working with.
As you can see, this isn't the typical sports watch. It looks closer to a Rolex than a Timex, which means that as designers we have the challenge of creating a high end kiosk/booth that speaks to the specific audience that would potentially purchase this watch. As a design also we have to focus on sporty/active audience, who are willing to make an expensive purchase on a sport's branded watch. So our group really tried to nail down a specific active audience, and we vacillated between the diving community and the aviation audience. At one point we even discussed incorporating both in our kiosk design, but that concept was weak and was easily seen as such when we started sketching out our ideas of incorporating air and water, or planes and scuba tanks, they were just too far apart to make a high end design concept. So then we focused on just aviation and then the ideas started flowing.
Monday, November 29, 2010
Monday, November 22, 2010
Final Model for Project 4
Shelving system with scaled boxes, and bookends, Scale for this model is 3" = 1'-0"
View From Top of Shelf
Book End
Scaled Box, each one of these little Boxes took me 2 hours to make, yikes!! There were 18 total.
Monday, October 25, 2010
Looking Back
I am supposed to reflect on the first half of the semester in this posting. It has really been a roller coaster of sorts, with big ups and big downs. Finally after six weeks I am coming to understand there is in fact a method to the madness of this class, but it took a really long time to get there. I began frustrated in general with this design class because I felt we really got off to a slow start, and I wasn't sure how the first few projects related to interior design. And despite going through a pack of xacto blades, curbing my self-hatred at my lack of any knowledge to do with Creative Suite, and coming up with a final presentation that looked like a three year old made it, I have in fact leaned more than I expected about the design process. Specifically, how detail oriented it is. I think this profession will reward those with strict organization skills, and a strict attention to details, both of which are processes I need to put a little more effort in to. But I also learned how much of a struggle the design process can be, or how straight forward it can be. I think the line between the potential for struggle or ease of the process really stems from the strength of the design idea. If it is a mediocre idea it really falls apart during the design process. But, if it is a strong design idea it holds up very well from one design aspect to the next. The strength of the idea really becomes apparent in the design process.
On a side note I have really come to understand how time consuming this professions has the potential to be. I cannot at this point imagine designing an entire room, let alone a house or a building. There is so much thought that has to be incorporated into any given space, that any time I see an interior I like it now reminds me of the headache the designer must have swam through in order to get to that final finished product. I am also getting a little nervous about what the design process would look like if you had to cater your designs to a client's taste. I am no way excited about that process.
Overall I think this class up until this point has been successful at teaching me how to think differently about design, a feat that is probably more valuable than memorizing standard dimensions in space planning techniques. It is not what I expected, but it is pretty interesting to feel the effects of learning a new way to view the world, or at least the interior spaces of the world.
On a side note I have really come to understand how time consuming this professions has the potential to be. I cannot at this point imagine designing an entire room, let alone a house or a building. There is so much thought that has to be incorporated into any given space, that any time I see an interior I like it now reminds me of the headache the designer must have swam through in order to get to that final finished product. I am also getting a little nervous about what the design process would look like if you had to cater your designs to a client's taste. I am no way excited about that process.
Overall I think this class up until this point has been successful at teaching me how to think differently about design, a feat that is probably more valuable than memorizing standard dimensions in space planning techniques. It is not what I expected, but it is pretty interesting to feel the effects of learning a new way to view the world, or at least the interior spaces of the world.
The Shelf and the busts
I wanted to include my sketches so far for my shelving unit for my boxes. I am thinking that I will make this out of black bristol with the shiny black coating as a finish, I was also thinking that I could pop the underside of the shelves with a bright emerald green to add a little color. I was going to stack the boxes vertically like books between two bookends on both the top and bottom shelves, and then have them open on display in the middle. I think my biggest challenge is going to be making the busts and not the shelving system.
I want the risers to be thin, like I drew here, but the support legs to be wider and have a soft curve, reminiscent of French antique furniture
Friday, October 15, 2010
And were off... Design Project #4
Now that the container is done and we are finished with our crits we have been handed a new project, create a display for our container(s). It can be either a counter top display or a floor display, and as per normal, we have to relate the design of the display to our object and to its container. I decided with the way this class is progressing I see a full on store design coming up, so I need to create a display that would work well into a room or a shop, so literally I am restrained by the parameters within a normal retail space, such as ceiling height. Therefore, the display unit must not be too grand to fit inside a store with 8 foot ceilings. I like the idea of taking a classic antique display and reinventing it with modern day finishes, like a Lucite shelving system, similar to the way Kartell reinvented the French antique (see photo below). Although, finding a way to cut curves into a shelving system may prove difficult and are certainly outside of my finish level with my handy dandy Xacto knife and my Alvin cutting mat.
So after an afternoon of calling around to the available plastics manufacturers, I was able to find out that this shelving system of mine would cost an arm and a leg and also that they would most likely only be able to cut the shelves out of acrylic sheets, and not the legs, because they can only cut on 90 degree angles. So my Lucite shelving system went out the window about as quickly as it came in. So, now I have to come up with a way to make the shelving system out of chip board, and then cover it in the same glossy black paper I used on my box. Also, as part of my design I thought I could create a plaster bust of some sort based on the silhouette I used in my container. Except that the silhouette would be used as a bookend and and I would be able to use the jewelry boxes as books, and stack them. Prof. Anderson liked this idea, so I pulled some pictures together to constitute my design inspiration for this project. I especially like the idea of popping a color on the shelves, like a bight Emerald green, so I included some rooms that had that sort of black and green color combination. Please see my design inspiration collage below:
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Photo From www.allmoden.com |
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Photo Collage of Various design elements and furniture |
Monday, October 11, 2010
Adding some sketches for project #3
I just wanted to add some photos I took of my sketches of project 3. The photos go in order from my first design idea (the hat box) and then go through some ideas I discarded before I created the models (see the quadrafoil?), until finally I came up with the idea for the final design for the box.
This last photo is of the final box, with some different ideas for color I had.
Sketches of hat box idea |
Sketches of hat box with some different color combos |
Sketches of different box ideas, square, quadrafoil, picture box |
Oval Box Envelope Box Sketch |
I also wanted to post some of the comments I received from my piers during the pier critique in class. I wish I had received more comments giving me ideas on how to improve the design. However, the comments I did receive made me feel pretty happy with the success of my design. People really clearly understood my message of old and new merging together. In fact, my favorite comment was from someone who just wrote the word, "timeless" for their comment, which is EXACTLY what I was going for. Someone else wrote, "Elegant, regal. Love that the necklace is depicted on the silhouette! Allows you to imagine wearing the necklace." Someone else wrote, "Great job! I really think you captured the "timeless" quality. The black and white and silhouette work really well together and evoke elegance, femininity, and the necklace without referencing any particular time." A few people did say they thought that the size of the box was bulky, and while I agree the size could be smaller, I really wanted the necklace to have room to hang within the box, instead of having to be folded into a smaller space, as if the box was made just for the necklace. (which it was).
Friday, October 8, 2010
Final Box, Finally!!!
Since my last post I thought of a design, bought the materials, spent about 20 hours building my box, and then finally turned it in last Tuesday. Here is the final submission:
So, as you can see I decided to stick with the black and white, revamp the non-descriptive female advertisement in the form of a silhouette, and put it together with a clean, simple box. The black was just a glossy black finish, and the white was a glossy, pearlized paper. I liked the idea of the double frame and the look too once it was together. I added the gold necklace to pictorally suggest and tie in the necklace. I had a really difficult time hinging the box, so I used a black ribbon on the back to create the hinge. I am really happy with the overall design, I really liked the way it looked and would certainly be able to translate this box to multiple iterations of antique jewelry, not just my necklace. I think I finally was able to come up with a design that spoke both of the old and of the new and with that I am most happy. It is funny because I came up with a finite problem and gave it a designed solution, and that is the acheivement I am most proud of. However, the final box gave me some difficulty, I should have applied the paper to the exterior edges after I scored and folded the corners, it would have been a little cleaner. I also should have reinforced the interior hinge of the box, because as of yesterday it was already tearing. I had some difficulty figuring out how the necklace was goign to sit within the confines of the box. I finally decided to use the interior of a roll of tape, glue it to a square piece of chip board, stretch black velvet over the top, and then add bendable wire covered in velvet to act as arms to hold the necklace. See below:
Once I submitted this box for crit on Tuesday I found out that we were doing a peer critique in class. I felt pretty confidant about this because what I lacked in precise construction I think I made up for with the aesthetics of the design. It turns out that I was right. My peers really liked the box, which was more rewarding than any grade from a professor. One student even wrote that they thought the box was, "timeless". Which is exactly what I was trying to convey through my design. Someone else also mentioned endearing, which is how I viewed the design too. I am really happy with the comments and feedback I received. Unfortunately, with the good news comes the bad, and now I have a new assignment to work on. Stay tuned for my initial ideas.
So, as you can see I decided to stick with the black and white, revamp the non-descriptive female advertisement in the form of a silhouette, and put it together with a clean, simple box. The black was just a glossy black finish, and the white was a glossy, pearlized paper. I liked the idea of the double frame and the look too once it was together. I added the gold necklace to pictorally suggest and tie in the necklace. I had a really difficult time hinging the box, so I used a black ribbon on the back to create the hinge. I am really happy with the overall design, I really liked the way it looked and would certainly be able to translate this box to multiple iterations of antique jewelry, not just my necklace. I think I finally was able to come up with a design that spoke both of the old and of the new and with that I am most happy. It is funny because I came up with a finite problem and gave it a designed solution, and that is the acheivement I am most proud of. However, the final box gave me some difficulty, I should have applied the paper to the exterior edges after I scored and folded the corners, it would have been a little cleaner. I also should have reinforced the interior hinge of the box, because as of yesterday it was already tearing. I had some difficulty figuring out how the necklace was goign to sit within the confines of the box. I finally decided to use the interior of a roll of tape, glue it to a square piece of chip board, stretch black velvet over the top, and then add bendable wire covered in velvet to act as arms to hold the necklace. See below:
Once I submitted this box for crit on Tuesday I found out that we were doing a peer critique in class. I felt pretty confidant about this because what I lacked in precise construction I think I made up for with the aesthetics of the design. It turns out that I was right. My peers really liked the box, which was more rewarding than any grade from a professor. One student even wrote that they thought the box was, "timeless". Which is exactly what I was trying to convey through my design. Someone else also mentioned endearing, which is how I viewed the design too. I am really happy with the comments and feedback I received. Unfortunately, with the good news comes the bad, and now I have a new assignment to work on. Stay tuned for my initial ideas.
Sunday, October 3, 2010
Desperate
It's late and I am not able to sleep because I am really bothered that I cannot find a creative packaging idea in my head ofter two weeks and four models that conveys this idea of timelessness. I feel like I am still at square one with this project. I spent saturday scavenging the aisles of Michael's, AC Moore, G Street Fabrics, and Joanne Fabrics to no avail. Exasperated I went to the mall and went into every jewelry store/department store in the homes that some supreme idea would waft its way into my thick skull. I have what ever the equivelent of writer's block is but with design, maybe designers block. Yes, that's it, I have designer's block. Officially. I have done so much just to realize how little I have come. I need to add the photos of the other models I made, so below take a look. Again, as with the first model, please keep in mind I was only looking for a shape that would work.
Ok, so here I decided after the French label box to go back and try at least to make a model of my original idea (the hat box) it its most basic form, the circle. After making it though I realized I had just made a round box in an attempt to make a hat box. This round box was no different though than any candy box, or anything else for that matter. I also made an awful attempt to create the insert for how the necklace would lay inside of the box, here is the result (its very crude):
Those lines were Prof. Anderson's attempt to try and teach me how to more cleanly create an insert, which I really appreciated. I feel sort of desperate for any instruction at this point, so even if she is teaching me how to make an insert I probably won't end up using in my final model, I am really grateful for the lesson. My next model was more traditional; instead of trying to reinvent the box, I just build a box and tried to come up with some ideas on how that box will be unique. I decided on a box that hinged up to reveal the necklace, inside of a more temporary packaging that was like an envelope that just carried the box inside. Here is the result:
I liked the envelope box the best, because I thought it had some clean, minimalistic lines and because I like the idea of the flap opening to reveal the box within. However, I still for the life of me cannot justify how this relates to my necklace, or how any box will relate to my necklace. I have tried a ton of different shapes here. I even thought to do a quadrafoil until Prof. Anderson told me that it was the trademark of a modern day jewelry company, Van Cleef Arpel. Great, I am lost. I even had a discussion on the basics I know of what consists classic. Maybe I should reiterate them here. First of all when I think classic I think of black and white, as a color combination. I think of a pearl necklace against Jackie O's bubble gum pink Chanel suit. I think of the french twist (yes the hair style). Finally, I think of pretty much everything Audrey Hepburn. How these relate I do not know. How I can relate them to my necklace I do not know. I wish I had a Tinkerbell of design wishes in my pocket and hopefully the idea would just flash into my skull. I know I really like the idea of a silhouette, like the ones from my original advertisement, but more old school, like a real profile silhouette. I also like the idea of the black and white contrast here. But I cannot have a box of just a black and white silhouette, can I? I am lost, tired, and stressed! Welcome to GW grad school right? I really want to do well on this project, I just feel like nothing cohesive or even legitimate has struck me yet. Maybe sleeping on it will help. Otherwise I will have to make that envelope container that I cannot even begin to rationalize how it relates to my product. Stay tuned...
Image of circular model |
Circle Model Box Insert |
I liked the envelope box the best, because I thought it had some clean, minimalistic lines and because I like the idea of the flap opening to reveal the box within. However, I still for the life of me cannot justify how this relates to my necklace, or how any box will relate to my necklace. I have tried a ton of different shapes here. I even thought to do a quadrafoil until Prof. Anderson told me that it was the trademark of a modern day jewelry company, Van Cleef Arpel. Great, I am lost. I even had a discussion on the basics I know of what consists classic. Maybe I should reiterate them here. First of all when I think classic I think of black and white, as a color combination. I think of a pearl necklace against Jackie O's bubble gum pink Chanel suit. I think of the french twist (yes the hair style). Finally, I think of pretty much everything Audrey Hepburn. How these relate I do not know. How I can relate them to my necklace I do not know. I wish I had a Tinkerbell of design wishes in my pocket and hopefully the idea would just flash into my skull. I know I really like the idea of a silhouette, like the ones from my original advertisement, but more old school, like a real profile silhouette. I also like the idea of the black and white contrast here. But I cannot have a box of just a black and white silhouette, can I? I am lost, tired, and stressed! Welcome to GW grad school right? I really want to do well on this project, I just feel like nothing cohesive or even legitimate has struck me yet. Maybe sleeping on it will help. Otherwise I will have to make that envelope container that I cannot even begin to rationalize how it relates to my product. Stay tuned...
Design Project #3, Models
This past week I have really struggled with my quest to create a box that speaks to the "timeless" aspect of my necklace. How exactly does a container say timeless? In my brainstorming I had the thought that timeless equated to classic. So, I was trying to create a container with a classic shape. I was also trying to make a container that spoke to the feminine aspects of the necklace, especially considering the heritage behind the item; four generations of women in my family have handed this item down from one generation to the next. I had to then come up with a shape of a container that while spoke to the timelessness of the necklace also would have been available in the original era where the necklace was created. To me, that meant that my container could not be completely minimalistic and modern, because that would not have existed when my great-grandmother was alive. So I tried for a vintage, feminine shape first. I thought soft curves would speak to the feminine aspect of the locket. After a little online perusing, I found the shape that appealed to me, the French label.
I found this image of a compilation of a few different French labels. Thought the colors are distracting, the shapes are really what I was looking for. Some of the shapes are more friviluous than I was looking for, and others were overly simplistic. I finally settled on this shape to create my model:
Upon presenting this first model in class for desk crits, I was told that it really speaks to a vintage or antique era, rather than a timeless theme. Also, the corners probably would not hod up for a very long time as they are sharp and not made of a very durable material(I made this first model out of Bristol). I personally was happy with the shape, but not the effect, as the box and the necklace do not speak the same language. They do are not reflective of each other. I am really struggling with an idea of how to create a container that can sufficiently reflect the necklace.
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Image From www.acharmingchest.com |
French Label Model |
Monday, September 27, 2010
Design Project # 3
The newest assignment I received in my design foundations class required that I create some sort of container/packaging for my necklace. The container had to be functional, meaning it had to actually contain the item and be able to open without falling apart. To those of you who don't already know this, that means I have the daunting task of creating models, actual models of the container I am trying to create. Let me tell you there was a reason as a child I preferred coloring to Legos, I was never able to make any sort of cohesive structure with those darn plastic pieces before I got frustrated and pushed the whole thing over. I knew those Legos would come back to haunt me, I just didn't realize I would ever be graded on my model making ability. Now, back to the present challenge at hand, I have to come up with a container the really speaks to the timeless aspect of my necklace. It needs to be durable enough that it can be handed down from one generation to another, and it cannot speak to a specific era, because the necklace is timeless. I basically have the challenge of creating a dateless container to hold my necklace.
My initial idea was to create a miniature version of a hat box, with a large silk bow to hold the lid on. I chose this style because I liked the idea of stacked hat boxes in a closet. They remind me of something I would have received from my grandma and would keep just for the novelty of the item. I also geve some serious thought to the companies that have trademarked their packaging in a very effective manner and three companies really came to mind, Hermes, Chanel, and Tiffany. The packaging for each of those companies is at once iconic of the brand, the luxury, and the classic vibe consumers associate with each one of those brands.
Hermes boxes are associated with the luxurious and uber expensive items that Hermes sells. Interior designers have used these boxes to accessorize a number of different spaces, from closets to entry ways. Like Hermes packaging, Tiffany too has managed to create packaging that adds to the iconography of the brand by using their signature Tiffany blue on their packaging. Now the little blue box generates as much excitement as the item held with in the box.
While Tiffany blue and Hermes orange boxes are trademarks of their brands, they are still in full color, while Chanel has really cornered the packaging market with their iconic black and white packaging.
All of these brands have well established packaging for their luxury goods. They seem all to have in common a simple design schematic. They are all rectangular or square boxes, with two color combinations. Their brand lettering is simple, understated, and relatively small in comparison with the size of the boxes. They all have some sort of ribbon included, which is not very original for packaging, but it is a classic way to say packaging. I liked the idea of the simple and elegant, and hat box is what spoke to me. I put together a collage of hat box images that I really liked.
My initial idea was to create a miniature version of a hat box, with a large silk bow to hold the lid on. I chose this style because I liked the idea of stacked hat boxes in a closet. They remind me of something I would have received from my grandma and would keep just for the novelty of the item. I also geve some serious thought to the companies that have trademarked their packaging in a very effective manner and three companies really came to mind, Hermes, Chanel, and Tiffany. The packaging for each of those companies is at once iconic of the brand, the luxury, and the classic vibe consumers associate with each one of those brands.
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Image from www.luxist.com |
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Image from www.fififlowers.com |
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Image from hatterandhareevents.blogspot.com |
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Image from www.deluxemall.com |
Next I came up with the proportions of the box, which would be a 8 inch diameter circle that was two 3 inches thick, including the lid. I thought that the profile of a woman in black and white on the lid wearing the necklace in gold would really stand out. I thought that the box could be white with black piping, and that the ribbon could be black.
When I presented this idea in class I was told that the idea of a hat box as packaging really dated the object to a specific era (when hat boxes were popular) and didn't speak to the timelessness of the object. I was also told that I should google minimalism and create a "box" that really disappeared, so that the necklace was the center piece. I agree that a hat box is a throwback to an older generation and thus is not consistent with my sentiments that the necklace is timeless. However, because I am not related to Harry Houdini, creating a container that disappears will be very difficult for me. So for now this grad has to go back to the drawing board.
Friday, September 17, 2010
First Design Class, First Project
My great grandmother's Irish Luck Locket |
Now back to the assignment, I was told to use this object to create a postcard to, "... highlight the image that best captures the essence of the object". The only constraints given were that it must fit on a 4x6" postcard. After giving this assignment some thought and evaluating what few design tools I had available to me at this point, I decided on simply hand sketching the necklace onto the postcard with graphite, just as the original jeweler who created the item would have done before he/she created the locket. I chose this option over simply taking a picture and pasting it to a card, and over using a more colorful option, as the simplicity of the grey and white colors I believe spoke the design of the locket and was a throwback to the past I mentioned earlier. Below is the image of the postcard:
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graphite on 4x6 postcard |
From here our next project was to take the item and create and advertisement/brand for it. Our final submission had to be 11x17" and could take on either a vertical or horizontal orientation. After giving this assignment a ton of thought and sketching some ideas I finally settled on advertising the necklace itself, foregoing the other ideas such as advertising for antique jewelry, specialty auction houses that sell antique jewelry, or even specialty insurance companies. The fact that the necklace told the story of multiple eras held some intrinsic appeal for the locket, but conveying that idea was challenging, should I show the era when the necklace was made, the antique tools it was made with, someone older gifting it to someone younger? I wasn't really sure.
Then it hit me that the different generations have all lived through their own history, world war one, world war 2, vietnam, women's suffrage, the civil rights movement, the technological era, and the informational era. But how to show the necklace moving through all of that history also presented a challenge, do you show a historical timeline with photos and move the necklace through all of them, and if so does that become confusing? Is it to far removed from the idea of selling the necklace? I think the answer to that is yes, it looses sight of selling the necklace and focuses too much on the story. So, then what am I trying to say and who am I saying it to? Who would buy this necklace and where would they look. I thought initially of fashion magazines, but then decided they would be too trendy and contemporary of a setting. Then I thought of where companies like Christie's Auction house or Sotheby's would advertise, magazines like the Robb Report. I also thought of the online one of a kind retail forum know as 1st Dibs. More than a specific audience I focused an creating an ad that would appear in either one of those publications, who already had established their book of business with buyers interested in one of a kind historical items. I also began to think about what my personal favorite thing to do with the necklace is, to wear it. I wanted to show the necklace as it was meant to be used, as an accessory, but also somehow include the historic value of the item. The idea occurred to me that women have been wearing this necklace through all of their respective eras and the necklace worked with what ever they were wearing it with because the necklace was timeless. Below is the final product:
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Design Project #2 |
In hindsight I should have made the word timeless larger, as it was huge when I was an inch from it, but disappeared when I was five feet away. But overall I was happy with the end result.
an open [sketch]book: early to rise
I just wanted to add the link to the cupcakes I referenced before in my first post. Now you can see what I am talking about! Please see the link below:
an open [sketch]book: early to rise: "It's 8:45 in the morning, and I've already been to a bakery and drawn a page full of cupcakes. The good news is that I didn't EAT the page ..."
an open [sketch]book: early to rise: "It's 8:45 in the morning, and I've already been to a bakery and drawn a page full of cupcakes. The good news is that I didn't EAT the page ..."
Monday, September 13, 2010
Ready. Set. Blog.
To kick off my first blog I thought that I would start with the basics; my dislikes and likes of other's blogs. However, I cannot take credit for this idea, as it is one of my first assignments for my new interior design grad program. As a school habit, I will start this blog on the more formal side, until I receive the green light from my professor that I am ok to go with a more informal and conversational tone. Also, you will have to bare with me as I change the overall appearance of the blog, as I am altogether new with both blogs and computer graphics. Right now it is really basic, but hopefully as my skills expand in complexity my blog with reflect my growth.
After navigating a few blogs to gain some inspiration and a small morsel of an idea of what I am/should be doing here I finally settled on reviewing the blog titled, "An Open Sketchbook" (www.anopensketchbook.com). I chose this blog over five others: Edgar Cabrera, Crack Skull Bob, Tommy Kane, Wagonized, and Andrea Joseph. While the other blogs were all unique and interesting, they focused on a narrow scope of topics. Each represented an individual style, but the blogs seemed to display a finished product, rather than the ideas, thoughts, and inspirations behind the finished work. On the other hand, An Open Sketchbook, displayed a wide variety artwork, including inspirational photos, informal sketches, and final compositions. The blogger posted images that created a cohesive digital collage. There is also a myriad of subject matter displayed, from cartoons, to portraits, quick gesture drawings, and even interior renderings. However, my favorite image is a sketch of a bunch of different cupcakes from a bakery the blogger happened to visit. Not only did the image make me want to run directly across the Key Bridge to brave the horribly long line at DC Cupcake, but it started a sort of chain reaction in my brain of all of the different ways the images of those cupcakes could be used. How would a single cupcake look at the front of a birthday card? Or, a pattern of all the different cupcakes embroidered onto a pillow, thrown onto a rocking chair in a little girl's nursery look? Or, even taken just as they are with the name of the cupcake shop at the bottom of an advertisement? I think all of these applications would be just as spectacular as the other.
I also enjoy the overall tone the blog takes on. The author is effective at explaining the images added to the blog and even though there is such a wide variety of images, the explanations seem to tie it all together. Some have personal significance, some are very obviously work related, others are just pretty doodles, but reading the excerpts attached to each and scrolling from the top to the bottom of the blog creates a single, cohesive blog. The images themselves are also stylistically similar; they are precise, clean, and colorful, yet manage to take on a playful casual twist. After scrolling from one image to the next it is becomes plain that the artist is the same through most of the images, and the images that are photographs are somehow complimentary to the drawings. Most importantly I think each image captures something beautiful. From a little girl on the beach, to a compilation of sketches of birdhouses, to those cupcakes I mentioned earlier, each image adds to the overall aesthetic appeal of the blog. The information and reasoning the blogger offers for each image posting is also concrete, reasonable, and easy to follow. The blogger does not follow up a simple image with something like, "I just thought this was pretty", but instead offers more complex statements such as, "One of the things I like best about our neighborhood is the diversity of houses in it. While all were built in the 1980s, the spectrum of styles and colors is quite broad." The statements are precise, relevant, and simple, a quality I hope to mirror in my blog in the months to follow.
After navigating a few blogs to gain some inspiration and a small morsel of an idea of what I am/should be doing here I finally settled on reviewing the blog titled, "An Open Sketchbook" (www.anopensketchbook.com). I chose this blog over five others: Edgar Cabrera, Crack Skull Bob, Tommy Kane, Wagonized, and Andrea Joseph. While the other blogs were all unique and interesting, they focused on a narrow scope of topics. Each represented an individual style, but the blogs seemed to display a finished product, rather than the ideas, thoughts, and inspirations behind the finished work. On the other hand, An Open Sketchbook, displayed a wide variety artwork, including inspirational photos, informal sketches, and final compositions. The blogger posted images that created a cohesive digital collage. There is also a myriad of subject matter displayed, from cartoons, to portraits, quick gesture drawings, and even interior renderings. However, my favorite image is a sketch of a bunch of different cupcakes from a bakery the blogger happened to visit. Not only did the image make me want to run directly across the Key Bridge to brave the horribly long line at DC Cupcake, but it started a sort of chain reaction in my brain of all of the different ways the images of those cupcakes could be used. How would a single cupcake look at the front of a birthday card? Or, a pattern of all the different cupcakes embroidered onto a pillow, thrown onto a rocking chair in a little girl's nursery look? Or, even taken just as they are with the name of the cupcake shop at the bottom of an advertisement? I think all of these applications would be just as spectacular as the other.
I also enjoy the overall tone the blog takes on. The author is effective at explaining the images added to the blog and even though there is such a wide variety of images, the explanations seem to tie it all together. Some have personal significance, some are very obviously work related, others are just pretty doodles, but reading the excerpts attached to each and scrolling from the top to the bottom of the blog creates a single, cohesive blog. The images themselves are also stylistically similar; they are precise, clean, and colorful, yet manage to take on a playful casual twist. After scrolling from one image to the next it is becomes plain that the artist is the same through most of the images, and the images that are photographs are somehow complimentary to the drawings. Most importantly I think each image captures something beautiful. From a little girl on the beach, to a compilation of sketches of birdhouses, to those cupcakes I mentioned earlier, each image adds to the overall aesthetic appeal of the blog. The information and reasoning the blogger offers for each image posting is also concrete, reasonable, and easy to follow. The blogger does not follow up a simple image with something like, "I just thought this was pretty", but instead offers more complex statements such as, "One of the things I like best about our neighborhood is the diversity of houses in it. While all were built in the 1980s, the spectrum of styles and colors is quite broad." The statements are precise, relevant, and simple, a quality I hope to mirror in my blog in the months to follow.
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