The Design Thread
The Design Thread
Design rules my life.
From fashion, the architecture around me, art on my walls, in the mags I read, on the cover of the music I buy, the products I choose, the fonts I decide to use, the games I play. Design is central to my life.
It is everywhere, from the urban landscape to the virtual world, from the keybaord to the playground, from the bike you ride to the pen you write with, everything is designed.
"desgin adds value to all of our lives, it is about good ideas, logical outcomes, sustainability, effiency, beauty and quality"
What gets you off in design?
From fashion, the architecture around me, art on my walls, in the mags I read, on the cover of the music I buy, the products I choose, the fonts I decide to use, the games I play. Design is central to my life.
It is everywhere, from the urban landscape to the virtual world, from the keybaord to the playground, from the bike you ride to the pen you write with, everything is designed.
"desgin adds value to all of our lives, it is about good ideas, logical outcomes, sustainability, effiency, beauty and quality"
What gets you off in design?
- system
- let the hustlers play
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Re: The Design Thread
definitely good typography (kerning, letter form, weighting, et al). imagery, individual flair and colour too.DBoy wrote:What gets you off in design?
typos tend to give me the shits though.DBoy wrote:"desgin adds value to all of our lives, it is about good ideas, logical outcomes, sustainability, effiency, beauty and quality"
DRS wrote:It’s uplifting while we drift through time,
‘cause we keep pushing the vibe.
Re: The Design Thread
I designed that to draw attention.system wrote:typos tend to give me the shits though.DBoy wrote:"desgin adds value to all of our lives, it is about good ideas, logical outcomes, sustainability, effiency, beauty and quality"
- breaksRbest
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- ghetto kitty
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same here, my life is full of analysing design and concept and how it all applies/translates to the real material world
it makes me laff when some really simple thing, like a bottle opener, doesnt work!
whats the point?
heres one of my fav things >>
this guy is one of my idols > physics in motion >
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FMqftVhOuTw&eurl=
it makes me laff when some really simple thing, like a bottle opener, doesnt work!
whats the point?
heres one of my fav things >>
this guy is one of my idols > physics in motion >
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FMqftVhOuTw&eurl=
- breaksRbest
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ghetto kitty wrote:this guy is one of my idols > physics in motion >
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FMqftVhOuTw&eurl=
is right, that's awesome!
I think I am, Therefore I am. I think
Last edited by taylem on Thu Jan 24, 2008 2:54 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- ghetto kitty
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i think you can tell a lot about a person by what design they identify with...
all that stuff you posted taylem, clean lines, movement and motion,
simplicity and elegance.
the negative space being jsut as important as the actual colours and shapes.
i think i can tell what walking into your house feels like
all that stuff you posted taylem, clean lines, movement and motion,
simplicity and elegance.
the negative space being jsut as important as the actual colours and shapes.
i think i can tell what walking into your house feels like
design is a massive part of my life.
i've always enjoyed looking at beautiful things in an abstract sense, but i think one of the great things about getting older and having a little more disposable income is being able to replace some of your 'everyday' practical things and instead surround yourself with things that are cleverly and beautiful designed and give you pleasure to look at.
eg getting rid of the crappy old couches and getting something that everytime you walk into your home you can admire, as well as find comfort in.
i've always enjoyed looking at beautiful things in an abstract sense, but i think one of the great things about getting older and having a little more disposable income is being able to replace some of your 'everyday' practical things and instead surround yourself with things that are cleverly and beautiful designed and give you pleasure to look at.
eg getting rid of the crappy old couches and getting something that everytime you walk into your home you can admire, as well as find comfort in.
Friday - Nail, head. In a well presented way, maybe in black and white and with a ergonomically designed hammer.
I appreciate the things in my life that represent aspects of design I love. From the native American ceramic bowl I bought in San Fran to the Obey design on my wall. They all fit in there.
I am sure if Lucas was here he would post something like this
I appreciate the things in my life that represent aspects of design I love. From the native American ceramic bowl I bought in San Fran to the Obey design on my wall. They all fit in there.
I am sure if Lucas was here he would post something like this
:doublescript:Friday wrote:design is a massive part of my life.
i've always enjoyed looking at beautiful things in an abstract sense, but i think one of the great things about getting older and having a little more disposable income is being able to replace some of your 'everyday' practical things and instead surround yourself with things that are cleverly and beautiful designed and give you pleasure to look at.
eg getting rid of the crappy old couches and getting something that everytime you walk into your home you can admire, as well as find comfort in.
less clutter of crap and more clean lines
love red
love angular spaces, tonnes of natural light, texture, old wood, vaulted ceilings and original facades (tonnes in brunny with the faded tetley ads on old brick etc)
hate frou frou, that fake french provincial look and hate country style, baltic wood, blue and yellow checks etc.
would gag for warehouse conversion with polished concrete floors, original timber beams, urban style art and japanese water garden with huge koi
Be who you are and say what you feel because those who mind don't matter and those who matter don't mind - Dr. Seuss
I work at a small animation / post prod / film prod company. We do a lot of different stuff, from film production to editing to motion graphics to 3d animation to traditional 2d animation to stop motion to photography - whatever we need to get the job done. However all of us have a pretty substantial graphic design background, and we all still think of ourselves as designers (not exclusively, but its a huge part of everything we do).DEAN G wrote:Who here works in the design industry?
Cool, this thread could be handy for networking. I'm always finding people who work in other design disciplines can often be helpful to our own.taylem wrote:I work at a small animation / post prod / film prod company. We do a lot of different stuff, from film production to editing to motion graphics to 3d animation to traditional 2d animation to stop motion to photography - whatever we need to get the job done. However all of us have a pretty substantial graphic design background, and we all still think of ourselves as designers (not exclusively, but its a huge part of everything we do).DEAN G wrote:Who here works in the design industry?
Transmission Games (Formerly IR Gurus)
A lot of what I do would be considered design, but not in the normal sense.
A lot of what I do would be considered design, but not in the normal sense.
thats the thing, there is no normal sense.
Design covers so many areas...
Game design, brand designers, architecture, industrial design, urban design, graphic design, thearte, tv and set design, product design, fashon design, it design, craft practice, exhibition design, textile design and crosses disiplines form science, engineering, it, business and on and on.
I am becoming deeply involved with industry at large over the next few months, reading some really interesting stuff.
Design covers so many areas...
Game design, brand designers, architecture, industrial design, urban design, graphic design, thearte, tv and set design, product design, fashon design, it design, craft practice, exhibition design, textile design and crosses disiplines form science, engineering, it, business and on and on.
I am becoming deeply involved with industry at large over the next few months, reading some really interesting stuff.
nice style gnatty!! i LOVE red too. my loungeroom wall is red at our current place. with a huge red on white obey pic hanging on it - looks the bomb.gnat wrote::doublescript:Friday wrote:design is a massive part of my life.
i've always enjoyed looking at beautiful things in an abstract sense, but i think one of the great things about getting older and having a little more disposable income is being able to replace some of your 'everyday' practical things and instead surround yourself with things that are cleverly and beautiful designed and give you pleasure to look at.
eg getting rid of the crappy old couches and getting something that everytime you walk into your home you can admire, as well as find comfort in.
less clutter of crap and more clean lines
love red
love angular spaces, tonnes of natural light, texture, old wood, vaulted ceilings and original facades (tonnes in brunny with the faded tetley ads on old brick etc)
hate frou frou, that fake french provincial look and hate country style, baltic wood, blue and yellow checks etc.
would gag for warehouse conversion with polished concrete floors, original timber beams, urban style art and japanese water garden with huge koi
you'd love our new place. two levels - downstairs polished concrete with old beams for the ceiling. has posts all through it at used to be the stall dividers for the horses (it's an old stables), still has the hitching rings on the walls and the posts have gnaw and rope marks from the horses too.
upstairs is one massive room with beautiful old floor boards and huge pitched roof cathederal ceiling with gorgeous aged beams.
sounds the bizness lady. mad jealous
love the idea of horse gnawed character
love old banged up wood that's been waxed up
have friend with massive refec style dinner table made of old railroad planks with the iron tacks in em. fucking mad. shits on my freedom imposter
love the idea of horse gnawed character
love old banged up wood that's been waxed up
have friend with massive refec style dinner table made of old railroad planks with the iron tacks in em. fucking mad. shits on my freedom imposter
Be who you are and say what you feel because those who mind don't matter and those who matter don't mind - Dr. Seuss
word, we had a tour of your studio in st kilda with my uni and I was very impressed.taylem wrote:XYZ Studios
KTM RC8.. bam... orange... mmm
Ducatti 848, i was stickly Japanese but now this is my new love... 23k on road, only needs to be serviced every 12,000 km. mmmmm and it's WHITE. sold.
Did i mention brembo brakes and single swing arm? rad
The rubber plant was surprised. If the rubber plant could have spoken, it wouldn't have said anything. That's how surprised the rubber plant was.
- huge
- old boy
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looks like a pokemon eating a tire. huhuh
http://www.thelittlemule.com - tredleys and caffeine
http://www.dubstep.com.au - aussie dubstep forums
http://www.dubstep.com.au - aussie dubstep forums
At the moment I'm living in the Netherlands, nearby Jansen's workshop. a few months ago, he had an open day. The workshop was pretty small, not much to see (surprisingly!), just 2 garden sheds on top of a hill. Inside it looked pretty much like a regular handy-man's shed... no magic dust...ghetto kitty wrote: this guy is one of my idols > physics in motion >
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FMqftVhOuTw&eurl=
There was lots of old/broken 'animals' and parts lying around outside. He also had 2 large ones which were operational. One BIG animal was powered by an air compressor. The smaller one (well, the size of a Mini), needed to be pushed by hand... you gave it a gentle push and the legs would start working and carry it along for a few meters. Amazing stuff! The motion was like a crab.. the legs are always moving, but only a couple of them are touching the ground at any time.
Jansen was walking around, talking to people and giving occasional demonstrations of the air compressor animal.
- ghetto kitty
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the holding page for http://stateofdesign.com.au/ has just gone up
If you are in design, get involved.
If you are in design, get involved.
- andy_hoffman
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Here's another theo jansen clip with a bit more detail about how his animals work.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b694exl_oZo
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b694exl_oZo
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no more epilepsy raptor jesus
no more epilepsy raptor jesus
Mmm, Alfa Brera. They are lovely on the inside too - wish I'd gotten to drive it. They have inherited a lot of the functionality from the 156 upgrade to the 159, so they aren't as bad as they could have been on that front. Mind you, would willingly put up an awful lot for the sheer awesome of owning one. Makes the competition look like they're from Ikea.
With the exception of the 80s, Alfa's are generally on the money on the aesthetics front (Giulietta Spider anyone?). And I hope we've all see the 8C...
:homerdrool:
With the exception of the 80s, Alfa's are generally on the money on the aesthetics front (Giulietta Spider anyone?). And I hope we've all see the 8C...
:homerdrool: