Thursday, October 29, 2015

Time Planning

Time management allows for the mind to be cleared for the creative thought process. It is an necessity in the creative industry to plan and schedule time in order to achieve set tasks and briefs, often within a restricted timescale.

Functioning professional practices would not survive in the industry without established time planning and scheduling to guide them through the design process with clear aims and objectives. Many large agencies have an entire department dedicated to the art of planning, whilst smaller agencies have to take this task on amidst all other sectors of the set task. Without explicit time planning, a practice can not be a professional success.

Poor time management in the creative industry can lead to the following downfalls:
  • Missed deadlines.
  • angry, disappointed clients.
  • substandard work.
  • missed opportunities. 
  • Stress.

Perhaps the most severe result of poor time planning, further than stress, is burnout. This psychological stress consists of lack of motivation, exhaustion and feelings of inadequacy and self worth.

So how is time planning possible?

Love list-making  |  Set goals for the hour/day/week/month  |  Have "to-do's"  |  Have "want to-do's  |
Know yourself  |  Plan ahead.

Tips for Time Management.

I found a page on the NHS website, from their "mood zone," which documents ways in which we are affected by stress, anxiety and depression - all feelings that can be experienced as a result of poor time management. It details good time management as an essential for "coping with the pressures of modern life without experiencing too much stress." By becoming successful at managing time, we are able to feel more relaxed, focused and in control of our lives.

“The aim of good time management is to achieve the lifestyle balance you want,”


says Emma Donaldson-Feilder, a chartered occupational psychologist.

Her "top-tips" for time management are exhibited below:

  • Work out your goals.
  • Make lists.
  • Work smarter, not harder.
  • Take breaks.
  • Prioritise important tasks

Donaldson-Fielder expands on each of these tips, which can be found at:







Thursday, October 22, 2015

Events in November

National



Where? 
Serpentine Gallery, Kensington Gardens, London.
When? 
25th November 2015 - 14th February 2016
Who? 
Michael Craig-Martin
What? 
TransienceThe first solo show of Craig-Martin’s work in a London public institution since 1989, Transience will bring together works from 1981 to 2015, including his era-defining representations of once familiar yet obsolete technology; laptops, games consoles, black-and-white televisions and incandescent lightbulbs that highlighted the increasing transience of technological innovation. The exhibition also featured new wallpaper that had been conceived especially for the exhibition. 

 Local (Leeds)


Where? 
The Gallery at Munro House, York Street / Duke Street, Leeds.
When? 
9th-15th November 2015
Who?
Joan Cornella
What? 
The Gallery at Munro House, in partnership with Thought Bubble Festival, are to host an exhibition of works by Spanish cartoonist and illustrator Joan Cornell, who is famous for his unsettling, surreal humor and black humorous comic strips - as well as artwork. He has a global following, with his works consisting of mostly wordless 6 panel comic strips. Cornellà explores disturbing themes, extreme discomfort, often grotesque, all packaged neatly into brightly coloured, beautifully rendered comic strips.
This will be Cornellà’s first solo exhibition in the UK, exclusive to the Gallery and to Leeds.

Thought Bubble is the UK’s largest annual event which celebrates sequential art in all its forms, including everything from superheroes to independent and small press comics.

Thought Bubble Festival runs 9-15 November 2015, with tickets available online now.

Radio/Television

The radio, television and internet are abundant with constantly updated platforms and contents, meaning here is where you are sure to find talks, documentaries and commentaries. With sites such as Nowness premiering new videos everyday, and TED Talks regularly being uploaded - there will be plenty of sources of inspiration to take advantage of in November and beyond.


Thursday, October 15, 2015

BE A SPONGE - 10 New Sources of Inspiration

Today's session entailed discussing sources of inspiration and materials to be taken advantage of to inform our own practices, remembering inspiration can be taken from anywhere.

"Inspiration can be taken from around you, and also within you."

Where can you find inspiration?

Blogs  |  Galleries  |  Books  |  Magazines  |  Zines  |  Gigs  |  Concerts  |  The Street  |  Socials  | Performances  |  The Past  |  The Future  |  Friends | Family

Sectors inspiration can be taken from:



Art  |  Music  |  Poetry  |  Film  |  Literature  |  Dance  |  Photography  | fashion  |  architecture  |  Technology  |  Science

Noted Sources



Ted Talks  |  Do Lectures  |  The Chicken Shed Chronicles  |  Instagram  |  Medium  |  The Plant Hunter  |  Radio 4  |  Another  |  Dazed and Confused  |  Pinterest


Having compiled lists in groups of our inspirations, we then shared them with the rest of the class to provide one another with new sources to influence our practices. Below are 10 sources I discovered in the session:

Design Milk http://design-milk.com

















Design Milk, founded by Jaime Derringer, is a design blog featuring new interior design ideas, architecture, modern furniture, home decor, art, style, and technology. The blog has been featured in the Los Angeles TimesTime Out New YorkThe San Francisco Chronicle, was one of the Google Reader Engineers’ Staff Picks and has been noted on Twitter’s “Who to Follow” list of influencers in Art and Design.


Alongside graphic design specifically, I also have a strong interest in interior design and decoration. Design milk provides imagery of contemporary interiors that excite me in that they make me consider  how I may want my own home in the future. 


Twitter - One Minute Briefs https://twitter.com/OneMinuteBriefs





















One Minute Briefs is a concept brought to you by Nick Entwistle, creator of The Bank of Creativity. They promote brands and causes via Twitter by challenging the creative community  to respond to a brief in One Minute and reward the best ideas. When they publish their ideas, they are shared - generating hundreds of thousands of mentions per day which is all positive advertising content for the client. This enables the brand to engage with a large audience very quickly and cost effectively. It is also a great tool for educational workshops, talks, events and is a popular social network for the creative industry.

When inspiration and creativity is lacking, these briefs may act as a resource for myself to be able to begin generating ideas, which in turn will undoubtedly bring an abundance of thoughts on my own personal project considerations.

Newgrids http://newgrids.fr


New Grids was launched in spring 2011 by Thomas Bouillot, with the aim of gathering some creative work, original thinking and digital experiences.

This curation of work and new ideas and considerations is abundant with articles and writings that not only inform on contemporary practices, but also provide information that is thought provoking and interesting. I feel regular visits to this website will keep my outlook on design fresh and exciting.

People of Print http://www.peopleofprint.com





















The People of Print website, originally created by Marcroy Eccleston Smith, began in 2008. Its purpose is to serve as a library of illustrators, designers and printers both creatively and commercially with the purpose of educating and inspiring.

Having been introduced to a number of print methods during my foundation and discovering a love I had for the processes and finishes alike, this website will allow me to explore the possibilities of contemporary print practice and perhaps inspire a preference for print over digital where possible and/or appropriate.

Friends of Type http://friendsoftype.com















Friends of Type is a website featuring original typographic design and lettering. The site showcases  fresh visual content typically every day, by four primary contributors. Posts are meant to log ideas, express, and inspire them and their readers. In the last week of every month they feature a guest designer, someone they admire and think will elevate their work and the site through their contribution.

As somebody who considers type something they want to form a significant part of their practice, this website will provide me with inspiration and links to practitioners in this field I may otherwise have been unaware of.

















Eye is "the world’s most beautiful and collectable graphic design journal." It is published quarterly for professional designers, students and anybody else interested in critical, informed writing about design and visual culture.

The writing style used in the magazine is what attracts me to this publication. I love reading interesting, professional articulations on design concerns. Wording and prose are something I have interest in, making eye a potential collectable of my own in the near future if possible.

Betypehttp://betype.co










Typography and calligraphy, lettering. Find the best fonts suggestions.


To become more competent and hand lettering is a significant ambition of mine, so retype is an ideal online resource for exploring the practice and bettering my own.


My Modern Met http://www.mymodernmet.com
















My Modern Met is "the big city that celebrates creative ideas." The site is a platform for creatives to discover art, design and photography inspiration.


This site collates inspirations from all corners of the design industry. It is a great site for keeping informed on contemporary practices in all creative sectors, and therefore is an important site to visit regularly.














Launched in 2010, NOWNESS is a video channel showcasing contemporary culture through film.  A new video is premiered everyday that gets under the skin of the most influential names across art & design, fashion & beauty, music, culture and food & travel.


Nowness provides a more captivating platform for keeping up to date with the latest significant occurrences in contemporary design and beyond. By watching each premiered video daily, being informed on current affairs in the creative industry will be easier than ever for me.

Debbie Millman: The Top 10 Things I Wish I Knew When Graduating College

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kkd8OSDa55A
Debbie Millman offers tactical and practical advice for soon to be design grads applicable to anyone in any walk of life.

This talk by Debbie Millman provides excellent insight into life as a practicing designer, interaction with clients and beyond. The talk by Millman allows for new perspectives to be adopted and for the industry, and life in general, to be seen with more clarity. This is one of my favourite talks.

Saturday, October 10, 2015

Leeds Light Night

Leeds Light Night provides people with a unique opportunity to explore Leeds in a once-a-year event of city-wide occurrences of light-related exhibitions. These include "spectacular" light projections, installations, film, dance, music, theatre and street performances. The festival is spread across 10 "zones," splitting the city into sectors where different significant exhibitions can be seen. These locations include Millennium Square, Town Hall, Train Station, Victoria Gardens, The Headrow, Briggate, Quary Hill, Universities , South Bank and First Direct Arena.
First Direct Arena.

Although I attended the event last year, this year I managed to explore many more zones, seeing a wider variety of works and light-displays. The highlight of the night for me experiencing the alternating forms and shapes exhibited through bright, vivid colours. I am very much inspired by colour and its significance in design, how its used and the context behind the use of particular shades and tones and the effect these have on the eyes and perception of what's being communicated.




Light Night has inspired me to try and be braver in the use of colour in my own practice, as although I am passionate about colour I have a tendency to produce work with a monochromatic visual language. I want to push the boundaries I have unconsciously created for myself to be able to create a  greater, more visually diverse portfolio of work that shows my ability to produce design for a range of differentiating clients and sectors. 

The event influenced me to browse my collection of Victon:ary Palette books, exploring monochromatic, metallic, multi-colour, neon and pastel uses of colour within the industry. By reacquainting myself with the designers and works featured in these books I believe I will be able to produce a more varied selection of ideas and concepts, something I wouldn't have been able to do had Light Night not inspired me to have a look at them once again. 


Brian Eno's BBC Radio 6 Music John Peel Lecture 2015

This afternoon I listened to Brian Eno's BBC Radio 6 Music John Peel Lecture. The questions posed by Eno are whether or not art is to be considered a luxury, or beyond that even. He also questions if there will ever be a possibility of creating a situation in which the arts "flourish."

I was fascinated by the talk, and somewhat emotionally invested in what Eno had to say about art and its place within community, society and beyond. Something I found profound was in the beginning of the lecture, when Eno discusses the education secretary's proclamation that "arts and humanities don't offer such good job prospects as the STEM subjects" and therefore it wasn't a good idea for students to endeavour into the subjects. This was interesting to me in that perhaps more specifically design, of course an elements of the arts, is responsible for our ability to communicate - through type. Without type, where would we be in the world? To what point would we have progressed without such imperative means of documentation and communication? The questionability of the arts' contribution to the economy also forced me to consider just how important it is. Again in terms of design, distinctly branding and identity, what has to be thought of is the fact that people buy into brands as a result of their visual language. Without identities, created considering style trends and popular culture of the arts, would businesses be as successful? and in turn what would be the effect of this on the economy. 

Eno's view on the arts being an "embellishment and embroidery" of the basic necessities of life also intrigued and provoked thought from myself. I very much liked this ideology, this notion of our capacity to enhance the mundane. The significance of the arts affect on human life itself cannot be denied as we "stylise" every aspect of our lives from, as Brian Eno says, food to clothing, to moving even. He explores the fact that "You have to wear clothes. But you don’t have to come up with Dior dresses or Doc Marten boots or Chanel little black frock." Further links here can be made to branding and identity in design, as it is these that enable us to enhance our own particular self-perception.

Perhaps Eno's most interesting point made in this lecture is the idea of imagination being the primary tool for creation, making reference to the first occurrences of this in childhood. Our ability to imagine is instinctual as humans, immersing ourselves in other imagined worlds through which we can adapt our reality. He identifies the fact we are constantly learning, through play as children. However, "children  learn through play, while adults play through art." It is this common denominator of humanity that creates bonds of community within society.

The final point of Eno's John Peel lecture establishes the need for humanity to "somehow stay coherent" in a world of ultrafast, perpetual change. The challenges faced as a result of this will mean a necessity to "constantly be remoulding ourselves," however this may not be as hard as it seems as a result of the massively influential culture of the arts, which are ever-changing, constantly redefining popular culture and inspiring us to be involved in what's current. 

"I think we need to be thinking about art and culture not as a little add-on, a bit of luxury, but as the central thing that we do." 

- Brian Eno

Thursday, October 8, 2015

Study Task 01 - Getting to Know People

Studio Dumbar and 11 other design studios to identify and explore.


Studio Dumbar:


Who?
Studio Dumbar is an international Dutch design agency founded by Gert Dumbar in The Hauge, 1977. The studio specialises in branding and online  branding, and were the first company from the Netherlands to go international. They are the third most awarded design outfit after Apple and Pentagram. 
Where?
The studio has it’s home / base studio is the Netherlands, Rotterdam, located within an unused electrical facility. They also have liaison offices in both South Korea and China.
What?
Studio Dumbar “create every visible expression of a brand or organisation online and offline.” The studio’s expertise lies in strategy, communication, branding and process management.
How?
The studio focuses it’s design efforts on drawing public attention to not profit-making organisations. Approximately one third of their work goes unpaid through government subsidies. It is this ethos of Gert Dumbar that enables the studio to produce designs primarily based on passion for the cause, rather than for profit.
What makes them unique?
Abstract, geometric, complex typography and distorted digitally - based aesthetics underpin the designs created by the studio. The studio describe themselves as flexible and informal  in their approach to design. This was evidenced in Dumbar’s design of the NS (Dutch Railway) when the client didn’t like the approach, through which he painted the trains yellow. They still to this day however are the same colour. The work created by the studio show durability, as designs produced even in 1980 have shown longevity and have remained current within the industry.

Studio AH HA




Who?
Studio AH—HA is a communication & graphic design studio established in 2011 by Carolina Cantante and Catarina Carreiras.
Where?
The studio is based in Lisbon, however they "look forward to work with the rest of the world."
What?
Studio AH HA "pursues varied creative interests across a variety of mediums." Noted works include brand strategy to interior design, naming and identity work, advertising, new media, traditional and fine print, retail and product design, photography and illustration.
How?
Working with an "ever-changing cast of collaborators," Studio AH HA works together with clients from start to finish of the design process, "filtering" their  ideas, inspirations and motivations into their communicating visual language. 
What makes them unique?
AH HA's "holistic approach" towards design and branding means they are able to produce "fresh, engaging and compelling" brand messages through collaboration with their clients.

Hey Studio 



Who?
Hey is a graphic design studio specialising in brand identity, editorial design and illustration.
Where?
The studio, with a team of just 5,  is based in Barcelona, Spain.
What?
Hey was founded in 2007 with "the idea of transforming ideas into communicative graphics." In 2014, the studio opened an online shop, in order to share their passion for typography, illustration and bold graphics. They undertake side projects, alongside their own specific practices, which aim to "play with new ideas, push creative boundaries and develop a passion that is then injected into client’s work."
How?
Hey Studio take care of every single step of the design process and always work closely with clients, both big and small, forming one-to-one relationships with them to achieve and produce the greatest resolutions.
What makes them unique?
The studio's work is identifiable through prominent features of geometry, color and direct typography. It is this specific visual language that has enabled Hey to work with clients including Apple, Vodafone and Three to name very few.

Sagmeister & Walsh



Who?
Sagmeister & Walsh is the joint design firm of Stefan Sagmeister and Jessica Walsh. Sagmeister is a graphic designer and typographer acclaimed for his work for the Rolling Stones, The Talking Heads, Lou Reed, and The Guggenheim Museum. Walsh is a designer & art director working in NYC whose work has received various distinctions and has won a multitude of awards. The firm creates identities, commercials, websites, apps, films, books and objects for clients, audiences and themselves.
Where?
The team of four, including Sagmeister, Walsh and two other employees, are located in a small studio New York City, though they produce work for clients internationally. 
What?
The firm produce works in Advertising, Art Direction | Branding & Identity | Consultancy | Concept
Development | Content Development | Commercials | Curation | Design System | Environmental  
Design | Event Design | Exhibition Design | Film/Video | Furniture Design | Identity | Interactive | 
Naming | Print | Packaging | Signage | Writing | Website Design for clients in the corporate, arts, 
publishing and editorial, educational, music and non-profit sectors.
How?
The firms small cohort of specialised sector designers means as a team they can provide their
services for any client in a vast range of innovative deliverables. 
What makes them unique?
The firm produces all works with signature edge of sophistication, forward-thinking and enterprising aesthetics that have made them one of the most famous and acclaimed design firms in the world. 

Hey Days



Who?
Heydays is a Norwegian design agency with the focus of their work being the development of visual identities, digital solutions and other associated material for clients small and big. 
Where?
The agency is based in Oslo, Norway.
What?
Heydays produce a range of works within three main sectors: consultancy, design and development. They types of design they produce are as follows: Logo | Visual Identity Web design Interface design | Applications IllustrationEditorialPackaging | Signage.
How?
The agency "use insight, instinct and commitment" in their designs and "dare to challenge the established truth." It is their belief that the most precise solutions are found together with clients through an "open and passionate dialogue." Each of their designers work directly with their respective client contacts for easy and tight communication throughout the project.
What makes them unique?

Together with their clients, the agency identify and clarify core values to make relevant and tailored solutions to design tasks, something which has helped them in becoming one of the most awarded graphic design agencies in Norway.

Lust



Who?
Lust is a multidisciplinary graphic design practice established by Jeroen Bareness  Thomas Castro, and Dimitri Nieuwenhuizen, in 1996. 
Where?
Lust are based in The Hague, Netherlands
What?
The practice work in a "broad spectrum of media" including traditional printwork and book design, abstract cartography and data-visualisations, as well as new media, interactive installations, and architectural graphics. LUST is also "deeply interested in exploring new pathways for design at the cutting edge where new media and information technologies, architecture and urban systems and graphic design overlap."
How?
Lust used it LUSTlab, established in 2010, as an aid in producing their work. This is a "new form of research and development" which allows them to go further than observing, inventing and producing through the ability share knowledge, ideologies and issues.
What makes them unique?
The research carried out by LUSTlab "generates hypotheses and makes unstable media stable again." This specific addition to the Lust practice allows them to produce varying outcomes, from visions to new communication tools, man-machine installations and physical products using digital content.

Build



Who?
Build is an "award-winning" creative agency  founded in 2001 by creative director Michael C. Place and business director Nicky Place. The agency are a team of four.
Where?
The agency was based in London originally until their recent relocation to Yorkshire in 2015.
What?
Build work with creative, design-led clients, to produce work they are "justifiably proud of." The agency use stories and ethos to communicate through strong visual narratives, utilising brand identity, art direction and graphic design. They exhibit works, judge awards, and also present talks. These works have been published in over 100 books and magazines worldwide. They also have an online shop.
How?
The agency utilise their "extensive experience of production" to turn concepts into ideas that can be communicated across multiple channels.
What makes them unique?
The agency take advantage of the extensive experience and knowledge had by each of the four designers who work their, working closely with clients to create works all parties involved can be proud of.

Elmwood




Who?
Elmwood are "the world's most effective" brand consultancy agency, having won more DBA Design Effectiveness Awards than any other agency since the scheme began. 
Where?
Elmwood was established as a small local design studio in Leeds in 1977. It has since expanded its presence to London, New York, Singapore, Hong Kong and Melbourne too.
What?
The agency see it that "typically, every project’s untypical." Their work ranges from "provocation, research and insight, to design realisation and brand guardianship." Elmwood predominantly produce brand identities, however also have their own brands of tea and beer.
How?
Elmwood see it that it's the people they work with who influence the way they work and the way they do things. They "sought out fellowoptimistas’ – people who are passionate about what they do." They are advocates of change and are always ready to "shake things up."
What makes them unique?
The agency believe they have "managed to de-code effectiveness" by figuring out how to surpass learned behaviour and "trigger positive responses" from clients and consumers alike. It is Elmwood's unique outlook on their practice that has enabled them to achieve international success.

Bleed



Who?
Bleed is a multidisciplinary design consultancy, with a primary focus on identity.
Where?
The consultancy has bases in both Oslo, Norway and Vienna, Austria.
What?
Bleed create "identity and experience" via concept development, art direction, graphic and service design.
How?
The consultancy try to represent a range of cultures and disciples to challenge the perceptions around art, visual language, interaction, media and also identity. The works they create are all inspired by existing parts of their clients companies. 
What makes them unique?
It is bleed's manifesto that makes them unique. This being to "be different, take chances, share ideas, have fun, believe the hype, move in different directions, be nice, keep learning, and collaborate."

Face


Who?
Face are a "supermodernist" design studio, specialising in the development of honest branding projects across the world. 
Where?
The face studio was established in Monterrey, Mexico in 2006.
What?
The studio's aim is to produce work "intended to brave the test of time." These works are primarily web-designs and brand developments.
How?

Face believe "the assignment contains the solution." It is for this reason that they aim to have a deep understanding of both their projects and client's needs via their own "fool-proof creative method."

What makes them unique?
The design studio's constant effort is the defining factor of their practice, as well as talent and commitment to producing quality works of the highest international standard. 

Dessein


Who?
Dessein was founded in 1987 by Directors Geoff Bickford and Tracy Kenworthy after they "plunged head first into the world of design" immediately after graduating from College. The challenge of finding work became a reality, however they managed to quickly establish Dessein into "a reputable design studio." 
Where?
The studio was founded in the heart of Northbridge, Perth, Western Australia.
What?
Rather than promote themselves as a studio having the ability to respond to anything they are confronted with, they instead choose to do is promote what they can do, and do it well. Dessein specialise in branding, identity, packaging, signage and web design - using illustrative aesthetics with elements of photography commonly.
How?
Dessein say the key to their studio is a "multi-cultural mix of creatives, who collaborate across all aspects of design" - making for an interesting combination of talents. It is the culmination of the strength of each designer at the studio that ensures the works they produce work across multiple platforms.
What makes them unique?
Before creating any design solution, the Dessein team take time to listen, learn and understand their client's values and what they represent. No matter what the studio are designing, the solutions they create always "clearly communicate the core objectives without fuss or confusion."

Wolff Olins


Who?
Wolff Olins describe themselves as "creative partners from ambitious leaders." The agency was founded by Michael Wolff and Wally Olins.
Where?
The brand consultancy was established in 1965 in Camden Town London. The Wolff Olins base is still found in London, however they now have presence in New York, Dubai and San Fransisco. 
What?
Wolff Olins' specialism lies in creating positive social impact for clients, and has worked in sectors including technology, culture,retail, energy & utilities, media, and also for non-profit organisations.
How?
The consultancy use the development of brand experiences, creatively led business strategies, and visual identity systems to produce their works.
What makes them unique?
Wolff Olins was founded with the intension to help organisations "shake off their corporate camouflage"and establish their identity in the world, which they have and continue to achieve as a result of the nurturing of a "rich mix of styles and skills" including programme managers, designers, strategists, technologists and educators.


Before starting this exercise I only had knowledge on one of the design firm/agency/studios, this being Sagmeister and Walsh. Having now explored a further 12 it has been easy to identify an established connection between them all; Each of the subjects I have looked at have commented on their small teams of sector specific designers and close relationships with clients as their reasoning for success. Something can be taken away from each of these individual agencies to inform, influence and inspire my own practice - be it their approach to work, their ideologies behind design process or visual language as a whole.