Sunday, March 28, 2010

David Carson Draft


Nick Kingsbury
Computer Graphics
March 28, 2010


David Carson

Interestingly enough, Davis Carson, born in 1955 in Texas, did not go to school to become a graphic designer. His degree is in sociology from San Diego Sate University; far from the realm of art. In the 1970s, Carson worked as a sociology teacher at a California high school. He also dabbled in professional surfing, ranking 9th in the world. His formal training in graphic design came from brief 2 to 3 week classes he took at the University of Arizona and in Switzerland in the 1980s. This is when he discovered his talent.
Throughout the 1980s and 90s, Carson was a major influential force behind skateboarding and surfing magazines and campaigns. Such magazines included Beach Culture, Transworld Skateboarding, and Self and Musician. The work he did at these venues brought him notice and further opportunities for his innovative grunge style and typographic oddities to flourish. Publisher Marvin Scott Jarrett was impressed with Carson’s work and hired him to design a music and lifestyle oriented magazine called Ray Gun. His work in Ray Gun magazine brought him even more fame and reputation. So when he started his own design firm, David Carson Design, in 1995, he soon had accounts with major companies including Ray Ban, Microsoft, and Pepsi.
Carson says he is most interested in the emotion of design. There is an emotional response to the design piece that the viewer experiences before they even read the text or figure out what is trying to be sold or promoted. He went on to publish a number of books detailing his work including “The End of Print: The Graphic Deisgn of David Carson,” “2nd Sight,” and “Fotografiks: An Equilibrium Between Photography and Design Through Graphic Expression That Evolves from Content.”
Carson travels frequently, giving speeches and seminars about his work and graphic design as a whole. One such speech, “David Carson on Design + Discovery,” was recorded and posted on www.ted.com, where he talks about the importance of intuitive design. Carson expresses how schools are shying away from teaching design through intuition because it is difficult to “quantify” intuition. In this video he elaborates about the importance of intuition by examining a quote by Albert Einstein: “The intellect has little to do on the road to discovery. There comes a leap in consciousness, call it intuition or what you will, and the solution just comes to you and you don’t know from where or why.” Carson shows a design he created that incorporates this quote. This design is a great example of the kind of work that Carson specializes in. Text is laid over a blurred and distorted background. This text is also highly distorted. The words are not in alignment and they are different fonts, sizes, and colors. They blur out of focus in some points, and are in sharp focus and contrast in others. He selects a few strong words such as “leap” and “solution” to pop out at the viewer, so they immediately feel the emotions he wants them to. The distorted images and text that Carson uses can be predominately categorized as the grunge look, the style of art that is purposefully disheveled, discordant, and ‘dirty’ looking.
One of Carson’s works (Design A) is perfect example of his grunge typographic style. The background is a photograph of a man’s legs from the knees down to his feet. He is wearing a business suit and standing on a plain, salmon colored floor that has been rendered to look somewhat stained and dirty. The photograph has also been brought down to a medium to low chroma, yet there is still sharp contrast between the pink floor and the man’s black shoes. There is something off-putting about the stance of the businessman. Looking at his body language, you can tell that he’s not conveying confidence. His legs are relatively close together, and his feet are pointing inward. It’s a very awkward position. It feels like the man is trying to make an excuse for his own weak existence.
The text at the bottom of the design reflects his typographic style talked about earlier in this paper. It is the same phrase: “what’s all this noise about anyway?” repeated, but there is no sense of order. The font size erratically changes, the repeated phrase is cut into fragments, and pieces of the text are cut off by the margins. As mentioned before, Carson chooses a select few words to serve as focal points. The large emboldened “noise” and the boxed “anyway?” are such examples. It is not clear exactly what this design is trying to convey. The image and text do not seem to be all that related. The thing they do share, however, is the grungy quality that produces an uneasiness in the viewer.
Another one of Carson’s designs (Design B) consists of a two-page spread detailing mostly text. Unlike the piece analyzed previously, this design has no background image. This presents Carson with more of a challenge since he has to capture his viewer with only typography. The first thing the viewer notices is the word “raw” printed in huge red letters across the two pages. Carson’s grunge style is exemplified through this word alone. First of all, the word “raw” is a powerful one with several connotations that lend to the central theme of disorder and spontaneity. The letters are rendered to resemble worn paint on the side of an old wooden billboard. The edges of the letters are speckled, implying that the paint is slowly flaking off. He makes the word a little more disheveled by applying a slight break and shift down the horizontal middle of the word. The red “raw” stands out on the damaged-looking background with a smattering of jumbled letters, words, and imperfections. Overall, the immediate emotion Carson is trying to illicit in the viewer is one of edgy intrigue.


Sources:
· http://www.davidcarsondesign.com/?dcdc=top/s

· “David Carson on Design + Discovery”, http://www.ted.com/talks/david_carson_on_design.html

· http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Carson_(graphic_designer)



Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Bamboo Flow lamp


Igendesign, the Budapest-based design firm run by Lorincz and Alberto Vasquez, have invented the bamboo Flow light. This eco-friendly light source looks like a wind chime, and is powered by wind energy. As the structure rotates, it powered led lights at the ends of the bamboo sticks. The designers created this product as an attempt to make South American coasts safer. In many areas there is no electricity so at night, the beaches become abandoned and dangerous. Shedding some light in these areas might help. But I'm concerned that these lamps won't give off enough light. It seems like you would need very strong winds at all times for the lamp to properly spin and disperse an ample amount of light.

Harry Potter Now a Reality


Scientists from Karlsruhe Institute of Technology in Germany and Imperial College London have developed a technology to actually make objects appear invisible! A network of photonic crystals is layed over the object and renders it invisible by dispersing the light that falls on it and scatters it away. "We put an object under a microscopic structure, a little like a reflective carpet," said Nicholas Stenger, one of the researchers who worked on the project. The scientists so far have only done this on a microscopic scale, making a bump on a piece of gold disappear. This is a major breakthrough in science and has thousands of applications - one of them being the disconcerting cloaking of soldiers and weapons. Another, safer application would be for that of design. Imagine a 3 dimensional sculpture that you couldn't see, but had to feel with your hands. Although this is exciting, with the current technology, it is not yet in our capability to reproduce this on a large scale. Check out the link.

Thursday, March 18, 2010

class notes 3/18/10

take a picture of a texture that works well with the theme of the scene you are using in the project.
crop it to 8"x8" by 300 dpi
then blow up a section of it and distort it somehow
Then cut out a copy of the person and put in front of the texture background
Use pen tool to cut a copy of the person out, change closed path to a selection, copy that image and then paste on texture background
desaturate,blur etc. background as needed so the person is still the focal point
hen adjust the color, contrast, brightness of the person to somewhat match that of the blurred texture background
Soften the cut-out edge of the person by using the pen tool to make a closed shape surrounding the edges, then make a path, then use gaussian blur (level 3-5)

Torzo Surfaces


Torzo Sustainable Surfaces, a firm based in Oregon, has come out with new a table top material that is completely eco-friendly and quite attractive from a design standpoint. The sugar cane, which is a fast growing plant, is pressed and glued together with non-toxic acrylic polymer. This surface is called Tiikeri. Although composite board is widely used, this company actually produces it for its aesthetic and recycling quality, making it quite marketable in this day and age.

Alice in Chroma-land


Jose Gonzalez and Michael Szivo run a New York-based design studio called SOFTlab. They have an exibit opening up soon at at "Devotion - a new gallery in Williamsburg focusing on the intersection of art, science, new media, and design." Their exbit, called CHROMAesthesiae, consists of multiple bell-shaped paper blossoms that hang from ceiling space. Each blossom has a different combination of contrasting colors in high chroma (chroma is the level of brightness and intensity of a color). The design and color scheme is beautiful and would do well in a lounge or club setting. I feel too many deigners are straying away from beauty, so it's nice to see it being respected.
SOFTlab is also responsible for many other large scale works of art in many other mediums. ONe such impressive work is called pAlice, a network of over 2400 interconnected triangular panels, done to "turn the room inside out." The name 'pAlice' references what is known as the Alice Universe where at least two topologically-distinct routes between any two points exists.

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Class notes 3/16/10

We search for faces – that is hardwired into us

Then we look for the written text – this is a learned tendency

We look for the foreground and background and the difference between the two

Respect the users/viewer’s time by helping them figure out what parts of the image/design is important

Visual processes are determined by the primitive reptilian mind

The reptilian mind: “fight or flight” instinctual animal-like nature; not really associated with the rational mind

We look for differences - the thing that stands out the most

Memory Glasses


A college student, Richard DeVual at MIT has invented memory glasses which work as "virtual post-it notes" that show up in a tiny spot on the surface of your glasses lens. Apple has set it's sights in this invention, having just hired him. This is a cool idea but I think its pretty useless. Our Iphones have calendar apps which you can program to remind yourself of important events. A post-it popping up an inch in front of your eyes while you're driving probably isn't the safest thing either. If the very act of talking on your cell phone raises your risk of a car accident, think of how dangerous this would be.

Betacup

Starbucks, Core77, Jovoto, and Denuo are a few companies sponsoring Betacup, a competition to solve the disposable paper coffee cup problem. This recycling effort aims to make paper coffee cups completely recycled. $20k will be awarded to the winning solution. The contest is different than others because of the fact that all ideas will be open to the public to ad comments and suggestions, kind of like a blog. Although I understand the possible appeal of this plan, I don't think the competition is designed very well. This open posting feature might deter serious innovators to publicly disclose their ideas in fear of it being ripped off. Intellectual property rights are very valuable and publicly disclosing your great ideas is not always prudent. Watch the video here.

Thursday, March 11, 2010

Hoodie Origami

Antonio Scarponi, founder of Conceptual Devices, has come up with a new everyday design technique with a practical and fashion-oriented focus. He has detailed a way to fold a hoodie into a backpack/pillow/laptop bag. I like the practical application this design has. It can be used any time when you're in a pinch: say when you're at the beach. Check it out at core77

Electronic Skin

A company called Sensor Products Inc., in operation since 1990, has developed something called Tactilus Real-Time Surface Pressure Mapping Technology which is an "electronic skin" that senses the body's tactile pressure against varous objecs such as furniture, clothing, and wheelchairs. This technology ulimately has the potential to allow companies to redesign a lot of their products to be more comfortable and safe for the consumer. This technology would not only be used for products that have tactile impact with the bod, but with machines. By mapping out the tactile force among machine components, scientists will be able to identify stress points that could wear down certain components, leading the machine to become hazardous.0<span class=sensprod001.jpg">

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

class notes 3/9/10

  • in photo editing, the opposites are:
  • green ----- magenta
  • red---------cyan
  • blue--------yellow
  • shift command 4 takes a picture of what you're looking at

Bar Pods


Sekhar Roy, a student at the Florence Design Academy has created a concept seating unit called the Terrace Bar Seating Pod. The orb-like apparatus has both vintage and modernistic elements. The overhanging light reminds me of an old fashioned street corner, while the general bubble shape of the unit looks futuristic. I like the concept because it really sets the mood for intimacy. This would definitely do well in a restaurant/bistro/coffee shop catered for dating. Roy has a bunch other other concept designs on his online portfolio. Most of them seem to revolve around interior design. He is currently looking for connections and jobs.

Thursday, March 4, 2010

Nike Grind

Apparently, Nike is now recycling components of old sneakers into what it calls Nike Grind. Nike Grind is broken down into three subcategories including rubber (made from the outer sole), foam (made from the midsole), and fiber (made from the fabric components). The Grind rubber is used for track and playground surfaces, the foam is used to pad outdoor courts, and the fiber is used for cushioning pads for indoor courts. There are plants that do this recycling work in the Midwest, Europe, and Australia. Of course anything recycled provides a good impact on the environment, but I think Nike would do better to recycle the old shoes to produce shoes for the poorest areas of the world, places where people can't afford shoes. Watch the video of how it's done.

class notes 3/4/10

  • Photoshop: raster-based program - creates a grid of assigned values (pixels)
  • in practice, use layout program, with a editing, and a vector based program.
  • Adobe Illustrator is a vector based program

Kaynemaile


KML22 is a "seamless polycarbonate mesh" created by the company called Kaynemaile. The seamless aspect of the mesh means that each little ring has no joint the way traditional metal jump rings are produced. So how are these things made? Unfortunately the company isn't telling. Smart move. Kaynemaile, a New Zealand based company, says that "the innovation results in a cost-effective, odorless, thermally insulating, impact resistant, rust free, and pleasantly translucent alternative to old-school metal mesh." This product offers amazing possibilities when it comes to interior design. It can be formed into elaborate chandeliers lit up by different color lights, or used as room divisions. There is talk about using this material for body armor and artificial ski slopes. It all depends on what strands of polycarbonate materials get injected into the molds.


Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Carb Chairs


Here is a set of furniture (a table and 2 chairs) fresh out of the oven. These bread-crafted chairs were created by Spanish industrial designer Enoc Armengol called "Panpaati." The description about the bread furniture is a little lofty for my taste. The writer is trying to tie the bread chairs in with the living element. For god sakes, its a chair made from bread. You can't sit on them or really put them anywhere. If the creation was a more aesthetically pleasing subject, then maybe it would be a good centerpiece for a family party, but besides that, I'm not a fan.