Tuesday, May 04, 2004

Design tool - Polar Adjectives

Xanadu - designed using polar adjective

Many years ago I took a Color Workshop from Wilcke Smith. She'd just returned from a from a seminar with some top designers, including Jack Larsen. She passed along a really useful system of clarifying the design process using Polar Adjectives.

For me, the problem is often that my beginning idea is really a general feeling that begins to draw me toward a vague concept - a fuzzy vison. The design above is titled "Xanadu", designed after the workshop. It's a rendition of a poem by Samuel Taylor Coleridge.

Then, there is also had been the commission where I need to magically read their mind & find what sort of vision they currently have of what they think they want. Their descriptions are unvisual, scattered, contradictory, etc. Arghhh!

Polar Adjectives allow me to get quickly from vague and general to specific and tune in on a specific idea (without wandering about in space for a month!), moving from general feeling to a pretty concise vision, to a beginning design.

The tool Wilcke shared was to make the longest list of Polar Adjectives,(opposites) we could... at least 45 sets. Then to apply it to a general concept - example: magic, outer space, celebration, river, lullaby. All of us have a gazillion possibilites for each of these. Concepts are big.

The make your list. Example:

hot - cold
warm - cool
fast - slow
moving - still
horizontal - vertical
diagonal - straight
curvy -linear
shiney - matte
fuzzy -smooth
circular -rectangular
organic - geometric
loose - tight
free - controlled
masculine - feminine
transparent - opaque
earthy - airy
dry - wet
active - passive
Include "feels like",
descriptive words - many
that are visual, but general.

Now, choose a general concept, for instance, "magic". Using you first inclination, apply every single set of polar adjectives and choose one. Everyone will
make a different choices in their version of magic. You will, along the way, get specific about which facet of "magic" you want to explore this time.

As you keep adding to your adjective list and making choices, you will quickly narrow and get a clear concept of how to the design should look. Often it will tell you what kinds of lines, areas, textures, colors and embellishments are most suitable this time.

It's a fairly easy matter to chat with a customer and establish 1 or more concepts that would apply. Hand a list of "polar adjectives" to them, and have a much better understanding of what they want.

Wednesday, March 24, 2004

Image optimizing software, design tips

In addition to fiber art and printmaking, I'm a graphics artist and owner of several websites - all of which use quantities of images. One of my main concerns is image download time. I'm also "software frugel"!! I'd rather spend my $$ on threads than computer toys when possible.

There's a list of great freeware graphics programs and resources on my Links page at Art 4 the Web.. You may find a numer of useful items there.

Among them is an unliscensed "freeware" version of JPeg Wizard... an astounding small program that will "optimize" a .jpg image without compromising quality. It's reputed to be the only optimizing software that accomplishes this. Note, however, that this is true only if you don't get greedy - I recommend it be left at default settings. I've been merrily using it for years - it usually improves download time by 20-45%. All of the images on this site have been "wized."

While I'm busy beating my own drum, here's a list of design tips I've picked up over the years from some eminent teachers including Constance Howard and Wilcke Smith. Others I've come up with by necessity by living far from a major shopping area.

Sunday, March 21, 2004

Break an old Gestalt today

I find myself returning again and again to danny gregory's weblog Everyday Matters. It makes me chuckle in the most unladylike fashion, and, even worse, muse for 15 minutes and think.

I get all too comfortable with a theme, techniques that I know work, colors I like, using them over and over. "Like" is fine, but at some point, my "likes" become walls. How comfy and safe! It's time to break a few of my Gestalts - those patterns of perceiving that have become so automatic that I really don't see creatively at all.

Everyday Matters nudges me gently to get on with it. I haven't discovered all the fabulous fabrics, threads, colors of the world yet. Yesterday, after reading February 22 - "Counting Blessings", I went on a small journey of discovery to hardware and craft shop, and came home with a fistful of new toys! Pencils that change color, interesting bits of paper & materials to actually start that experimental ideas journel I've been going to start for years.

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