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VICTOR PAPRIEK

Utility thought process


Key features of his design:

  • Can in make life easier for some group that has been marginalised by exisiting social, political and economic organisation?

  • Can it ease pain?

  • Will it significantly aid the sustainability of the environment?

  • Will it save energy or help to gain renewable energy?

  • Can it save irreplaceable resources?

This is from the perspective of a product designer

Does my manifesto highlight in enough detail what my key features of design are?

Is there anything I could change / add to my manifesto to outline my key features of design better?

End user

- customers, clients, audiences, buyers, collaborators, children, everyone

Who do I think my end user is?

- My first end user will be the clients who I am designing for

- My second end user would be the shops/ bars the client wants to collaborate with to sell the bottles to

- My third end user will be the people who buy the bottles/ beverages themselves. I need to find out from the client what target audience this will be aimed towards by interviewing them.

- The community will be another end user as they will see the advertising and public image


Utility

  • quality of appropriateness in use

  • practical purpose of how design works

  • function, efficiency, use value


Significance

  • forms assume meaning in the way they are used

  • roles and meanings assigned to them

  • expression and meaning

  • communication, shared meanings, beauty

what is the relationship with the audience, customer, client, community?

My design practice would be more significance however it would be a mixture of both.


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Principles of User Friendly Design

'User friendly: how the hidden rules of design are changing the way we live, work, and play'

KUANG AND FABRICANT



Design in feedback

- Get people to test and give you feedback

Avoid confusion

- User can make mental map of what is happening

Design a pattern language

- Consistancy of communication

Design for practical intelligence

- What you want to design

- How you want to design it

- End with who for and get feedback

- Graceful design

- Careful relationship with end user

- Good dialogue

This book seems really interesting and I will see what other important information comes up as I read it.

Portfolio career

  • I can get funding from specific places for my major project or other projects after the MA

  • This involves talking to people who are not designers - use lots of imagery to inspire them

  • Sometimes they will fund without thinking of planning - Look at what you can do in the research - especially in public spaces

  • There is money available to do creative murals, street 'stuff' etc.

There are lots of forms available to get funding - Will need a design proposal

Competitions can be a good way to get funding

Grants aren't widely known about so can be a good way to get funding

Different councils have different amounts of funding set aside for design.


Design proposals need to:

  • Be professional looking

  • include imagery

  • catch the reader's attention

There are some companies that will write design proposals for you. They also do the costings and other admin things for you - leaving you to do the design work. They then take a percentage of the project funding.

MA Design Blog

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