Thursday, July 30, 2015

Design 2- Project 3

So the day has come where we submit our final. The Bloomingdales armatures took route to their new vertical standings. This model consisted of plexi glass which was later cut, basswood spray painted white, museum board, and wire (optional). 
I utilized score marks solely on the plexi and some Mylar to add definition to the layers. The preparation and occupational spaces began to be visible once the basswood and museum board was added to the armature. 

Here is some process: 


The building time frame consisted of messy planning with cardboard armatures, and expensive plexi later cutting. Until we reached the building week where it all came together quite quickly.


Here is the finished product:






*The drawings were pinned up at Valencia College*

Thanks for keeping up with me!
-Michelle C. Harter

Sunday, July 12, 2015

The Aesthetics

Alright, so I'm veering off alittle but from my progress in class and taking the direction to my progression everywhere. 

Today at work I took on the task of rearranging the nutrition wall. I've been the visual organizer of the nutrition wall and pretty much all the accessories for the past almost 2 years.


The aesthetics matter. They will always matter. 


Not only do I need to make this wall look neat, and clutter free, but also organize it the way the consumer will need it. 
Quick Lesson: Nutrition for running falls along the lines of gels, electrolyte drink replacements, chews, meal bars, and vitamin or powder enhancements. 
Going off of that, the nutrition wall had to express the options and importance the consumers would be utilizing. Organizing the nutrition wall to importance and similarities is a major aspect of aesthetics. 
Not perfect but you need an idea before you can start anything. I decided to set the wall up vertically in relations to the type of nutrition, and horizontally in relations to the brand and organic amount. 

It may sound like I'm telling you about running and the proper nutrition but after taking my design classes, I found this task to be so much easier than before. I knew how to plan and execute a situation based off of consumer ideas and paint a picture/idea to help their selection. 

Here's the final outcome! 







Thanks for keeping up with me! 

-Michelle C. Harter

Wednesday, July 8, 2015

Design 2- Assignment 1

So last Tuesday we took a trip as a class to the Millenia Mall, in Orlando. I was super excited due to the fact it was a mall (I over shop). We measured, scaled, took snapshots, and drew the Bloomingdale's 3 public viewed facades. The main entrance being the first one, the side which was much longer than both other 2 facades due to the ramp, and the third facade which started on the second floor just above the ramp from facade 2. 

Thursday when the drawings were due, I was running late to class and by the time I got there (11 minutes late) the other professor already dismissed U.S. My friend told me the criteria of the homework due Tuesday of the upcoming week so we bought our paper and went on with our weekends. 

When I hear draw the facades on a horizontal paper, I assume draw each facade next to eachother side by side. This became my first iteration...
My professor on Tuesday had us all pin up our work and she observed each one. I received many compliments from other classmates about the detail I put into my drawing. When my professor got to my drawing she asked who printed it out on autocad, I burst out laughing and replied I drew that! I'm guessing that was a compliment, but I haven't worked with autocad yet so who knows. 
Here's more of my first iteration. 

My professor told me to re do my drawings with less detail as well as with the new scale the whole class agreed on. 

This was the new result, pretty plain, but it will help me get to the next step by building my armature with the longest facade for our final project. 

Stay tuned! 

Michelle C. Harter