Friday, June 15, 2007
FinaL!...
I did it! the final has been produced. Although I didnt do the wall mounted version, the standard benchtop/table version works just as good. It comes in 2 panels that are the same piece of imgery but altered slightly that compensate each other. The colors I chose were RED and WHITE to futher the effects of the light and design. I used 10 LED light all up, 5 red and 5 white. This one is powered by a central battery but it is supposed to connected to a transformer and what not then plugged in to the wall.




Sunday, June 10, 2007
MARKET/DESIGN PROCESS...
This product aims at pretty much all of the sectors of China as interior decoration reffers to most people and is an important aspect in the Chinese culture. In terms of design process, the acrylic/glass piece would be laser cut with the initial designs on it would be laid out on an adhesive then cut out and sand blasted as demonstrated previously. the base would consist of 10 LED lights MAX that would place in an injected moulded piece of plastec to cater for the numerous wire work and durability.
It would then be instigated as a family of products in which you would buy separate pieces to accomodate for users variest moods. The interchangeable panels would mean that it would cater of all sectors as the price of the actual item would be low no more than buying a lamp or other light fixtures ranging towards the $30-$50 price range. The ight would not be flatt packed and would come in 3 separate pieces, the 2 acrylic panels and the base without the hassel of configuring it and confusing.
It would then be instigated as a family of products in which you would buy separate pieces to accomodate for users variest moods. The interchangeable panels would mean that it would cater of all sectors as the price of the actual item would be low no more than buying a lamp or other light fixtures ranging towards the $30-$50 price range. The ight would not be flatt packed and would come in 3 separate pieces, the 2 acrylic panels and the base without the hassel of configuring it and confusing.
Sunday, June 3, 2007
P.O.G...

The above diagram illustrates a gap between indoor decoration with the use of banners and scrolls displaying feeling of good luck, tranquility etc...with lighting. There few products on the market that display these qualities and conveying it into a 'designerly' fashion. But I don't only want to introduce some design influence but also keep its meaning as staed in my previous post. If these two things can be accomplished at the same time in one object, then it would not only enrich the area it is situated in, but also the soul.
Monday, May 28, 2007
Blast IT!...
After the initial cutting and peeling, all that was left was taking it over to the sand blasting machine to frost up the exposed areas and to reveal the final imagery.

Peeling final layer...


Final magery...
Time to light it up!...
ExperimentS...
After a brief design freeze, I started experimenting with acrylic plastics in terms of scale and thickness'. The consideration of incorporating other materials such as glass is still an option for now depending on the outcome of the acrylic. Glass would be a contender due to its similarity in transparancy and lighting effect, but the fact that its glass gives it whole new demension in terms of class and the sheer fact that most people would be more interested in displaying a glass mantel-type piece rather than plastic...or would they? If you have any suggestions or thoughts on this, feel free to help a brother out...Soifua...
Wednesday, May 23, 2007
Whats your ANIMAL?...












Further DEVELOPMENTS...
Just thinking about not only having Feng Shui related signs and symbols, but also expand to the other factions of the Chinese culture such as star signs related to the 'Zodiac Calender' (12 animals) and elemental symbolism (fire, water, wood, metal and earth). These could be adopted in to my design concept of symbolism through lighting and could be interchangeable in terms of swoping these acrylic slabs depending ton the time of day/month/year. Just something to think about...You stay classy...
Whats NEXT?...


Well, after some research into cultural factors such beliefs and superstitions revolving around 'Feng Shui', I decided to mimic an existing product but to inject some designer features in to it that would not only boost its overall image aesthethically but maintain its cutural meaning which is very important. As discussed earlier, i mentioned an interest in the scrolls and banners hung from house/apartment walls that symbolised wealth, well-being etc...I wish to endeavour this aspect further by implementing an 'Acrylic' version that would have a light source (preferably an LED) shinning from the bottom that would create a illuminating effect. It would be a feature in the room rather than a light itself that would have the desired messege/image/symbol either laser cut or sand blasted on the acrylic surface in which the light would coincide and illuminate this feature further. In terms of scale, it has'nt yet been decided nor the issue of it being a set piece on a table or hung on a wall but all will be decided in due time...yea thats it for now aye stay tuned for more HombreZz...



For info on 'Feng Shui' visit 'www.fengshui.com/'
Tha VERDICT...

After the 'jump starter' with the group research tasks, I took into account the various elements of Chinese cultures and traditions. One that stood out for me like a sore thumb was the scrolls and banners that were hung up in homes/apartments symbolising aspects of good luck and well-being etc...I made a comparason of other existing products on the market that had a western influence but had lost its deeper essence in which it had been 'europeanized' to the point were the other half had been neglected. In this brief I wish to produce a product that has been extracted from the Chinese culture and modernize it not the point where the concept itself is lost and one demensional but rather compensate both aspects aesthetically whilst bearing in mind its awareness culturally...aiiight. SpaniolloZz OUT!

Designing for CH-CH-CH-CHINA...
Well it goes a'lil something like this...
Over the next 15-20 years more people will migrate to China’s cities for higher paying jobs. These working consumers once the country’s poorest will steadily climb the income ladder, creating a new and massive middle class. By around 2011 the lower middle class will number some 290 million people representing 44% or the urban population. A second transition is projected to occur in the following decade when hundreds of millions will join the upper middle class. By 2025 this segment will comprise of 520 million people – more than half the expected urban population of China.

The government started the trend moving in the late 1990s when, hoping to get state companies out of the business of housing their workers, it prodded families to buy homes, offering low-cost mortgages or bargain prices on older apartments. Coupled with rising urban incomes, that set off a building boom in the late 1990s in Beijing, Shanghai and other cities, with developers putting up forests of high-rises with thousands of new apartments. Decorating a home has become a cultural phenomenon, driving the creation of the career of Chinese interior designer and a crop of home-decor magazines with the latest in European design. Estimates of the size of China's home improvement market range from $15 billion to as much as $40 billion, with growth forecast at 10 to 20 percent a year. The government says overall retail sales rose nearly 13 percent in 2005.
Over the next 15-20 years more people will migrate to China’s cities for higher paying jobs. These working consumers once the country’s poorest will steadily climb the income ladder, creating a new and massive middle class. By around 2011 the lower middle class will number some 290 million people representing 44% or the urban population. A second transition is projected to occur in the following decade when hundreds of millions will join the upper middle class. By 2025 this segment will comprise of 520 million people – more than half the expected urban population of China.
The second biggest IKEA store in the world after the Stockholm flagship store is in Beijing, China. IKEA like other furniture and furnishing retailers is hoping to cash in on the millions of new home buyers and they stand to profit from twin trends in China, both government-supported - millions of families buying new homes and, official efforts to drive economic growth by boosting consumer spending. IKEA, which in addition to the Beijing and Shanghai outlets has a store in the southern city of Guangzhou, plans to have a total of 10 stores within five years, including expansion to the country's west with an outlet being built in the city of Chengdu.

The government started the trend moving in the late 1990s when, hoping to get state companies out of the business of housing their workers, it prodded families to buy homes, offering low-cost mortgages or bargain prices on older apartments. Coupled with rising urban incomes, that set off a building boom in the late 1990s in Beijing, Shanghai and other cities, with developers putting up forests of high-rises with thousands of new apartments. Decorating a home has become a cultural phenomenon, driving the creation of the career of Chinese interior designer and a crop of home-decor magazines with the latest in European design. Estimates of the size of China's home improvement market range from $15 billion to as much as $40 billion, with growth forecast at 10 to 20 percent a year. The government says overall retail sales rose nearly 13 percent in 2005.

Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)