Learn Origami

Oh, ya. These were the last few pages of my audit with the instructions for folding the pastry box with lid, and loose-leaf tea bag. Learn! Fold! Love! Origami!





YIKES

It’s time for an update, sorry guys. Thanksgiving came and went, and of course while being confined in the Middle-of-Nowhere, Alabama without cell service, internet and 5 TV channel options with a satellite, I had an amazingly relaxing time and got nothing school-related accomplished. Last night I stayed up until my class this morning finishing up my sustainable packaging audit for the House of Chá. Here are some pages from my PDF presentation..







What is occupying my time now is the website for my composting project. It’s coming along slowly but surely. I can’t explain how frustrating it is to have to teach yourself a program, and not have a teacher behind you to ask questions along the way. After hours of Flash tutorial watching, I have a few fancy frames to show for it. And then I of course stumble upon beautiful sites like this that make me feel completely inadequate. I should go learn Flash in Japan. They obviously know how to work it.
Sustainable Packaging Audit

House of Cha is a tea house based in Lawrence, Kansas, that sells hot and cold tea, bubble tea, as well as small, gourmet pastries. The atmosphere resembles that of a Zen garden, and gives the impression of a place where tea must be sipped, not gulped. Time is not taken for granted, as the area is small and intimate, and tea is brought in small tea pots with small cups to accompany.


At the moment, the store relies on the same SYSCO packaging used by almost every place in Lawrence that sells coffee. Their bubble tea comes in the same plastic cup with the vacuum sealed lid—standard to most bubble tea specialists from the US to Japan. Unlike the rest of their store, their packaging relies on conventions of the thrifty over the atmosphere of “one with the earth” they seem to give off with their Zen garden approach. When at the store, people are given hand-crafted tea pots and bulbous glasses guaranteed to make any drink look amazing. There is clearly and aesthetic and a feel they want to project, but when it comes to those who are not available for the “break from life” that they offer, than it’s “paper or plastic?,” then off to the landfills.

My other idea is to reinvent the to-go conventions of a local bakery. I don’t have a particular bakery in mind, rather my hope is—in the future—to open up a bakery/coffee shop. My concept behind the store, or my zag, entails my backed goods to be sold from the pan. Who, honestly, can wait for their fresh baked cakes and cookies to cool before sampling or scarfing? I want to sell individual cupcakes that have been baked in mugs, or batches of half a dozen or a dozen straight from the muffin pan.


Traditionally, bakeries used the thin card stock boxes to house everything from pastries to sheet cakes which sometimes include a clear plastic window. The boxes are used once as a serving station before getting tossed, or recycled if they are without the plastic window. In the case of the bakery at Hy-vee, breads and rolls are quickly slipped into plastic bags with zip ties, while cakes and cupcakes are packaged in the card stock windowed boxes and everything else in pop-close plastic boxes. Their baked goods are cooked in aluminum pans, thrown away after one use.


The containers used house the foods for the few days they stay edible, unless finished on the first day. Afterwards, the package is discarded either in the trash or recycling bin. When first arriving at the store, boxes lay flat and bags are pressed together in large batches. Some cakes even arrive to Hy-vee frozen, and in the box they are sold in.

photos by: my roommate, the lovely Lindsey Fisher

school is my life again

We had another one of my favorite paintings in class today.


Death of Marat, 1793 Jaques-Louis David

David didn’t give Charlotte Corday the time of day, and painted a man in a tub. Wonderful. Design wise its uses so much negative space—believed to be inspired by David seeing the body presented in the large open cathedral—and the reference to the Pieta in the pose, and a crown of thorns-esque towel that would have been soaked in vinegar due to Marat’s skin condition. It was also not anything like the allegory and history paintings that, at the time, were the main styles being used to capture important modern events. Good job David for being entirely too creative.

Also, for Graphics I settled on rebranding Composting. This will be exciting. And hopefully get me to compost, along with millions of others like the Got Milk? campaign!
The Moment We’ve Been Waiting For

This is it. The class I’ve been looking forward to ever since I got a sneak preview, as a lowly sophomore, of the projects that the upper class fourth year graphics students had been working on. The desks had been transformed into individual presentations, tiered with boxes, bags and invented products–each reflecting the hours and hours of detail work and focus that had been dedicated to them. What drew me so much to this type of project is my own desire to create a business and be the sole designer behind all aspects of its design and brand identity. Though, this semester there is a new professor teaching the course, and with a new professor comes a new perspective or take on the curriculum or project. In this case, the project has not changed so much, but instead of inventing a commercial business that uses packaging, we are free to choose any business or organization, or even a niche audience that we feel needs a designers assistance solving a particular problem or overlooked aspect. Here is our vague outline of the project:


independently identify and define a significant problem facing a civic institution, niche audience,government agency or commercial business;

conduct research to develop a strategy to solve the problem you identified;

visualize your research;

translate your research into a persuasive and emotional visual proposal;

support your reasoning and work with process documentation


I’ve spent a lot of time dreaming about the possibilities of my future entrepreneurial endeavors, and have come up with some creative and fresh ideas involving a cupcakery/bookery, but the question I’ve not quite answered for myself is “Why?” Why do people need this luxury; Is there any way I could use it to help the community?; What makes this cupcakery different than the other bakeries, or how can I make it better than the competition? This last question, I’ve dabbled with more, but this project–I hope–will force me to find a place for my idea in a way that will more benefit society rather than clutter it with more capitalistic/consumeristic crap.

Although, with Peace Corps on the horizon, it may be beneficial to think about creating and designing a non-profit program to experience the steps and what’s needed to create/repitch a program, before I’m thrown into a foreign country and expected to do it with 4x less resources..

I thought this post may help me think of more ideas.. so far no luck. What a mess my brain is when school starts, and creative possibilities are fighting each other and multiplying behind my eyes.

Helpful comments for this post include:

1) what about non-profits, or a particular ngo, irritates you?
2) what company, in your opinion, isn’t handling the switch to sustainability as smoothly as others that have modernized?
3) how could your favorite café or bakery suit you better?
4) what is your favorite part about bakeries?
5) what industry has gone through a recent major change? (ex: blockbuster vs netflix)
6) what would you do if you were me? ha


perhaps I’ll create a survey for people to fill out..? thanks blog
gender&revolution

Two buzz words that completely pulled me in. I was thoroughly agitated with myself today on my first day of classes, when the class I thought would perhaps include revolutionary and propagandistic poster art, but instead includes Rococo paintings of french aristocracy and the controversial Marie Antoinette. The teacher talks to fast for me, but it may just be because I’m used to slow and broken English—man I miss it. I’m looking up another art history class now, along with times for a french class that I spontaneously decided to take after a meeting with my Peace Corps advisor! This year is going to be awesome. Especially because my new roommate is wonderful. Lindsey. Not Dora.


Here, though, are some nice paintings I saw from class that may or may not make this class more appealing.



Caspar David Friedrich, The Monk by the Sea


William Turner, Slavers Throwing Overboard the Dead and Dying


Jean-Augustine-Dominique Ingres, La Grand Odalisque
alphabet class

We had class today, for the first time in a while, and I finally had a complete alphabet with me to get critiqued! Hogan said I’d come a long way and didn’t have too much to fix before putting it into FontLab.. exciting! So here’s what I had today just to have a process update.

Letters that I still need to play with are s, v, y, and z. Hope you like it.

product of the 80s

Aside from getting up to shower at 9, making lunch and going to the bathroom a couple times, my butt was sitting my bed for 12 hours today while i reminisced on my old childhood toy, the Lite-Brite…

















and watched an awesome 80s vid perhaps for some inspiration. I wish the 80’s would have never left..

thoughts from the shower

I thought of this when I was in the shower this morning. thoughts..?






















and then this was just a creepy picture i took last night of the basillica! I want to go back now with a make-shift tripod and a super long shutter speed 🙂 ooooOooOoOoOh

and yesterday was my roommate Claudia’s birthday and we had brunch together in a really cute cafe around 2ish 😀 She’s such a sweet person—it was sad because everyone was out of town and her boyfriend couldn’t get off work back in her hometown, but in a positive light it’s always nice to get to hang out with her one on one because she’s so quiet. She’s also so patient with my German speaking skills and teaches me so much! How did I get so lucky with my roommates?? Danke schön Jesus

experimenting with fonts

One of my classes is an Alphabet design class. We were asked to find a modern design object, and design a font logo for it. I chose the penny farthing as my object, and I’m naming the font “Ariel” which was the name of the first penny farthing invented by James Starley. I’ll just keep updating this same post with all my sketches and experiments..






This first experiment I cut some paper into circles trying to get a modern look that still mimicked the contrasting circle sizes of the wheels.












some earlier sketches: