Live like someone left the gate open

June 7th, 2012

go life lensGotta love this little puppy.  She’s up for exploration, engine is revved, gas pedal is to the floor.

Like a Go Life Lensâ„¢.

Action packed, try it, let’s explore, jump in, take a chance – all are important, natural, vocabulary to a Go Life Lensâ„¢.

On a good day, it brings exploration, spontaneity, embracing innovation, taking advantage of opportunity & manageable risk.

On a bad day, it can bring leaping before you look, crash & burn, didn’t think of that, oh dear!

Some days it pays to bust out, some days it pays to stay inside & ponder.

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Fishbowl toilets- now that’s creative

June 5th, 2012

If these fishbowl toilets aren’t an attention grabber I don’t know what is.

There are a variety of ways to see these tanks, from an environmental lens to a sociological one:

  • Designed for Chinese families where space is at a premium, they’re marketed as a way to save space
  • They use less water (the toilets use less water because of the displaced room for the fish tank)
  • The company even claims the LED light used to light the tank can replace regular lights in the bathroom, thereby saving on the electric bill.
  • And in an odd twist, the company also says that the fish can provide company for Chinese children (makes sense I suppose in single kid families – as long as junior wants to hang out in the bathroom)

Environmental.  Sociological.   It’s all in your perspective.  What do you see?

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Laying it bare – monthly round up of May Life Lensesâ„¢ blog posts

June 1st, 2012

We’re laying it bare. Stripping it down. Peeling back perspective.

In this monthly round up you’ll find the Life Lensesâ„¢ blog posts laid bare for the month of May.

Get bare, dive in deep and take a full look around or simply take a peek. It’s up to you. Regardless, your perspective will thank you.

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Learning to see – design lessons from Anthony Rotolo

May 29th, 2012

Creative Commons licensed on Flickr by: qthomasbower

Someone forwarded me this blog post by Anthony Rotolo.  I love the emphasis on seeing. Anthony says ‘If we can observe a thing and understand why we react to it in the way that we do, then we can bring insight into our work, and so cause others to see.’

Anthony writes from the perspective of design but there’s much to be said for the importance of seeing – of seeing ourselves, our colleagues, our family, our friends, our enemies – in ways that illuminate the light of awareness & promote understanding – using the same principles he uses for design.

Check it out.  It’s good stuff.

Designers are ever-learning to see. We view the world with the naked eye like everybody else. But we learn to see differently. This comes as a result of our training…

In our training, we learn the principles of design and these act as so many lenses through which we observe elements around us. Once we have a principle like Proportion (for example) inside of us, we see things differently because we notice the scale of one thing relative to another. This gives us insight into what pleases our eyes. So, we observe the golden ratio in the human body, and we apply it in our own compositions until they please us.

We look for contrasts in the world because contrast makes the world interesting. And then we look to achieve contrast in our compositions until we’re well-pleased with them, too.

We see the texture of trees, or of leather, or of a baby’s skin, and then we add texture to our compositions so that, through sight, we simulate the sense of touch.

We observe the colors of the world. Warm ones. Cool ones. Colors that evoke a reaction in us. And then we communicate the emotion of color through our work.

These are a few examples of the imperative of seeing. If we can observe a thing and understand why we react to it in the way that we do, then we can bring insight into our work, and so cause others to see.

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