Wednesday, December 15, 2010

CREATIVE PROFESSIONAL

"A creative professional is a person who is employed for the extraction of skills in creative endeavors. Creative professions include writing, art, design, theater, television, radio, motion pictures, related crafts, as well as marketing, strategy, some aspects of scientific research and development, product development, some types of teaching and curriculum design, and more. Since many creative professionals (actors and writers, for example) are also employed in secondary professions, estimates of creative professionals are often inaccurate. By some estimates, approximately 10 million US workers are creative professionals; depending upon the depth and breadth of the definition, this estimate may be doubled."

-WORK FROM INSPIRATION
-BRAINSTORM ABOUT IDEAS YOU ARNT FAMILIAR WITH 
-RESEARCH
-PUT YOURSELF OUT THERE
-DONT BE AFRAID TO FAIL
-EXPERIENCE IS EVERYTHING
-BE ANNOYING OR PERSISTENT TO GET YOUR POINT ACROSS

Monday, December 13, 2010

EXCEPTIONAL PERSON -- Allie Lynch

EXCEPTIONAL PERSON -- Allie Lynch --WORKER AT TREADWELLS ICECREAM

While being home in salem MA, for a weekend, i found myself in my usual favorite icecream place.  Treadwells icecream is a family owned buisness which is famous for their 55 plus homemade icecream flavors. Not only is their icecream amazing everytime i have walked into this small but very enjoyable store i have been overwhelmed by the kindness of the workers.  This day i happened to meet a girl a year older then me who had just graduated from UMASS AMHERST, with a degree in graphic design.  Allie was the definition of personable and was eager to learn more about me finding out we had the same interests.  Although Allie had graduated she was part time working at this icecream place in hopes she would soon find her dream job in the design firm.  The advice that Allie had given me was to take charge and to never give up.  Although she does not have a job in the field she wants she is still interviewing weekly and interning to keep her knowledge up to pace so future jobs can see her desire for it.  She told me to take as much experience as you can get and to never let go of an internship or a job because in the long run its all worth it. Graduating on time is not what people look for its WHAT YOU DID to get there.  I learned a lot from meeting this girl and it has made me view my options very differently as i approach my last semester at Hofstra. 









Anna Akbari

Anna Akbari teaches in the department of Media, Culture, and Communication at New York University and has also taught in the School of Art and Design History and Theory at Parsons: The New School for Design.  Her research interests include visual and virtual self-presentation, mediated identity, fashion studies, visual culture, and body politics.  She is the founder of Closet Catharsis, her wardrobe consulting company.  In addition, she is currently working on several book projects and is a freelance marketing consultant.

While attending graduate school, she co-founded Brainwright, a New York-based business that connected skilled, working arts and humanities professionals with students of all ages and levels for private coaching. A former Peace Corps volunteer in the Dominican Republic, Anna founded and managed the Mao Foundation for Bellas Artes, a nonprofit music foundation which raised scholarship money to train Dominican piano students as teachers. She also has a background in theater. A graduate of Interlochen Arts Academy, she has recorded radio voice-overs, taught numerous children’s theater workshops, performed in a variety of theatrical productions, and is the former host of Manhattan Neighborhood Network’s “Ranting and Raving Reviews.”

Anna received her Ph.D. in Sociology from The New School for Social Research, holds an M.A. in Liberal Studies from the New School, and a B.A in Religious Studies and Middle Eastern Studies from NYU.  She is the recipient of the NYU Prize in Religious Studies, the New School University Fellowship, and the Discover Card Tribute Award.

Sunday, December 5, 2010

unexpected colaboration: cappellini, disney & dror do the tron armchair

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Speaking of Tron, an unusual collaboration between Disney and Cappellini has yielded the Tron Armchair, designed by NYC-based Dror Benshetrit. The chair will make its official public debut in just a few hours, at Design Miami/Art Basel.

house industries pop up holiday

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Andy Cruz and Rick Roat from House Industries were in town today to present their Holiday Pop-Up Show at Partners & Spade with live screen printing by Awesome Dudes. It's no secret we're huge fans, our logo uses their blaktur typeface designed by Ken Barber, and Ken if you're reading, there's Core77 t-shirt headed your way!

Unfortunately this was just a one day event. If you're in LA next weekend you can catch the show at Heath Ceramics opening December 11th, and for the folks in Portland, we carry a selection of House Industries wares at Hand-Eye Supply. It was hard to resist the opportunity to pick up a custom screen printed t-shirt—I ended up getting 3 made—and can highly recommend the Awesome Dudes if you're looking for a good short run t-shirt printer.

hermaphrodite chair by bibier fiuza faustino

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Fashioned from a single sheet of aluminium, architect Didier Fiuza Faustino's "Hermaphrodite" is a stool concept that reflects the shape of the pelvis. Drawing heavily on saddle making tradition, "Hermaphrodite" is designed to be straddled, rather than merely sat on.

As the name may indeed suggest, this concept is intended to confront the user with their own anatomy and gendered identity—something that, many a gentleman out there may argue, a fair number of poorly designed chairs succeed in doing already.

the benddesk solution to desktop multi-touch

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To paraphrase Steve Jobs, a central problem with multitouch as a desktop user interface is that we need to work with our hands on the horizontal (think of the keyboard, mouse, or tablet on your desk) and view on the vertical (the monitor in front of you). Jobs indicated that Apple testing showed users' arms would become fatigued from constantly reaching out to touch a vertical monitor.