Monday 22 April 2013

Saltaire Mill Bookshop

I went to saltaire mill and in there bookshop I found a lot of interesting books which kind of made me realise where my interests and practice lie. For one it showed that I love books and love looking at them, how there laid out, the stock used, different finishes etc. but also what design caught my eye as well as what disciplines.

  

I've always been interested in advertising however i'm not entirely sure it is something I would want to go into, especially immediately. Although this adverts really catch my eye and think this is due the conceptual side to them as some of them are just so clever or inventive. This one shown above that I snapped from a book based on advertising that cares shows how the format of different advertising space can be used to convey the concept. This shows how even though it's not happening here in this country, it is in another and is very thought provoking in it's use of imagery by placing it in the environment we see. 

  

I love vintage sign typography and although it is something I don't have skills in it's a personal atheistic I do enjoy.

   

Stationary, gifting and papercraft is a big love of mine which I have always enjoyed and been interested in. This is something I would love to do as part of my practice however more applied to other things rather than a complete focus on it. For example using paper craft in packaging or creating a branding and identity for a range maybe. Either that or just doing it as a personal piece of practice which I enjoy in my own time.



I found this magazine for the 'creative and curious' and was really intrigued especially this one was based on stitching. I looked it up online and it had raving reviews but was very expensive which was unfortunate.

"UPPERCASE publishes books and magazines for the creative and curious: products that spark the imagination and inspire creativity. Our eponymous magazine, now in its fourth year, is loved by readers around the world and has been recognized for its design excellence. Our books profile up-and-coming artists or explore emerging trends in design and creativity."

Sunday 7 April 2013

Gadget Show - N.E.C Birmingham

I went to the Gadget Show in Birmingham and found some really interesting technologies which I thought could be useful for future projects or proposals.
There are connections that come in the shape above in the leaflet or as a phone which project your phone screen up to 16 inches. I thought this was really interesting and showed how our phones are becoming mini computers and therefore theres a big potential to utilise what it can do in the areas of graphics.


'blippAR' is an app which you can download for free and when hovered in front of an image it will bring it to life. This is the future of advertising and means a big change in the way advertising is used and displayed.

 These are tv's which can disguised as mirrors when off. They come in a range of different frames to fit your interior. This could be used for exhibitions, point of sale, promo stands or street advertising. 
I saw 3D printers at work and after already watching a video on the future of printing and design I was assured by witnessing it's technology in person. The future of design and print will be transformed by this new technology as it will print any design even 3 dimensional things in a special type of plastic. Special and rare parts or even genetics of the human body can be copied and printing meaning a whole new way of looking at all things that we are in contact with.

Friday 5 April 2013

Liveson Article - Morals


After a particularly gripping (and somewhat creepy) episode of Charlie Brooker’sBlack Mirror last night, we came across this site liveson.org - with the catchy tagline “When your heart stops beating, you’ll keep tweeting.” A tweet later, we found out that many of you were also unnerved, but also confused, as to what this site was. Spoof or real? We contacted the creators at Lean Mean Fighting Machine to find out…
MB : We tweeted a link to your  site earlier today and it’s received A LOT of attention, and after a quick WHOIS found out it was you guys.
So is it, or is it not, a spoof?
It is real. The idea of it came about in March 2011 (I have it on my Evernote account, the modern version of sending an idea to yourself by first class delivery). Since then we’ve talked about it, it repulsed some people, made others laugh, but everyone found it interesting on some level.
But like most of these ‘silly’ ideas we just parked it. At one time it was just going to be about creating another you, so that it could trawl the internet and find stuff you’d like to see, freeing the real you up to get on with work. The after life part was then just going to be an easter egg.
MB : Could you tell us a bit about Liveson?
We have a partner – which I can’t disclose – as they’re getting involved in good faith and we didn’t think this would cause as much hoopla as it has done. But they will be helping us develop the A.I. Not being the technical director, I can’t give too much detail on this yet – but the next update to the site will give more depth into how we are doing it. 
MB : Were you aware of the episode of Black Mirror that aired last night on a similar theme? Was it your intention to coincide with this or was it coincidence?
Black mirror was the catalyst for us to just get on and do it. One of our planners heard an interview with Charlie Brooker a couple of months ago, and he mentioned this theme to one of his episodes. The planner told me, and we just thought, this would be the perfect time to launch the idea.
We knew we’d had the idea for ages so didn’t have hang ups about looking like we’d ripped it off (I think the after life is a pretty old idea anyway) we knew people would probably think its a PR stunt for the show. But our intention is to genuinely see what we can do with this technology. In that sense we saw Black Mirror as a big ad for LIVESON.
MB : What do you think projects like this could really mean for the future of how we live and die in peoples’ minds?
I really don’t know, that’s why it’s interesting. Obviously it automatically leads us to a dystopian vision, Charlie Brooker’s drama was intense and I suppose you could say not a good ad for LIVESON… but that’s dramas job. Our job will be to see how good we can make a version of you out of relatively little information.
We think the biggest thing about this could still be the help it can give you in a time starved world. If there’s two of you, then you can divide and conquer the information overload.
In terms of the moral, ethical, philosophical points, I’m not smart enough to understand all the implications. There seems to be a guttural instinct to the idea. My wife just hates it. Whereas I find it funny and interesting. Being an atheist, I think its at least a better or more real deal than the church offer…

The last point here is what really interested us. We live in a world where the kind of people that want to tweet and share, are also often the people who may be too time poor to stay on top of things. Is there truly any benefit in a bot which could keep abreast of all the things that apply to you, when you may not have the time to discover them yourself? It is the context, here, which turns it from something that strives to be efficient, into something which becomes creepy and highly unnatural. Networks which we already trust have started to fringe onto our rights regarding this topic; 0nly recently we saw complaints over Facebook using diseased friends and relatives’ accounts being used to sell and share promotional items over the social network. The Black Mirror audience have been quick to create their own morals from last night’s tale, but ultimately we must be careful to ensure that what saves us time, doesn’t cost us our humanity.
Thanks to Dave Bedwood, Creative Partner at Lean Mean Fighting Machine, for sharing their thinking behind LIVESON.

This is the site that there referring to in the interview. I found this on the moving brands website and being someone who watched the black mirror series I find this incredibly unnerving and struggle to see its purpose. Why there would be a need for a computer system to comment on things on your behalf after you are dead is not only pointless but creepy. Advancement in technology can be positive but when it comes to topics like this is where we fail to recognise the point to stop. Hopefully the technology will be put towards something much more worthwhile but at least it has helped me realise where my morals lie within matters like this and I can strongly say that my practice will not provoke things such as this.