Thursday, 3 September 2015

App ideation tools

Visual appeal is crucial to communicating or "selling" ideas. And so it is in the development of ideas in the early stages of the design process because what is visually appealing also helps motivate ideation and creative expression. And hence the appeal of using creative app tools or web platforms, digital pens and touch screens to generate, develop and synthesise ideas, for getting ideas feedback, for creating interactive timelines, for sharing stories using storyboards, movie posters or customised comics strips, or for creating mobile visual studios - just to give a few examples.

Sunday, 19 July 2015

Why ideation skills?

Ideation skills include the skilful use of ideation tools (words, sketching, modelling and computing), which help not only in generating ideas but in developing and communicating ideas effectively. Moreover, ideation skills foster self-discipline, and help build designer confidence. Although different design disciplines may have different visualisation customs and habits, ideation skills apply across subject boundaries and enable designers to capture and convey ideas in any situation and medium.

Sunday, 21 June 2015

Tool-idea cycle

While there is much speculation about what aspects of designing will be taken over by computer algorithms in the years to come, the future of the design profession will probably require much more creativity, flexibility and adaptation. Such requirements highlight how designers make use of ideation tools, analogue and digital, and how tool use, in turn influences ideation. This iterative adaptive process, or tool-idea cycle, which includes copying of procedures, typically triggers new ideas and innovation. The tool-idea cycle, then, as evidenced in the world of ideas, from the ancient Greeks to Silicon Valley tech geeks, signposts design futures.

Thursday, 21 May 2015

Rhetoric as an ideation tool

Rhetoric is the art of persuasion, and part of human communication that includes purposeful and strategic manipulation of signs and symbols, and whether in the form of written and spoken words or visual elements (verbal and visual rhetoric). Designers too, in communicating ideas, may use rhetoric when addressing  a particular audience, from design team members to clients to end users, in specific situations, from ideation sessions to pitching for work to public consultation, in order to win over the audience for their idea. Rhetoric, then, and particular visual rhetoric using images as sensory expressions of cultural meaning, can be seen as an ideation tool.

Friday, 8 May 2015

Instrument ideation rules?

Working with conceptual tools can be messy - for example, sketching using graphite, inks or colour paints, or modelling using scrap paper, wooden sticks, and glue. It might then be tempting to let go of messy or untidy conceptual tools, and fly the idea by digital instruments letting software show the way. But, and using the metaphor of instrument flight rules, designers, unlike pilots, do not typically operate under conditions in which ideation by outside visual reference is not safe. Although software guided ideation may appeal to improvement at micro level, for the bigger picture, which is not easily quantifiable, there can be no instrument ideation rules.

Sunday, 12 April 2015

Ideation perspective

Although the idea of the sole creative genius may be seductive, the reality is that ideation doesn't work in isolation. The world of design ideas is truly contextual, embedded in individual and collective memory, evidenced in history and material culture, and reflected in everyday life of talent, passion and ambition. The ideation workshop, then, is not an ahistorical event, lacking a historical perspective or context, but an imaginative engagement with conceptual tools communicating first thoughts and ideas relevant to contemporary design practice.

Sunday, 1 March 2015

Moore on seeing more

Design ideation is about new ways of seeing, and experiencing the world around us through the use of ideation tools . But in increasingly digital and virtual environments, should we, like Mary Moore, daughter of Henry Moore, the sculptor, be worried that we're losing our skills to see things properly? 'We don’t look at things, it’s terrifying, it’s happening more and more and more. People see two-dimensionally on their phones and laptops and iPads; they don’t see shapes or understand form'. Moore is hoping her father's sculptural work would encourage people 'to explore what is in front of them with an open mind and in a fresh way, so that they might re-evaluate or see things that they have never seen, understand things they have never understood.' Source: http://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2015/feb/27/damien-hirst-set-back-art-by-100-years-says-henry-moores-daughter

Blog Archive