Interaction Design (Interactive App / Product Design Brief)

Claire Smyth AAD010 Introducing Studio Practice : IXD / Interaction Design (brief / concept pages

Interaction design (IXD) is in which described and referred to as the efficient design of interactive products and services in which a designers focus goes beyond the item to include the way in which users will interact with it, meaning the close scrutiny of users’ needs and limitations etc truly does empower designers to customise output to suit precise demands.

https://www.interaction-design.org/literature/topics/interaction-design

To begin the interaction design workshop we took part in sketching / designing a number of quick products, items, objects and buildings under three different time limits / constraints (5 / 10 / 20 seconds) to get our minds constantly thinking about what design aspect work well together when giving something to sketch out in procreation for designing concepts within the set interaction design brief which I feel was really helpful to understand that design can be produced in so many different but intriguing ways, through how simplistic drawings can portray outstanding imagery that is still recognisable. As pictured below, the objects / things that we had to rough draw out included – The Titanic Centre, a watch, phone, radio, book and a laptop:

 

Within todays developing society, recent research has shown that we are in which becoming slaves to our devices, as while screens provide a window into the digital world they can also immensely begin to separate us from the physical as a result of relying too much on the workings of a device and its contained technology to get through each and every day. Whether we are conversing with friends through the likes of WhatsApp, posting photographs of miscellaneous things on Instagram or organising plans / a night out through Facebook, we now hugely tend to be constantly connected to our screens, through increasingly and more than likely experiencing the world through screens and filters, leading to lose of connection towards / with reality. As a result / for this interaction design workshop we were in which given the brief of developing concepts for a digital product or app that would in which encourage people to take time away from their screens with the aim of getting out and interacting more with their surroundings and areas / county of which they live in, meaning as a result I have created, put together and designed a digital app fitting this brief through the displayment of concept pages, research, ideas and explaining my concept / app in great detail.

Research shows that there are great amounts of people having lived in a specific area but have not fully explored it and seeing what it has to offer along with becoming much more educated on its history etc due to establishing set routines to where they visit, go to and travel as a result of sticking to places that they have liked and was best suited to them and their family despite living in that area for various years or most of their life. For example and in great relevance to aspects such as this when aiming to appreciate your surroundings and local areas, throughout this year of 2020, lockdown more than ever has taught, showed and demonstrated to us that the actual ability, desire and want to go out and explore (daily walks etc) the surrounding, urban areas that we live within or near / close by as a result of the governmental travel restrictions and social distancing measures. In correlation to this brief, I have in which now wanted to put together, research and design a digital interactive but educational app with the main aim and ability of exploring / widening your surroundings much more frequently. As a result I have given it the name of urban exploration in corelation with the aim to explore the local urban surroundings around you and within a small radius, including places, local businesses, environments and buildings such as museums, galleries, parks, loughs, beaches, toe paths, sculptures and national trust forests / parks etc including places within Belfast especially and its contained museums, the history of Titanic, Botanic Bardens, docks, towpaths and many more

Throughout this app and its contained concepts, it can in which give people / families with the opportunity to create memories in the outside world, learn and further educate yourself on the place where you live, with the ability to reflect on your experiences (highs and lows / peaks of pits of your day of exploration), whilst continuing to analyse your physical activity through the use of counting steps and being recommended various local places to participate in the likes of hikes, camps training / exercise camps and park runs.

To work / control this digital app of urban exploration, ensuring that you are getting the best out of it, once downloaded the user will in which begin with selecting, typing in and registering their postcode or area, meaning that it can bring up various destinations, places areas etc close to them within either walking distance or driving to along with a wide range of recommendations of places to visit, go for walks / runs / cycles or experience, to where they can then pick and go through all the suggested areas / places in their surroundings choosing what to actually visit and checking them off as they go along as a result of having the ability to visually look at pictures of the area / destination beforehand along with becoming much more educated upon it. This is because under each tab of a place / area recommended / suggested within the app there is in which a briefly documented fact file including information and key dates of the environment / place being visited. When a family, group of people or individual who is controlling the app chooses to visit a particular area / place, the app will give the opportunity to create a log of each time / day a particular area was visited. This then means that to increasingly interactive and gain more from visiting the suggested places, such as the likes of museums, parks and exhibitions a short quiz is available to be completed incorporating simple multiple choice questions regarding general information about and surrounding it, which allows the people on the app to become much more educated upon the particular place, creating the aspect of competitiveness of wanting to ensure that all questions are correct. Common questions can include: what year did the park open? Who designed the sculpture exhibition/ etc.  Throughout logging your explorations and visits, there is the ability to create an almost diary / blog post of the day spent exploring aspects of your surroundings. This includes uploading any pictures taken and documenting the time spent there through highlighting both highs / lows (peak and pits), what you found interesting and in general just an overview of the visit for your personal memories whether it was spent with family or friends as all logs are saved in a calendar tab to where you can look through and reflect upon what you got up to on that particular you went and visited / experienced something new. Furthermore, as exercise is highly important not only for your physical but mental health, the app once logged on will continue to count your steps, along with recommending various local areas to exercise including the likes of park runs and exercise classes in nearby leisure centres

The benefits of this digital interactive app of urban exploration can in which be seen as:

Receiving the ability to be encouraged to go out and walk more, increasing and improving a person’s overall physical health through being recommend greater opportunities to participate in further aspects of exercise, along with tracking your physical health.

By reflecting upon your experiences, it allows the ability to work upon and consider your mental health and wellbeing, much more frequently than perhaps before

The app can further help the likes of local business with your area to boost its economy / hospitality through being recommend a variety of them, especially due to the recent implications brought by coronavirus including the closure of non-essential places / shops.

Photography Brief (beauty in the ordinary and overlooked)

Claire Smyth AAD010: Introducing Studio Practice (photography brief) : Beauty in the ordinary overlooked

“There is hidden beauty in the ordinary, and great beauty in the overlooked. Little things are big, less is more. Imperfection is beautiful.” – Quote from: Abby Ross.

In reflection and responding to the Japanese photographer of Rinko Kawauchi and as a result / towards the AAD010 photography with video workshop, using our imagination, we were in which given the brief of ‘Beauty in the ordinary and overlooked` and instructed to take a range of photographs of our surroundings as a result of considering to recognise and take notice of the beauty in the ordinary and overlooked, continuing to look at the world around you with the main purpose of creating and publishing a mini digital photobook using visual metaphors (or similes) to inspire the feeling of a dream. Once all photographs are taken, we are to compose and put together significant pairs of images from our best photographs / pairs that are seen as similar but different through paying attention to various crosses of elements in the pictures that look similar but are not the same thing, including the likes of and for example: two things of the same colour / moods, two things with a vague shape, things that are normally big and small but appear the same size on the flat surface of the photographs, things that are created through the comparison of one thing with another of a totally different kind to create a new meaning (which is often poetic) or /  and considering the narratives that are starting to emerge etc.

For my photos and digital photo-book titled as Deterioration / Unknown Surroundings, I took it upon myself to go around my house (both inside and out) and to significant areas within Belfast and its City Centre that where easily accessible to me. These included the areas / surroundings of Titanic Quarter, Belfast Docks, Ormeau Road, Rosetta and their; significant urban architecture, buildings, gates, building sites, rope, different grounds (cobbled / pavements / tram lines), fences, doors, windows, sky (sunsets) bricks, exhibitions, signs, churches, graffiti (public artwork), nature (leaves, weeds, flowers etc) and aspects of natural deterioration in relation to the likes of developing rust, overgrown weeds, run-down buildings / parts of it, abandoned infrastructure, crumbling bricks and the natural reflection of / in puddles etc through analysing and taking photos utilising key shots, compositions and point of views such as closeups, unusual angles, portraits, landscapes, skylines (taking shots from far away etc) and taking into consideration the likes of light, relictions, shadows, weather and the contained environments with the main aim of looking at ordinary things within my house that reflect the feeling of being in lockdown (trapped within your local area), along with considering things around me that wouldn’t typically be seen as beautiful / interesting to the general public as a result of letting my mind and eyes drift when analysing and taking into consideration what exactly is around me / right under my noise or on my doorstep without realising.

Below, I have now composed, displayed and put together a pdf PowerPoint Presentation / digital photobook containing a wide range of photographs / images which I believe are my best shots, along with significant pairings to in which when going out and about taking my photos, I really considered what type of shots would suit each other and go well together as a result of significant environments, objects, shapes, colours, tones, and textures etc throughout my images.

Photography brief powerpoint 1

Photography brief powerpoint 2

Photography brief powerpoint 3

Environment Workshop (mixed media drawings of surroundings / concertina project)

Claire Smyth AAD009 Drawing in Practice: Environment Workshop (mixed media drawings of surroundings / concertina project)

Over four working days, to complete this unit / task of work, I have in which created a variety of drawings / sketches from real life and the views of / around my surroundings using a wide varied range of mixed media, drawing materials and techniques, whilst creating art with materials and ways that I am familiar with and enjoy, along with pushing myself to draw outside of my comfort zone or with different materials / art styles or certain things that I have not experienced using and drawing with as much.

As a result, I created multiple drawings in various sizing scales of different areas, surroundings, buildings and places which included: The outside of the Belfast School of Art building, its surroundings, the MAC, skateparks, St Annes Square / Cathedral, nature, local forests, apartment buildings cars, signs, trees (nature), my back garden / the view outside of my window from my house etc.

The materials that I commonly used throughout this environment workshop, where in fact materials such as: charcoal, watercolour paints, pencil, pen, fine liners, wax crayons, coloured markers, oils pastels, soft pastels, sharpies and collage materials such as newspaper etc.

As pictured, within my drawings, I used various drawing / marking making techniques, some of these included: mark making, abstract, expressive, shadows, tone, depth, colour, detail, structured, aligned, playful, experimental, bold marks, subtle details, block shapes and patterns etc.

*To complete the concertina project, I based myself around St Annes Square in which I folded an A2 sketchbook page to create various panels to where I picked out different viewpoints for each when looking round the area, where then using a combination of different materials and drawing techniques, I was then successful in creating a concertina composition on the one page, viewing different areas of St Annes Square.

Overall, most aspects of this environment workshop was in fact highly enjoyable and fascinating as it was kind of a new way of created various / multiple pieces of art (drawings) with the main aim and end goal of using and experiencing a wider range of media to display my surroundings in various different ways: capturing sky scapes, closeup details, architecture,  fences, buildings (both modern and ancient), natural and manmade, high / low viewpoints.

(Ranges of scale used throughout: A4 / A3 / A2.     Date from when work was being completed: 17th – 22nd of September 2020).