Tuesday, February 9, 2016

Two ways of looking at the design process


Here's one way.  If it looks like a PowerPoint slide, that's because it is.*  If you start at 1:00 on the circle, you see how you start by giving yourself permission to try--to carve out the time, find the materials, use them (even "waste" some), fail, try again.   You show up to the studio or wherever you make stuff, even if all you have is 20 minutes.
You get the idea.  Each step follows, one leading neatly (?!) to the next.  You get that it's more a circular than a linear process, though, that continues on around, revisiting some stages, until you collapse from exhaustion the piece is finished.

Then there's Austin Kleon's view, from his wonderful book, Steal Like an Artist:

In my experience these views are both accurate.  The design process is sort of like riding a roller coaster.  You strap yourself in, hold on, scream, almost wet your pants with fear and excitement, wonder why you ever decided to do this, swear never to do it again.  Then it's over, and you get off, exhilarated and ready to do it again.
Come explore the ins and outs and ups and downs with me.

*It's from my Design Process:  Inspiration to Roadmap class, next Tuesday at Chattahoochee Handweavers Guild. Click HERE to register.

4 comments:

Terri Bryson said...

It's amazing how the design process which applies to just about everything really is like going in a circle at times, feeling like cat chasing its own tail. We all keep plugging away in spite of all frustrations. Sometimes we even get rewarded by happiness with our resutls.

kathy loomis said...

The clock diagram is fine except I always skip directly from 1:00 to 7:30. None of that boring research and sketching for me -- I need to START SEWING!!!!!!! (and I guess you save 6 1/2 hours too.....)

Molly Elkind said...

Haha! Well, everyone's process is different, and yours obviously works well for you, Kathy! I do feel sometimes when I'm in the zone that I've mislaid 6-1/2 hours somewhere.

Molly Elkind said...

Terri, thanks for reminding us that happiness does result, in the process and in the final product! That's why we keep getting on that roller coaster, right?