Wednesday 14 November 2012

Eco Print and Paper Visting Speakers for Worcester Graphic Design Students

Mary Warren from Robert Horne Paper talks to Green Design Students
at the University of Worcester.

Big thanks to Mark Pickford from Seacourt's Eco Printers in Oxford and Mary Warren from Robert Horne's sustainable board/paper suppliers in Northampton for coming over to talk to my yr 3 Green Design guys.. 

Mark talked about Seacourt's environmental credentials and the sorts of work they undertake as well as the many awards gathered en route (including 2x Queen's Awards!). Mary talked in some depth about the various papers and boards available now to designers when thinking about either eco print or packaging. She also talked about the need to think about reducing materials use where possible but while still conveying the same message. Finally Mary talked about the rise of the 'ethical consumer' - educated and with disposable incomes these people are part of the driving force behind many large companies 'greening' their business practices.

Great to hear them both talk about their industry and big thanks again to them both for travelling over to see us. Our third year Green Design students are working on an eco packaging brief this year to design prototype sustainable re designs of the iconic Worcester Sauce bottle and associated graphics.

Wednesday 17 October 2012

Designs on Signs Exhibition - Malvern Library


Graphic Design students from the University of Worcester will be exhibiting prototype wayfinding signage designs during Malvern’s Autumn Festival in the town’s library.

The project was given to the students by the Route to the Hills steering group, who are aiming to help find ways to help encourage pedestrians and walkers to enjoy both the town and hills.

Part of the group’s remit is to look into potential new wayfinding signage solutions in and around the town. The project was a perfect fit for the University of Worcester students, who were studying how best to create information graphics and wayfinding signage over their final semester.

Design lecturer Andy Stevenson said: “The students really benefited from working on this project. The fact that the signage design challenges were real, the clients were real and that there were great experiences gained while on a related visit to the London design studio, all helped make these a really realistic set of experiences for them.”

Malvern Autumn Festival organiser and board member for the Route to the Hills partnership, Peter Smith, added: “This project is a great example of a mutually beneficial collaboration between the Route to the Hills project and the University of Worcester’s student design expertise. It also adds to the great track record we now have with joint projects with the University.”

Councillor Phillip Grove, portfolio holder for economic development, said: “We are really pleased to have this opportunity to work with the students at the University of Worcester. I am very excited by the design ideas they have proposed and hope that some of their ideas can be incorporated into the final “Route to the Hills”, which is being developed to strengthen links between the town and the hills and help tourists and local people enjoy the heritage of the town.”

The Route to the Hills partnership is made up of eight organisations: Malvern Hills District Council, Malvern Civic Society, Malvern Town Council, High Street Malvern, Great Malvern Priory PCC, Malvern Hills Conservators, Malvern Theatres Trust and Malvern Hills AONB. 

Friday 24 August 2012

Emotisurvey Malvern Work Ongoing..

A test screen from the latest work ongoing showing photo and video feedback.

I'm dedicating these few weeks of research leave before term starts again in the main to trying to finish-off the web outputs for my latest emotisurvey project in Malvern.

The project is a new media consultative tool for the town planning and landscape architecture community. It involves a range of GPS-tracked participants giving their views on a client's wants at key points along a consistent route through urban areas but will eventually have internal applications too. It was commissioned on this occasion by the Route to the Hills steering committee - a project underway at Malvern Hills District Council to try to ascertain how people use the town and it's public realm.

This is the latest evolution of the emotisurvey project that I've been developing for a number of years now since it's beginnings in 2007. The emotisurvey we undertook in Worcester by the riverside formed part of a winning bid by Worcester City Council for the 2010 MJ Achievement Award for “Sustainable Infrastructure Achievement of the Year” which then helped the City Council secure a lottery grant to build a new footbridge over the Severn. The project in Malvern will eventually be visible to the public after scrutiny from the 'clients' as part of the Route to the Hills Project and staff at Malvern Hills District Council.

We've recently seen interest too from the Sustrans cycle network too who are interested in whether the project could help them gain feedback on and around potential new routes.

Andy Stevenson, Aug 24th 2012

Tuesday 17 July 2012

Feather Flags

In the middle of producing 'feather flags' for a client. There's so many variations of these things - curved, flat, small, large etc - care needs to be taken to ensure that the right one is designed-for..

Feather flag design concept for Dyke Ruscoe and  Hayes Ltd.

Thursday 5 July 2012

Students Get to Taste-Test Wild Foods on Campus

Ali Stevenson and students sample a selection of wild food recipes.

Graphic Design, Conservation Ecology and Environmental Management students have been trying-out a range of wild and ‘foraged’ foods put on as a lighthearted ‘sign off’ to a design brief on the Children’s Book Design module.

Children’s Book Design lecturer Ali Stevenson and students have been tucking-in to some home-made pastries, soups and desserts in a ‘wild foods’ taste-test on the University’s allotment. The move comes towards the end of the final-year Children’s Book Design module in the Digital Arts Centre. The module’s brief asked students to research and evolve a set of colour page spreads and book cover which aim to introduce families and children to edible plants and fruits that grow in the wild throughout the UK.

Mature design student Kashka Neri was also at the tasting and kindly supplied a delicious fresh sorrel soup to the mix of foods on offer. Kashka adds: “Eating wild foods and foraging is something I’ve done naturally for years. Since I remember, my family and I often went into woods or meadows in search for wild foods such as mushrooms, berries or herbs. Even now during my holidays in my homeland in Poland, the tradition of foraging - particularly for mushrooms, is very much alive and well and I’m keen to pass on these experiences and knowledge to my own children. Foraging for what can be gourmet food is such a wholesome experience too which is also healthy, fun and best of all - free! I feel that in UK the notion of gathering wild foods and their consumption has been forgotten for far too long now, a situation that hasn’t been helped by the spread of convenience foods and the large superstore chains. In contrast, many Eastern European countries still nurture this idea of wild food - adding value and importance to our everyday lives. Ali’s wild food taster session was such a refreshing occasion to take part in and I was delighted to be there – especially so with a variety of lovely food to try!

The module has been growing in popularity with design students over the last few years and has made use of visiting lectures from the BBC’s Wild Food specialist Andy Hamilton as well as Ali’s own background as a Senior Designer at Ladybird Books. The publishing industry has traditionally been a large employer of graduate designers and the University’s Graphic Design course has been evolving into this area and related as the industry’s outputs spread out into both e-books and interactive content too.

Student Sami Dore's cover designs for her
book on wild foods for families and children.
Ali instigated the module a few years back now and has been growing it’s involvement in the Graphics course at the University. Of the wild foods brief she adds: “this is a subject area that’s been growing in prominence over the last few years in both the media and TV. Combine this interest with the increasing awareness that we need to ensure that our children have access and opportunities to undertake outdoor activities to help counter the growing ‘computer screen culture’ (such as the National Trust’s recent ’50 Things to do Before You’re 11 1/2’) and you’ve got the genesis of this module’s brief.

The wild food taste test also had some very favourable feedback from the students who took part. The wild cherry clafoutis dessert supplied by helper Lon Teo, sorrel and nettle soups and spinach, feta and comfrey filo pastries seemed to be the hot favourites. These were closely followed-up by a surprise outsider in the form of Ali’s lecturer husband Andy’s roasted dandelion root coffee. It’s now hoped that this event might be repeated at a larger scale event at the University in the summer.

Contact:

Alison Stevenson
alistevo@thebumblebee.co.uk

Wednesday 4 July 2012

Tracing Spaces: Experimental Locative Media Collaboration

A composite image of (some) of our participants' walks.
I've been working on a locative media recently project in collaboration with digital media creatives Wendy Corbett and Kevin Jenkins. We're in the early days of it at the moment but exhibited it in it's early form at the University of Worcester's recent "A Place, A Space" research day.


We're hoping to evolve the concept further and are in discussions about submitting it into future digital media/arts exhibitions.


In essence, the project shows the digital audio and animated outputs of participants' walks within a test area. In this 'proof of concept' test we used a site at the University of Worcester, recorded walks via GPS and then 'mapped' these onto a test grid - each square of which instigates animations and audio. The project seeks to reflect whether or not you are free to walk where you wish or whether you are constrained in some manner.


Our test space at the University of Worcester.


Screen shot from square 05's animation.



Bespoke Maps for "Shackleton's Dream" - The History Press

Shackleton's dream cover courtesy of the History Press.
We've been creating a set of bespoke maps to work within a new title by polar author Stephen Haddelsey "Shackleton's Dream" (History Press). 


Stephen's book records the story of the Trans Antarctic Expedition (TAE) in the late 1950's whose members consisted both British and New Zealand nationals. It's also a story of the clash of the two personalities who ran the expedition - Britain's Dr Vivian Fuchs and his deputy the fiery New Zealander Ed. Hillary. It's a fascinating story and Stephen helps to bring it all back to life in his book.


We've worked on historical mapping titles previously including (selected examples): The Viking Atlas of WW1, The Viking Atlas of WW2, The Penguin Atlas of D-Day, the DK Factopedia/World Atlas and the Macmillan Atlas of the (American) Civil War.


We were asked to create a selection of bespoke maps to tally with key points in the book. Here's a few low res examples of which below:

 



You can see more about this expedition (inc. previously unpublished materials) and get more details on the new "Shackleton's Dream" book on Stephen Haddelsey's blog: http://stephen-haddelsey.blogspot.com/

Corporate ID Work Ongoing


We occasionally take on small corporate ID projects and are doing so at the moment with an ID redesign for a local accountancy company.

It's been so nice 'designing' again (and a refreshing change from our main academic roles)..

It made me recall how our own past lecturers had said how the ability to be visually creative and 'design' is a bit like a 'muscle' that you need to keep exercised.

As well as an ID revamp we've been charged with print/promo and signage tasks for this project.

Rough conceptual work ongoing..

Before:
Original wall sign.
Ongoing devts:
Revised concepts ongoing