Innovative Idea: Night Rider

Upcoming Inventions

innovation light vestOh yeah! Check out this illuminated MPH vest for cyclists. Yes, it is only in the concept stages, but the design is still cooler than cool. The link takes you to where you can read about the invention and how it is envisioned as an all-around sports vest to help spectators monitor the speed of their favorite athletes in action. But I think it is just fine as a cyclist safety vest.

 

Color Coded

Graphic Design, Photography

Graphic Design Color

I found this image to be interesting. It is difficult to see what role Photoshop had in the color saturation and juxtaposition. I have seen a lot of design blogs posting  collections of peoples’ things recently, and have noticed a great number of them categorizing by color. Stacks of books, shelves full of knick-knacks, and closets appear to be disregarding the subject of what is being stored, tending only to the color arrangement.

 

Motion Animation

General Design

f27f91779c955572c62cdfce76da73129c20f86d-m

Ok. Another chance to gaze into that big void of a box you call your monitor. Go ahead, try not to follow each sphere as it drops down, slides over and is destroyed.

 

Bottles to Glasses

General Design, Innovators & Creators, Upcoming Inventions

bottles to glasses invention
A glass artisan on Etsy invented a way to create a second life for beverage bottles. This seller turns any bottle with a painted label into a drinking glass using a unique process. What a great way to give bottles a second use, other than recycling.

 

Innovative Idea: Milk Light

General Design

milk light innovation
What’s cooler than cool? This milk glass night light. About 6 weeks too late for Santa, this innovative light would have been great for lighting a path to the Christmas tree for the Jolly Old Fatman.

 

Innovative Product Design: The Ultimate Tool?

General Design, Product Design

potato tool invention
I have often said that simple product design always wins. This design makes me eat my words. There may be no simpler tool than this Homo Sapien tool, and there may be no simpler man than he who buys one. At first glance, it appears to be a pair of dangly earrings, then maybe a set of petrified potatoes. Upon closer inspection, it is in fact a $40 rock on a string, being pitched as the ultimate kitchen gadget. This thing is about one idiot away from being pitched to millions of TV viewers.

 

Designer Interview: Brice Bunner

Designer Profiles, Innovators & Creators, Uncategorized

desinger bruce bunner
From a small home office in Columbus, Ohio, Brice Bunner provides product design services for clients around the U.S. With a few products set to launch this spring in stores such as Kmart and Walgreens, Brice is making it happen with little more than a 0.7 mechanical pencil, Adobe CS3 and a flatbed scanner. Bunner shares some of the everyday things he has done to make himself a better designer.

1. What was your first impressionable moment that involved design? When I was about 8 years old, I remember having taken a camping trip and seeing a two-sided salt and pepper shaker. I was jazzed, it triggered all kinds of ideas for better camping utensils. So many thoughts stemmed from that experience.

2. Design school prepares you for many things, but share one thing that you had to learn through experience in the design world to fully understand. No matter how much you are paid, or how much you know, the opinion of some people can, for no logical reason, trump whatever design solution you may offer. I have had the uneducated opinion of a non-designer sink a design idea of mine when the person who contracted me was doing some Q & A at the water cooler.  Thoroughly unprofessional, and ridiculous, my educated expertise was forfeited to the office banter of some business savvy co-worker.

3. Name one person who has influenced how you see things through a “designer’s eye,” whether it be an instructor from school or the author of your favorite blog or book. Chris Sickels of Red Nose Studios lectured once about how failures lead to great success. I had the chance to listen to Chris speak about four years ago, and that experience was an awakening for me. He talked about rapid failure and the idea that you can succeed mathematically, if you fail so many times. Hearing that was a great influence on me and reaffirmed the idea of perseverance.

4. As a consumer you observe products while inspecting price and branding. As a designer you observe products while paying attention to aesthetics and functionality. Which of those roles is it harder to relax from when you see the “next best thing” on store shelves? I can relax from neither. I constantly shop, if that’s what you want to call it. As a consumer I’m a spendthrift, but as a designer I approach every product with a close eye for design. Few things meet that standard to where money is of no consequence; the iPhone, the Flip camera.  Both are satisfying to me as a consumer and as a designer.

5. Is there any one product you see on the market that needs to be redesigned with a new material, perhaps a better interface or even a more green-conscious approach to the design as a whole? It is cliché, but: the car as we know it. There is no reason we cannot harness the power of water to fuel our vehicles. Car companies are in the dark ages. Green design is everywhere, some of it genuine, some of it not. But now there is a challenge for us to design a means of transportation without knowingly committing to a destructive cycle of energy. Water should fuel our cars.

6. The touchstone of any inventor/designer/entrepreneur is to see their idea on store shelves. What keeps your creative juices flowing in order to reach that goal? So many opportunities arrive from running into problems. I have had sleep interrupted by my mind churning solutions to problems I encounter. A good cycle to maintain is: address a problem, create a solution, and get feedback from others. By hitting problems head on you can better assess what it is you are trying to solve. Not only is it healthy to run into problems, it is to the benefit of what you are designing.

7. Everyone has their secret to great design. Reveal your sources of influence without which you cannot design, without stating the obvious, Davisoncreators.com. My shopping cart. I seriously find window shopping to be a great mind exercise when doing design work. I love going to Wal-Mart or CVS and sorting through bad designs while thinking to myself, “that is a horrible design, I need to fix that.” Another influence for me, from when I was younger, were “The Never-Ending Story” and “The Dark Crystal.”  These two movies were honest, creative productions that, to this day, remind me that anything is possible. As whimsical as they may be, the production really carried the stories through intense, old-school special effects.

8. Working as an independent designer, how much do you rely on networking for information and the resources needed for the work you do? As an independent designer, I do a lot of fishing and baiting. I will look for work then find myself having to manage other people that I outsource with to complete a project. In a way, I am the buffer between the outsourced designer and the clients I work with. 

I have to reach out and have other people help to do package design, graphics, model making and research. Not that I am not capable; by reaching out I can expedite the tasks to designers who specialize in those respective tasks. 

I tend to network with more of the business/ legal types. Going to an IDSA meeting, I find myself surrounded by “designers” shaking hands and mingling with the same people they work 40 hours a week with, which is no benefit to me. At a local level, BNI events or Kiwanis meetings are saturated with business savvy people, leaving me as the lone designer.   

9. What should the ideal designer do every single day, with the intention of becoming a better designer through habit? Make whatever it is you are doing simpler. I won’t recommend drawing each day or any of the sage advice you might get from other designers, but I will say this: simplify what you do. It doesn’t matter if you are organizing your work station, completing a task at hand or modifying your daily rituals, make it simpler, pare it down to its smallest possible parts. I have found that innovation comes through simplification.

 

Man Vs. Animation

General Design

animator-vs-animation

Sometimes it really feels like it’s you versus the computer. For anyone who has had a moment of frustration trying to design or create on their computer in the recent past, check this out.

 

Fruit Squared – Innovative Packaging Design

General Design

banana box design
strawberry carton package design
Talk about visual appeal. These innovative juice boxes are a great way to show consumers what it is they are about to buy. The detail in both the banana box design and strawberry box is awesome!

 

Fabric Maps

General Design, Upcoming Inventions

maps

These versatile fabric maps  are the perfect way to carry your city map with you as you travel. Both unique and functional, this patented design is ideal as an impulse buy for tourists or as the perfect accessory for hosting out-of-town guests.

 

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