Difference between revisions of "User:Tsrohwuob"

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Overview parts of iron
 
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Revision as of 23:49, 8 May 2018


My chosen artefact:


Kraan.jpg

TAP STOP Dick van Hoff 1995

Why do tabs look like sports cars if you just want water? This stop tab has no unnecessary details and veiled forms but leaves a glance how it works. It shows an industrial character which emphasizes the operation of the tab: the mixing of hot and cold water.


Research


Research homework >>>File:TAPSTOP RESEARCH1.pdf

TAPSTOP RESEARCH1.jpg

Preview of research 1, lamp by ontwerpduo > also showing what is invisible

TAPSTOP RESEARCH12.jpg

Preview of research 2, bicycle storage design academy 2017, something that you use in your daily life. simplify and execution are important

Objects for others:



1 DanFlavin.jpgProtectionglass jp.jpg

FUTURE dan flavin — niels Dan Flavin makes art with tube lights. In the future there will be more and more light, because of all the advertising on the screens. Look at ny Times Square in the past and now. First there were a lot of billboard, painted or printed. Nowadays there are big LED screens. Which ensures that our eyes become lazy. That's why we need these protection glasses in the future!

Sexy-relaxy.jpgNailchair.jpg

PAST sexy relaxy mirror chair — joep

I made a chair that refers to the nail chair they used in castles in the Middle Ages. This chair was meant to kill people. The chair that I designed for joep forces the user to sit with your legs crossed, otherwise the nails will hurt you.

Spijkerstoel.jpg

Blueprint


Blueprint iron.jpg

Process/Outcome

Iron1.JPG Torx.JPG Iron2.JPG File:Iron3.JPG

Overview parts of iron Overview2.jpg Above1.jpg


Statement

IMG 28862.jpg What if.... When I was in Boijmans I really looked forward to see one of my favourite works of the design collection. The Tap Stop by Dick van Hoff. For me it really stands out because it’s more than a well designed furniture or classic vitra chair. It’s not only a tap stop, but it’s a tap stop that shows the process of hot and cold water. The operation, process and simplicity were good keywords for me to start with.

The meaning of Dick van Hoff is that tap stops nowadays are looking too fancy. So that’s the reason that he designed a tap stop which emphasizes the operation of the tab: the mixing of hot and cold water. So it’s inside out and really transparent. Interesting about that is: what if everyday objects are designed to understand the operation? Are we then finally able to fix it by ourselves when it’s broken? Or do we still want to throw it away and buy a new one? These days we are so lazy, we buy things that we do not understand the process of. What if we know the process? Can we then create new objects with the parts of other objects.

A tap stop is something that people uses in daily life, something that is completely normal and unthinkable from the kitchen. We never think about who designed it, or who came up with this genius idea? Or even better, how it works. It’s just really nice that it works. I was questing myself, how does a house look like if all the product are have the working process in the outside, or really transparent. And houses should then all look like centre pompidou. Why are we hiding the process? Because in some cases the process could be very interesting.

I was looking for a everyday object in a second hand store that I could use for the transformation. A lot of objects were doing nothing, like cuterly or a table doens’t have a process and is already transparent in how it works. So something like a television is hiding a lot. But then I should make something like the iMac g3 of 2008, a transparent layer that is covering the process of the television. In the corner I found a iron that is doing something similar as the tap stop, warming up water. The iron had a screw with an extra protection, which makes it more fun for me to find out what’s inside.

I really wanted to start working without thinking about the real outcome before. My assignment for myself was to get every small piece out of the iron. I found out that the iron was really well designed, it was even massive.