Tuesday, March 07, 2006

Informative Links

Electronic Newsletters – spam or seriously good read?

Our virtual world abounds with newsletters sent daily, weekly, monthly, hourly!  It’s enough to make you want to switch off and finally run for those hills.  But wait, before you go, check out these newsletters that are, in my view, truly deserving of your time:

Design Council – a fantastic UK based organisation that promotes the vital role of design in today’s economy.  Their monthly newsletter will keep you fully up-to-date on issues facing the UK design world.

Dexigner – a monthly feast of designer communication. It covers all design genres and will keep you fully up to date on what’s happening out there.  

Electronic House – a great newsletter if you’re into the latest home technology. It issues bi-monthly and covers security and entertainment technology, and features the latest gizmos and geeky homes.


Metropolis one of my favourites.  It comes out monthly and offers an electronic taste of its monthly magazine of the same name, so it’s a great substitute if Metropolis is not available in your area.

Martina MacGreevy

Sunday, January 22, 2006

RISEN’s San Francisco Design Guide

This month we’re bringing you our San Francisco Design Guide, put together for all students attending the Rhodec Meet in February – and anyone else who’s interested! Here we’ve focused purely on design-oriented activities/sites (and left the rest to the tourist guides). We hope this provides some things of interest to the budding interior designer. This is by no means a comprehensive list, but should provide a starting point for planning your visit to this wonderful city.

Have fun!

Fiona

CyberCentre Director

 

 

DESIGNER RESOURCES

San Francisco Design Center

Open Monday to Friday, the Design Center is comprised of 3 buildings, features more than 100 showrooms, and represents over 2000 manufacturers. A must for the serious interior design student.

SF Mart

This to-the-trade only venue houses 100 showrooms of home furnishings, and holds design events. Check ahead for entry requirements.

SHOPPING DISTRICT

Jackson Square Historic District

This area comprises several streets, with many buildings of note, and shops of interest to the interior designer. It is particularly renowned for its arts and antiques. Whilst here you should also check out the wonderful ‘William Stout Architectural Books’ at 804 Montgomery Street.

MUSEUMS AND GALLERIES

De Young Museum

This museum recently re-opened (in October 2005) to much media attention. The striking new building was designed by the renowned Swiss architecture firm ‘Herzog & de Meuron’ and local firm ‘Fong & Chan Architects’. As well as showcasing art from the 17th to the 20th century, it is worth visiting for the construction alone, including the tower with fabulous views across the city.

SFMOMA

The ‘San Francisco Museum of Modern Art’ is another great place to take in some art in beautiful surroundings. This building, designed by Swiss architect Mario Botta, has a minimal yet strong interior, of elegant gray and black striped granite set against white, and good use of light.

Frank Lloyd Wright Building

The ‘Xanadu Gallery’ is housed in the only Frank Lloyd Wright building in San Francisco. This was designed by the architect in 1948, using his spiral ramp idea which caused much attention at the Guggenheim in New York. This gem is well worth a visit.

Legion of Honor

Visitors here will find much to see amongst this large collection of works of art, although probably the best known piece is Rodin’s ‘Thinker’. The attractive building also draws visitors, with its Beaux Arts styling, and proximity to the Golden Gate Bridge.

RESIDENTIAL ARCHITECTURE

Haas-Lilienthal House

This Queen-Anne style home of 1886 is furnished of the Victorian period, and can be toured on certain days.

The Octagon House

Although not open out of season, this solid brick construction, of quirky octagonal shape, can be viewed from the outside.

COMMERCIAL ARCHITECTURE

Hallidie Building

This was the first glass-curtain wall in North America, so definitely worth a look.

Mills Building and Mills Tower

The original ‘Mills Building’ was built in the Chicago School style of architecture, by the Midwest firm of ‘Burnham and Root’. The ‘Mills Tower’ was then added in 1931.

Bank of America Center

This skyscraper is a dominant feature on the San Francisco skyline, and even had a starring role in a movie – ‘The Towering Inferno’.

Transamerica Pyramid

Designed by William Pereira in 1972, this is the tallest skyscraper in San Francisco, and will be recognized by many for its unusual pyramid shape.

Medical Dental Building

A steel framed building, covered in terracotta, and noted for its ornate interior lobby.

CIVIC ARCHITECTURE

City Hall

This Beaux Arts building, with Baroque dome, has been restored, and is worth visiting for its exterior and interior.

(All Photographs Copyright Fiona Worboys 2006)

Tuesday, December 27, 2005

DESIGNER TALK

Hats off to our wonderful Sheree Schold.  Sheree has submitted the first in a long series of interviews with well known designers.

Sheree's interview with Linda Kahn is both inspiring and very informative.

Linda_bio_and_jpeg

(Click on the photo for a larger view)

Sheree:  Linda, first off I want to thank you for taking the time to do this interview.  From your Designer Profile, I see that you started your Design Profession in Atlanta and then went to New York, US.  Tell us about your design jobs in these cities.

Linda:  I was in Atlanta for 9 years.  I worked for more than one small company.  I also studied for a year, via my  University program, in Florence, Italy.  And this was the best design experience I could possible have -it molded my career.  I went to  find that great design job in New York but ended up working as a 'Style Coordinator' for Bonwit Teller. This job gave me tremendous management experience and great retail experience.  It was a real fairy tale job and I loved it, but it wasn't really interior design. 

Sheree: From your profile we know you had your own business in Pakistan but you didn't just start your own business fresh out of design school -s o do you think it is important for young designers to work as part of a design firm before trying to run their own businesses?

Linda:  I would say the main thing is to get out of school and go to work for a design company with a good reputation and one that is "safe" to learn in.  Work where you are protected from the hardships of the design industry so you can learn and grow - even if it doesn't seem as glamorous as working with a well known designer in a small firm.  I also advise no one to go out on their own from the beginning.  Work with a company where the head designer has a lot of experience, there is still a lot to learn.  The retail furniture stores that offer design services are a good place to start.  You will learn the corporate world, there will be employee policies, maybe health benefits and so on. And learn your sources!  Once you establish your name in the community, you can go out on your own. 

Sheree: How did you end up in Pakistan and what was the design community like when you moved there?

Linda:  I moved there for my husband's job and I was advised not to be an interior designer because the people didn't understand the field. I designed baby garments at first but then people began to see my home, and slowly they began to understand my talents.  My way into the interior design profession in Pakistan was from people who traveled and knew interiors from other areas of the world and they began to relate those to me and to seek me out.  After one or two interior design jobs, things began to snowball. I did really big commercial jobs and big residential jobs in Pakistan.

I was for certain a pioneer in the field of Interior Design in Pakistan.  Only two educated designers were there during my reign from 1982 to 98.  Very influential people began begging me to do their offices, their hospitals for they were so dissatisfied with local architects.  Not designers but architects who were not experienced in interiors and who had no interior training were doing interior projects.  Once my business got going, I ended up hiring architects to work for me as I was getting projects for my design talents but the projects also required architects!

Sheree:  Big concerns for young designers, who find themselves in situations like your early Pakistan experience, are how to get a business going when there are no firms to work for and how to inform possible clients about design services.  Any advice for them?

Linda:  You will always keep growing and researching and learning new things.  You will always have new challenges, just research it and do it!  You have to keep on learning and finding new techniques, but research is key!

Not only did I have to be an interior designer in Pakistan, if I wanted something, I had to have it made.  So I researched and learned how to manufacture and got great manufacturing experience -all due to lack of available materials and sources. 

In what ever way you can, let people see what you can do.  And shout about your talents, toot your own horn!  Get your name and your telents out there in your community.

Sheree: Linda, there is a lot of talk these days about related professions (a big one right now is graphic design) and how they are important to interior design -you have designed clothing and furniture and worked with architects as well as provided interior design services, how important do you think it is to be capable of cross over into other related design fields?

Linda:  It is very important.  It is all related.  Wether it is garments or graphic deisgn, it all portrays a personna, a mystique -we create an image of how we look, live, or put on paper to perceive.  The better you are in graphic arts, the better interior deisgner you will be.  The fast ability to do renderings and so forth is wonderful.  But if you are not good at this, you hire someone to do it for you.  Don't let any of your weakenesses stop you!  Hire a student even to do things for you - all design companies do this.

Sheree:  Linda, if you could give ID students just 3 words of advice to help them go out into the working world, what would they be? 

Linda:  Keep on learning!

Sheree:  Thank you again, Linda, for taking the time to answer questions and share your experience and knowledge.  Hopefully many ID students will read this and be inspired!

Linda:  Keep on believing in yourself and never give up on your dreams!  Keep on loving what you do, even in the down or slow times!  And don't give your drawings or work away until you are paid for your work!




Wednesday, November 30, 2005

Welcome to RISEN, the Rhodec IIDA Student Exchange Network, IIDA’s very first CyberCentre

A group of motivated students from distance-learning interior design school Rhodec International has come together to found this virtual campus centre.  This is a place for us to further our design learning experience, under the International Interior Design Association, through global interaction.

A special thank you must go to Martina MacGreevy and Rick Cejalvo, for providing the technical expertise and hard work in getting this site up and running, and for making it something we can all be proud of.  Thank you also to Lise Lindberg Holmse, Sylvie Podloski and Sheree Schold, for their input and enthusiasm throughout this project, and our other founding members. And finally, to Rhodec and IIDA, for their support and belief in our venture.

As CyberCentre Director, I'm really looking forward to working with Lise, Rick and all our IIDA members, to help make this an invaluable and fun resource that we can all participate in and share.

Fiona Worboys - CyberCentre Director