Friday, June 15, 2007

Concept Presentation



Today was the day to wow the judges with the design, yes folks today was presentation day.

I believe i did well but the most important part is the feedback from the lectures. They acknowledge the designs short comings and i would have to agree on that. There are many aspects i am still unhappy with, mainly the base stability problem that i have been having, i try to counter it the best way i know but still i fell short it wont stop me through. I will keep pushing this product even further in my own time.

I will follow up first by searching for any manufacturing and outsourcing for some of the parts, mainly the bottoms of the individual bins.

Concept CAD models

These are just some of the cad models that i did to see the product in a different light, the look of different materials, colours and finishes.



Thursday, June 14, 2007

Concept Final Progress 02

Well this is the progress with my model, its taken this long to get to this point from the last progress blog due to the fact i ran into some issues that needed me to spend more time solving. Things like the slot of the pole, gap issues etc.

You learn from your mistakes i say, by making the full scale model i have learn a few things in the design; mostly, would be how the draws would rotate.
I developed a simple mechanism to lock the draws in place when the draws are rotated to a certain degree, that raised restriction issues and made the design appear less "free will" and obviously appear restrictive.
So i decided to take away this feature and make it more loose to express more of a "fun" related product.
















Tuesday, June 5, 2007

Concept Final Progress 01



Well here it is, further progress on my final concept model; it will be made out of plywood as you can see... a very flexible and easy to use material indeed.

Will post up more undates on the final concept model progress soon also how i got the plywood to behave how it did, not rocket science or anything just plain messing around... >_<

Friday, June 1, 2007

Concept 2nd Attempt Material Prototype



This is the 2nd attempt at materials, to be honest i am liking the outcome of the plywood, i can see some nice natural looking finishes on it...

Wednesday, May 30, 2007

Concept 1st Attempt Material Prototype



Well this is the 1st attemped at using thin plastics to form the 'bins'. Why don't i just vac form the bins you ask? 1. the size is 1/1 scale so it be too big for the vac form machine and 2. the draft angles would be too much, the bins need to have 90 degree angles. Finally 3. im just testing plastic over wood >_<

Tuesday, May 29, 2007

Concept Brief Summary

Storage for the Unmentionables (Draw for small garments, socks & under garments)

Purpose - The designed unit is simply a storage unit for small garment items. These include socks, singlets and undergarments.

Target market – There is two intended target markets, 1st is newly married couples (or old) with no children and live in there own apartment and the other is single females who live in apartments alone or with another female.

Intended Use – The draw is fundamentally a free standing dresser draw for your small garment items. It can be position in most situations, from anywhere in the desired room, from the middle and corners of the room.

It not only stores these unmentionable items in a more unique manner but also is a decorative piece of furniture.

It adds a more presentable presence to, in this case “private items”. So hiding your dresser draw in the dark corner of a room may just be issues of the past.

Saturday, May 26, 2007

Concept Development & Design Freeze

Concept developments of the dresser draw.









The concept developments cover from the 'bins' to the base stand.

After this it comes down to experimenting with the right material for the job...

Monday, May 21, 2007

Concept Research Refocus





Shifting the products purpose and direction requires a new focus. So i have decided to refocus the target market on middle-class single females of China.

Chinese Women Have More Choices in Marriage

Chinese traditional culture considered marriage and motherhood the only real option for women,but today, it's only one choice for many Chinese women.

Miss Wei, 37, is still living on her own in Dalian city of northeast China's Liaoning Province. A graduate of a prestigious university, Wei opened her own company several years ago. Listing "driving, travel, and buying brand-name clothes", as hobbies, Wei said she was "very satisfied" with her current single life. She was not celibate, but did not want to compromise by getting married.

In China, more women like Wei choose to be single. In 1990, the capital city of Beijing had 200,000 singles. But currently, the number of single women in Beijing and Shanghai, the two biggest cities in the country, has surpassed 1 million.

The latest statistics from the All-China Women's Federation show that in the past five years registered marriages have decreased year by year, dropping in 2002 by 1 million on the number in 1998. Meanwhile, 1.2 million couples divorce every year, leaving many women single mothers.

"Though not all of them feel happy with their single status, they indeed have the choice to stay single," said Zhang Sining, a researcher with the Liaoning Institute of Social Sciences.

In addition to choosing to be single, more women delayed getting married and giving birth, or chose not to have children at all.

Horizon Survey and Index Network carried out a sample telephone survey recently on 1,031 residents aged from 18 to 60 in Beijing, Guangzhou, Shanghai and Wuhan cities. The result shows that compared with 1997, 11.3 percent less people questioned chose to have just one child, while 1.1 percent more people chose not to have children, and 3.9 percent more preferred to stay single.

Society gives women sufficient space to make their own choices and to decide their own destiny, said Jiang Yongping, Chinese women's affairs specialist.

Jiang said economically-independent Chinese women did not have to rely on their husband to buy houses, cars or clothes and society provided women more opportunities to join in social life.

Bao Qianyi, a 28-year-old teacher in the Foreign Economic and Trade University, has been married for four years. Bao and her husband have decided not to have a child.

"Marriage and motherhood are no longer obligations for women, but a status women can choose," said Bao, adding that she did not want anything, even a child, to disturb the harmony of her relationship.

Zhang said China was in a period of social transition, in which different cultural information was clashing to produce different moral values.

"But no matter what women choose to be, society is more tolerant of their choices," said Zhang.

But men viewed the diversification of marriage choices differently. Though many of the male respondents recognized and accepted the trend, most preferred the more traditional thought that "marriage is the best end-result for women."

Cao Yudong, a Ph.D student in the China Institute of Social Sciences, said that although he could accept the thought of diversified life styles, he himself had no intention of marrying a woman with such radical ideas.

http://english.people.com.cn/200308/25/eng20030825_122990.shtml

Sunday, May 20, 2007

Concept Dilemma

I have choosen to push the "waterdrop" concept idea. The "screen" concept just doesnt have a strong enough intended purpose and its direction was abit thin...so that is pretty much the base of the problem. Im going to use the "waterdrop" concept idea and push out a new design concept by the end of 25th of May and have a design freeze on the 27th of May. I will shift its placement from the living room, infront of the front door (screen) to it being used in the bedroom for its main and only purpose,to store clothes (dresser draw). This will give it a more strong sense of existences and why i have created it.

Concept POG

This is the POG, just random products pulled from company websites.

Saturday, May 19, 2007

Concept Process

I am in the process of completing my concepts. The following are some of my undeveloped concepts.



I have nailed down the concept i would like to work on. (Also another maybe)

1) A screen (furniture)


2) A holder for sauce bottles (maybe)


In the next week i will be following up on further research on the P.O.G for one of these choosen concepts.

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

Concept Read: China Made



Book Description

"Chinese people should consume Chinese products!"

This slogan was the catchphrase of a movement in early twentieth-century China that sought to link consumption and nationalism by instilling a concept of China as a modern "nation" with its own "national products." From fashions in clothing to food additives, from museums to department stores, from product fairs to advertising, this movement influenced all aspects of China's burgeoning consumer culture. Anti-imperialist boycotts, commemorations of national humiliations, exhibitions of Chinese products, the vilification of treasonous consumers, and the promotion of Chinese captains of industry helped enforce nationalistic consumption and spread the message--patriotic Chinese bought goods made of Chinese materials by Chinese workers in factories owned and run by Chinese.

In China Made, Karl Gerth argues that two key forces shaping the modern world--nationalism and consumerism--developed in tandem in China. Early in the twentieth century, nationalism branded every commodity as either "Chinese" or "foreign," and consumer culture became the place where the notion of nationality was articulated, institutionalized, and practiced. Based on Chinese, Japanese, and English-language archives, magazines, newspapers, and books, this first exploration of the historical ties between nationalism and consumerism reinterprets fundamental aspects of modern Chinese history and suggests ways of discerning such ties in all modern nations.



China Made is a good read, first seeing the size of it, it kind of scared me >_< It outlines the questions "why shouldn't China use chinese made products?
It goes much deeper by examining the effects of westeren cultural pleasures that effected the chinese consumer needs, giving birth to a massive market that was not seen by the Chinese themselves.
For me the most interesting part is having a much better understanding of cultural influences on product markets and influence that create consumer needs, in this case how west influence China and now, how China influences the west; Its a funny never ending tag-war.

Davo.

Friday, May 11, 2007

Blog Introduction [PROJECT CHINA]

Well I finally started my blog on PROJECT CHINA. From here on i will document how i go about the project, my trials and errors, my fails and success. I hope this documenting will help others understand my direction in this project so lets get onto it....... FIGHT OH! OH!