Josette Siig Gaardsvig has over 25 years of experience in creative fields including graphic design, product development, and fine art. She holds an MSc in Business Administration and has worked for companies like Lego, Danish Technological Institute, and as an independent consultant. Currently, she runs her own art studio and craniosacral therapy clinic. Her work focuses on design, creativity, and bringing art into business settings.
Karim Rashid is a famous Egyptian-Canadian industrial designer known for his minimalist and colorful designs. He runs a private design studio in New York. Rashid studied industrial design in Canada and Italy and has designed over 3000 products for companies worldwide. He is renowned for his furniture, lighting, and surface designs and has received over 300 awards. Some of his most notable designs include the Bobble chair for Moroso and the Malissa feeding bottle for Alessi. Rashid strives to incorporate sustainability and humanity into his designs.
Sandra Backlund is a Swedish fashion designer known for her sculptural knitwear. She launched her own label in 2004 and has since collaborated with luxury brands like Louis Vuitton and Emilio Pucci. Backlund's designs are meant to exaggerate and accentuate the female form through fluctuating proportions, using heavy materials like wool, paper, wood, and copper wire to transform knitwear into moving works of art. Her landmark collections explore themes like the human form, Rorschach inkblots, and bruising.
Bartoli Design is an experienced Italian industrial design studio, specialized in furniture and product design. From marketing strategies to mock-ups and product technical development, our activity embraces the full spectrum of design services and also extends to architecture and interior design.
industrial design, architecture, interiors, exhibition design
product design, furniture design
Bartoli Design architecture and interiors portfolioPaolo Bartoli
Bartoli Design is an experienced Italian industrial design studio, specialized in furniture and product design. From marketing strategies to mock-ups and product technical development, our activity embraces the full spectrum of design services and also extends to architecture and interior design.
industrial design, architecture, interiors, exhibition design
Angelika Groenendijk-Wasylewski runs YDU, a shop in Amsterdam that provides a platform for up-and-coming fashion designers. She handpicks new designers primarily from the Netherlands to sell their creations in the shop. With over 25 designers currently featured, YDU offers a variety of fashionable designs on a weekly basis to its many regular clients. Angelika aims to nurture young talent and help designers establish their brands through accessible retail space, as opening their own shops in Amsterdam is difficult due to high rents.
Johanna Gullichsen is a renowned Finnish textile designer who established her brand Johanna Gullichsen Textile Craft & Design in 1989. She specializes in woven fabrics and is committed to honest design and interpreting Scandinavian textile traditions in a modern way. She has exhibited widely across Europe and in the US since 1989 and sells her textiles through a flagship store in Helsinki and representatives around the world.
Glitter is made of very small, flat, reflective particles that are applied to surfaces to make them sparkle or shimmer by reflecting light in different angles. Glitter has been produced from materials like mica, glass, insects, and malachite since prehistoric times when it was used to decorate cave paintings. Ancient Egyptians made glittering cosmetics from beetle shells and malachite crystal. The modern plastic glitter industry began after WWII when an American inventor developed a way to produce plastic glitter as an alternative to unavailable German glass glitter. Advance Syntex Pvt. Ltd, an Indian company, introduced glitter powder to India in 1980 using Japanese technology and has since manufactured precision cut glitter powder for applications like text
Josette Siig Gaardsvig has over 25 years of experience in creative fields including graphic design, product development, and fine art. She holds an MSc in Business Administration and has worked for companies like Lego, Danish Technological Institute, and as an independent consultant. Currently, she runs her own art studio and craniosacral therapy clinic. Her work focuses on design, creativity, and bringing art into business settings.
Karim Rashid is a famous Egyptian-Canadian industrial designer known for his minimalist and colorful designs. He runs a private design studio in New York. Rashid studied industrial design in Canada and Italy and has designed over 3000 products for companies worldwide. He is renowned for his furniture, lighting, and surface designs and has received over 300 awards. Some of his most notable designs include the Bobble chair for Moroso and the Malissa feeding bottle for Alessi. Rashid strives to incorporate sustainability and humanity into his designs.
Sandra Backlund is a Swedish fashion designer known for her sculptural knitwear. She launched her own label in 2004 and has since collaborated with luxury brands like Louis Vuitton and Emilio Pucci. Backlund's designs are meant to exaggerate and accentuate the female form through fluctuating proportions, using heavy materials like wool, paper, wood, and copper wire to transform knitwear into moving works of art. Her landmark collections explore themes like the human form, Rorschach inkblots, and bruising.
Bartoli Design is an experienced Italian industrial design studio, specialized in furniture and product design. From marketing strategies to mock-ups and product technical development, our activity embraces the full spectrum of design services and also extends to architecture and interior design.
industrial design, architecture, interiors, exhibition design
product design, furniture design
Bartoli Design architecture and interiors portfolioPaolo Bartoli
Bartoli Design is an experienced Italian industrial design studio, specialized in furniture and product design. From marketing strategies to mock-ups and product technical development, our activity embraces the full spectrum of design services and also extends to architecture and interior design.
industrial design, architecture, interiors, exhibition design
Angelika Groenendijk-Wasylewski runs YDU, a shop in Amsterdam that provides a platform for up-and-coming fashion designers. She handpicks new designers primarily from the Netherlands to sell their creations in the shop. With over 25 designers currently featured, YDU offers a variety of fashionable designs on a weekly basis to its many regular clients. Angelika aims to nurture young talent and help designers establish their brands through accessible retail space, as opening their own shops in Amsterdam is difficult due to high rents.
Johanna Gullichsen is a renowned Finnish textile designer who established her brand Johanna Gullichsen Textile Craft & Design in 1989. She specializes in woven fabrics and is committed to honest design and interpreting Scandinavian textile traditions in a modern way. She has exhibited widely across Europe and in the US since 1989 and sells her textiles through a flagship store in Helsinki and representatives around the world.
Glitter is made of very small, flat, reflective particles that are applied to surfaces to make them sparkle or shimmer by reflecting light in different angles. Glitter has been produced from materials like mica, glass, insects, and malachite since prehistoric times when it was used to decorate cave paintings. Ancient Egyptians made glittering cosmetics from beetle shells and malachite crystal. The modern plastic glitter industry began after WWII when an American inventor developed a way to produce plastic glitter as an alternative to unavailable German glass glitter. Advance Syntex Pvt. Ltd, an Indian company, introduced glitter powder to India in 1980 using Japanese technology and has since manufactured precision cut glitter powder for applications like text
Italian Design selected by VDW in Berlin 22 - 30 May 2015 catalogVenice Design Week
ITALIAN DESIGN selected by Venice Design Week
How can design REvive tradition? Traditional production systems and innovative design
This year in Berlin, DESIGN WEEK network presents an exhibition that brings together products of fashion, interior, industrial design with the aim to inform the German public about the Italian creativity and quality. Scope of this exhibition is to create a business network among designers, enterprises, retailers and the German public. The exhibited works have been selected for the high quality of working processes to show the relationship between innovation and tradition. The exhibition points out the talent and creative potential of small Italian creators, enterprises, artisans and designers coming from industrial, fashion and product design.In Italy there are many high quality and innovative creative design companies, dispersed throughout the country; when it comes to micro enterprises, artisans and designers with difficulty manage to enter the international market. In order to facilitate their integration, DESIGN WEEK network has started a network of relationships within the international design weeks, featuring events aimed at enhancing “Good Design” , performing exhibitions in design centers and other strategic meeting points, located in high-frequency and shopping areas.
edited by arch. Lisa Balasso
concept: DESIGN WEEK network in cooperation with Venice Design Week and vogliadarte.it
exhibition: Berlin 22 - 30 May 2015
exhibition architects arch. Emilia Peregodarinperego.com
partner: design akademie berlin
Ca’ Foscari / Design Management
technical partners:
Michela Codutti
isoluzioni.com
AMR amrrecchia.it
CFM centrofiniturametalli.it
Dalpiandesign.it
Trendeventi
We would like to thank Boris Bullwinkel, Cecilia Bertolissi, Claudio Paggiarin, Diego Castellaro, Dörte Schultze-Seehof, Federico Fracasso, Francesco Da Rin De Lorenzo, Maggie Siner, Manelli Hosseini, Michele Salvato, Monica Calcagno, Jobst Eversman, Patricia Enge, Taddeo Zuccheri, Valeria Pagani, VITRARIA, Ulrike Schmälter.
Samuel Rhoads Clarke is an experienced designer specializing in brand experience and art direction. His resume summarizes his career working on projects for Nokia, Hendrick's Gin, and his own design studio. He has strong skills in communication, concept development, and project management. His portfolio includes exhibitions, publications, and installations he created for Nokia, Anonymous Artists, and his grayworld design studio focusing on conceptual art with technology.
Lightspace 2018 lightspace catalog from Bowermans and Maybell GroupJared Goodwin
lightspace’s vision is to be the most creative brand in public space furniture.
Originality is our language. Design is our life. The constant expression of design using spatial awareness, creating identity and delivering functionality is our blood. Our mission is to bridge the divide between Eastern and Western design and unite world leading designers from across the globe and in our native mainland to bring ideas and creatives together with high end manufacturing capabilities to create outstanding original design furniture using world class materials and manufacturing processes.
We aim to be an internationally recognised brand for workspace furniture that is focused on our core values of being always youthful, fun, collaborative and inspiring...lightspace, your inspiration…
How cool would be a product designed by you and crafted everywhere by local makers, without factories and logistics?
In this presentation we briefly recap the Slowd's history and show you how to hack the whole design product chain.
For this first edition, Rocalia has decided to highlight the design of natural stone through different approaches: furnishing, decoration, wall and floor covering.
The exhibitors who have contributed to the realization of design pieces selected by the Design Committee of the fair will integrate the ROCALIA DESIGN route.
Light + Building 2016: classical Aesthetics meets futuristic technologyCSIL Lighting
Trends for the 2016-17 season will be presented at the Light + Building Trend Forum in Fankfurt, providing an inspiration for specialistic retail trade, designers, architects and interior architects.
This document provides an overview of Softline Design's new collection of furniture. It highlights four collections - Spirit, Living, Active, and Accessories - that showcase elegant and comfortable furniture with a wide range of colors and flexible solutions. The collections are designed by Softline in collaboration with leading international designers to meet evolving lifestyle needs.
Aesthetic preference shift of the chinese young generation by yang design mdYANG DESIGN
This article summarizes an interview with Jamy Yang, a Chinese designer, about changing interior design trends among young people in China. Yang notes that the new generation values simplicity, sensitivity and intelligence in design over the ostentatious "daqi" style preferred by older generations. They are influenced by Western brands like Muji and IKEA that emphasize light, minimalist styles. Yang highlights several independent Chinese designers embracing this "Indie Pop" aesthetic and profiles two young professionals - Benny and architect Ruan Hao - whose modern, eco-friendly living spaces exemplify the trend away from conspicuous consumption towards quality of life.
TEPTA provides large scale of services and products of global brands in Turkey and neighboud as a 360degree solution partnership for lighting projects and needs
The document discusses innovations in windows, roofs, and facades that are redefining architecture. It profiles several architectural firms and projects from around the world that are experimenting with new materials and designs for envelopes. Specifically, it highlights the Harbin Opera House designed by MAD Architects, which features an undulating white aluminum facade that blends with the snowy landscape, and the Naman Retreat Resort by Vo Trong Nghia Architects, whose hotel building is clad in a concrete and greenery facade designed to reduce sunlight and induce wind flow. The article examines how technologies like double glazing, photovoltaics, terracotta, zinc and weathering steel are being used innovatively in
The document provides an overview of Bartoli Design, an Italian design studio founded in 1960 by Carlo Bartoli. It summarizes Bartoli Design's extensive work experimenting with new materials and technologies in furniture design. Some of their award-winning and iconic designs are mentioned, including the Gaia armchair which is in the permanent collection of MoMA. The studio continues to be led by Carlo Bartoli and his family, focusing on elegant, simple designs made with authentic materials. They explore a wide range of design applications beyond furniture as well.
This document is a resume for Albert Abrahamsson that outlines his education, work experience, software skills, languages, and an exhibition. It lists his bachelor's degree in industrial design from Lund University in Sweden and work as a junior designer and in sales. Software skills include Adobe and Autodesk programs. Languages include Swedish, English, Danish and German. It also lists an exhibition of his "Stolen Cyclo" chair in Stockholm.
Barber Osgerby Project Stories for the Design Museum DesignMuseum1
Edward Barber and Jay Osgerby established BarberOsgerby in 1996 after studying architecture together. Since then, they have designed furniture, lighting, and other products for many international companies. They are known for their innovative and award-winning designs. Some of their most notable projects include designing tables with colorful segmented aluminum tops for Established & Sons gallery and architectural designs for several H&M stores around the world.
Jacobo Munoz designs objects with attention to beauty, functionality, and the experiences and memories they evoke. He sees himself as a director ensuring every detail is perfect. His designs consider aspects like satisfaction, simplicity, and humor. Now, good design requires understanding manufacturing, lifestyles, and brand expectations. Munoz wants to create beautiful, functional objects that express his feelings and dreams, not just economic benefits. He designs for himself and others to acquire.
This document is the portfolio of Francesco De Nunzio, an Italian product designer and artist. It includes sections on his background and skills, examples of his furniture design, product design and artwork. Some of his past projects include designing coffee mugs for a bar in Rome and porcelain services for the airline Alitalia. His artwork covers subjects such as portraits, abstract concepts and pin-ups.
This document provides a summary of Jacobo Munoz's background and experience in product design. It outlines his education in industrial design, including a bachelor's degree from Ecole cantonale d'art de Lausanne in Switzerland. It then lists his professional experience directing design departments and founding companies. The document highlights some of his exhibition and lecture experiences internationally. It concludes by listing the languages he speaks and design software skills.
Brand Flash :Parachute Advansed Tender Coconut Hair OilDY Works
DY Works works with Parachute to launch a brand in the light hair oil segment, leveraging the equity built by Parachute Advansed over the years yet without the baggage of being an old fashioned, thick & sticky oil.
Italian Design selected by VDW in Berlin 22 - 30 May 2015 catalogVenice Design Week
ITALIAN DESIGN selected by Venice Design Week
How can design REvive tradition? Traditional production systems and innovative design
This year in Berlin, DESIGN WEEK network presents an exhibition that brings together products of fashion, interior, industrial design with the aim to inform the German public about the Italian creativity and quality. Scope of this exhibition is to create a business network among designers, enterprises, retailers and the German public. The exhibited works have been selected for the high quality of working processes to show the relationship between innovation and tradition. The exhibition points out the talent and creative potential of small Italian creators, enterprises, artisans and designers coming from industrial, fashion and product design.In Italy there are many high quality and innovative creative design companies, dispersed throughout the country; when it comes to micro enterprises, artisans and designers with difficulty manage to enter the international market. In order to facilitate their integration, DESIGN WEEK network has started a network of relationships within the international design weeks, featuring events aimed at enhancing “Good Design” , performing exhibitions in design centers and other strategic meeting points, located in high-frequency and shopping areas.
edited by arch. Lisa Balasso
concept: DESIGN WEEK network in cooperation with Venice Design Week and vogliadarte.it
exhibition: Berlin 22 - 30 May 2015
exhibition architects arch. Emilia Peregodarinperego.com
partner: design akademie berlin
Ca’ Foscari / Design Management
technical partners:
Michela Codutti
isoluzioni.com
AMR amrrecchia.it
CFM centrofiniturametalli.it
Dalpiandesign.it
Trendeventi
We would like to thank Boris Bullwinkel, Cecilia Bertolissi, Claudio Paggiarin, Diego Castellaro, Dörte Schultze-Seehof, Federico Fracasso, Francesco Da Rin De Lorenzo, Maggie Siner, Manelli Hosseini, Michele Salvato, Monica Calcagno, Jobst Eversman, Patricia Enge, Taddeo Zuccheri, Valeria Pagani, VITRARIA, Ulrike Schmälter.
Samuel Rhoads Clarke is an experienced designer specializing in brand experience and art direction. His resume summarizes his career working on projects for Nokia, Hendrick's Gin, and his own design studio. He has strong skills in communication, concept development, and project management. His portfolio includes exhibitions, publications, and installations he created for Nokia, Anonymous Artists, and his grayworld design studio focusing on conceptual art with technology.
Lightspace 2018 lightspace catalog from Bowermans and Maybell GroupJared Goodwin
lightspace’s vision is to be the most creative brand in public space furniture.
Originality is our language. Design is our life. The constant expression of design using spatial awareness, creating identity and delivering functionality is our blood. Our mission is to bridge the divide between Eastern and Western design and unite world leading designers from across the globe and in our native mainland to bring ideas and creatives together with high end manufacturing capabilities to create outstanding original design furniture using world class materials and manufacturing processes.
We aim to be an internationally recognised brand for workspace furniture that is focused on our core values of being always youthful, fun, collaborative and inspiring...lightspace, your inspiration…
How cool would be a product designed by you and crafted everywhere by local makers, without factories and logistics?
In this presentation we briefly recap the Slowd's history and show you how to hack the whole design product chain.
For this first edition, Rocalia has decided to highlight the design of natural stone through different approaches: furnishing, decoration, wall and floor covering.
The exhibitors who have contributed to the realization of design pieces selected by the Design Committee of the fair will integrate the ROCALIA DESIGN route.
Light + Building 2016: classical Aesthetics meets futuristic technologyCSIL Lighting
Trends for the 2016-17 season will be presented at the Light + Building Trend Forum in Fankfurt, providing an inspiration for specialistic retail trade, designers, architects and interior architects.
This document provides an overview of Softline Design's new collection of furniture. It highlights four collections - Spirit, Living, Active, and Accessories - that showcase elegant and comfortable furniture with a wide range of colors and flexible solutions. The collections are designed by Softline in collaboration with leading international designers to meet evolving lifestyle needs.
Aesthetic preference shift of the chinese young generation by yang design mdYANG DESIGN
This article summarizes an interview with Jamy Yang, a Chinese designer, about changing interior design trends among young people in China. Yang notes that the new generation values simplicity, sensitivity and intelligence in design over the ostentatious "daqi" style preferred by older generations. They are influenced by Western brands like Muji and IKEA that emphasize light, minimalist styles. Yang highlights several independent Chinese designers embracing this "Indie Pop" aesthetic and profiles two young professionals - Benny and architect Ruan Hao - whose modern, eco-friendly living spaces exemplify the trend away from conspicuous consumption towards quality of life.
TEPTA provides large scale of services and products of global brands in Turkey and neighboud as a 360degree solution partnership for lighting projects and needs
The document discusses innovations in windows, roofs, and facades that are redefining architecture. It profiles several architectural firms and projects from around the world that are experimenting with new materials and designs for envelopes. Specifically, it highlights the Harbin Opera House designed by MAD Architects, which features an undulating white aluminum facade that blends with the snowy landscape, and the Naman Retreat Resort by Vo Trong Nghia Architects, whose hotel building is clad in a concrete and greenery facade designed to reduce sunlight and induce wind flow. The article examines how technologies like double glazing, photovoltaics, terracotta, zinc and weathering steel are being used innovatively in
The document provides an overview of Bartoli Design, an Italian design studio founded in 1960 by Carlo Bartoli. It summarizes Bartoli Design's extensive work experimenting with new materials and technologies in furniture design. Some of their award-winning and iconic designs are mentioned, including the Gaia armchair which is in the permanent collection of MoMA. The studio continues to be led by Carlo Bartoli and his family, focusing on elegant, simple designs made with authentic materials. They explore a wide range of design applications beyond furniture as well.
This document is a resume for Albert Abrahamsson that outlines his education, work experience, software skills, languages, and an exhibition. It lists his bachelor's degree in industrial design from Lund University in Sweden and work as a junior designer and in sales. Software skills include Adobe and Autodesk programs. Languages include Swedish, English, Danish and German. It also lists an exhibition of his "Stolen Cyclo" chair in Stockholm.
Barber Osgerby Project Stories for the Design Museum DesignMuseum1
Edward Barber and Jay Osgerby established BarberOsgerby in 1996 after studying architecture together. Since then, they have designed furniture, lighting, and other products for many international companies. They are known for their innovative and award-winning designs. Some of their most notable projects include designing tables with colorful segmented aluminum tops for Established & Sons gallery and architectural designs for several H&M stores around the world.
Jacobo Munoz designs objects with attention to beauty, functionality, and the experiences and memories they evoke. He sees himself as a director ensuring every detail is perfect. His designs consider aspects like satisfaction, simplicity, and humor. Now, good design requires understanding manufacturing, lifestyles, and brand expectations. Munoz wants to create beautiful, functional objects that express his feelings and dreams, not just economic benefits. He designs for himself and others to acquire.
This document is the portfolio of Francesco De Nunzio, an Italian product designer and artist. It includes sections on his background and skills, examples of his furniture design, product design and artwork. Some of his past projects include designing coffee mugs for a bar in Rome and porcelain services for the airline Alitalia. His artwork covers subjects such as portraits, abstract concepts and pin-ups.
This document provides a summary of Jacobo Munoz's background and experience in product design. It outlines his education in industrial design, including a bachelor's degree from Ecole cantonale d'art de Lausanne in Switzerland. It then lists his professional experience directing design departments and founding companies. The document highlights some of his exhibition and lecture experiences internationally. It concludes by listing the languages he speaks and design software skills.
Similar to DY Works at London Design Festival (20)
Brand Flash :Parachute Advansed Tender Coconut Hair OilDY Works
DY Works works with Parachute to launch a brand in the light hair oil segment, leveraging the equity built by Parachute Advansed over the years yet without the baggage of being an old fashioned, thick & sticky oil.
DY Works Approach to Internet Retail BrandingDY Works
This document discusses why branding online is important and how different business types have different branding needs. It focuses on how brands can leverage communication and physical evidence across the consumer's online journey. The DY Works 6 Box Model is presented as a framework for understanding how to meet branding needs through differentiation, tangibility, and experience.
DY Works branding has over the last two years worked with Air India (across disciplines and departments) to arrive at a multi- disciplinary branding and design solutions for it's rejuvenation.
A glimpse into how DY Works evolved a brand strategy for 'Bingo' , manifested through design, creating mouth watering concepts to bring the innovative flavors alive - from identity creation, pack graphics and visual architecture
A glimpse into how DY Works helped Kurkure refresh & redefine its brand identity and establish a strong visual architecture strategy to straddle different extensions.
Container branding, also known as capsule branding, involves incorporating a company's logo into genre-based content. This technique was first used by a Belgian supermarket in the 1960s and became famous through MTV's work with ad legend George Lois. Many agencies and brands have since used this concept, applying it to projects for Waterstone's, Eurostar, and the San Francisco Asian Art Museum. While clients appreciate its flexibility, the author argues it has become an overused and easy approach.
Mathematics and statistics are increasingly being used to analyze and make sense of large amounts of data. However, there are also risks to over relying on numbers and quantitative analysis without also considering qualitative factors. Overall quantitative analysis should be used as a tool to help inform decisions, but not replace human judgment, common sense, ethics and other important qualitative considerations.
Various food and beverage brands such as Amul butter, Maggi, Horlicks, Real Juice, and Bournvita placed promotional materials at the Army Museum in Leh, Ladakh to increase their brand presence in the region. The brands impressively copied their logos and messages to fit with the context of an army museum.
This document discusses 5 potential packaging designs for a chocolate drink created by DMA Branding in 2005. Route 1 focuses on making the drink look more appealing. Route 2 explores how combining two opposing properties can create something unique. Route 3 aims to give the drink attitude from the packaging to entice young drinkers. Route 4 is inspired by Harry Potter and aims to set a new standard. Route 5 promotes a positive attitude and attempts to create a future-ready brand vocabulary.
Myths and Reality at the Bottom of the PyramidDY Works
5-6 years since the late CK Prahlad sexed up this demographic, Bottom of the Pyramid has been hotly discussed and grossly misrepresented. Here is DMA Yellow Works' view on the subject.
This document provides information on 11 logo designs created by various designers for different clients. It lists the logos for Canadian National Railway designed by Allan Fleming in 1960, Frost & Reed designed by Atelier Works in 2006, the National Theatre designed by Studio Hyde in 1974, Newspaper Marketing Agency designed by SomeOne in 2000, University College for the Creative Arts designed by Blast in 2005, the London Symphony Orchestra designed by The Partners in 2001, Rabih Hage designed by Hat-Trick in 2002, the Victoria & Albert Museum designed by Alan Fletcher in 1989, conEdison designed by Arnell Group in 2000, and the F1 logo designed by Carter Wong Tomlinson.
PDF SubmissionDigital Marketing Institute in NoidaPoojaSaini954651
https://www.safalta.com/online-digital-marketing/advance-digital-marketing-training-in-noidaTop Digital Marketing Institute in Noida: Boost Your Career Fast
[3:29 am, 30/05/2024] +91 83818 43552: Safalta Digital Marketing Institute in Noida also provides advanced classes for individuals seeking to develop their expertise and skills in this field. These classes, led by industry experts with vast experience, focus on specific aspects of digital marketing such as advanced SEO strategies, sophisticated content creation techniques, and data-driven analytics.
Fonts play a crucial role in both User Interface (UI) and User Experience (UX) design. They affect readability, accessibility, aesthetics, and overall user perception.
Revolutionizing the Digital Landscape: Web Development Companies in Indiaamrsoftec1
Discover unparalleled creativity and technical prowess with India's leading web development companies. From custom solutions to e-commerce platforms, harness the expertise of skilled developers at competitive prices. Transform your digital presence, enhance the user experience, and propel your business to new heights with innovative solutions tailored to your needs, all from the heart of India's tech industry.
Storytelling For The Web: Integrate Storytelling in your Design ProcessChiara Aliotta
In this slides I explain how I have used storytelling techniques to elevate websites and brands and create memorable user experiences. You can discover practical tips as I showcase the elements of good storytelling and its applied to some examples of diverse brands/projects..
ARENA - Young adults in the workplace (Knight Moves).pdfKnight Moves
Presentations of Bavo Raeymaekers (Project lead youth unemployment at the City of Antwerp), Suzan Martens (Service designer at Knight Moves) and Adriaan De Keersmaeker (Community manager at Talk to C)
during the 'Arena • Young adults in the workplace' conference hosted by Knight Moves.
Visual Style and Aesthetics: Basics of Visual Design
Visual Design for Enterprise Applications
Range of Visual Styles.
Mobile Interfaces:
Challenges and Opportunities of Mobile Design
Approach to Mobile Design
Patterns
Maximize Your Content with Beautiful Assets : Content & Asset for Landing Page pmgdscunsri
Figma is a cloud-based design tool widely used by designers for prototyping, UI/UX design, and real-time collaboration. With features such as precision pen tools, grid system, and reusable components, Figma makes it easy for teams to work together on design projects. Its flexibility and accessibility make Figma a top choice in the digital age.
1. L D F 17—25 September 2011 Visit dates 22 – 26 Sept 2011 LONDON DESIGN FESTIVAL
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19. L200xP36xH44 cm 4.300 € = 2,97,401.22 INR L15xP6xH110 cm 730 € = 50,475.48 INR ^ L400xP51xH85 cm 7.300 € = 5,04,884.61 INR
20.
21.
22. Bare is focused on the development of a range of nontoxic, electrically conductive materials . In the fall of 2011, Bare will launch its first two products, Bare Skin and Bare Paint . Both products act as a conduit for electrical signals to run across a variety of surfaces. Bare Skin is the only electrically conductive ink safe for use on the skin and is certified as a cosmetic in the EU. Bare Paint is a nontoxic, multipurpose material with a wide range of applications. Bare's products provide users with an exciting new platform perfect for prototyping, experimenting, and learning about electronics.
33. The rag and bone man is the maker and purveyor of bespoke unconventional metal furnishings . Transforming junk collected around the East End of London on a vintage trade bike and recycling it into new and industrial lighting designs. His work is inspired largely by Art deco and the machine age . Each light is unique, fabricated using a wide variety of skills including welding, brazing, polishing, lacquering and various patinas. His philosophy is to keep working with the parts he has or source what is needed allowing the materials to dictate the development of new assemblages .
34.
35.
36.
37.
38.
39. ‘ A shadow also plays an important part in lighting’ Therefore this pattern of ‘O’ has been chosen Hand made ceramic shade