Showing posts with label understanding. Show all posts
Showing posts with label understanding. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 2, 2008

I feel like calligraphy

I feel like calligraphy.
I'm misunderstood by many people. People understand only parts of me, I'm not able to say everything I wanted to say at once.
I'm speaking in another language because the language I would like to speak in, is a language which isn't allowed. I can't express my true feelings to everyone.

On the bright side of life, people who know me more think I can be beautiful. I can be art.
If I only would know how these other people were looking at me ..

More and more questions arise. If only a few would get answered. Start prototyping is the answer?

Monday, June 30, 2008

Calligraphy is like logos

In the questions after the first lecture today (as an introduction into calligraphy) I discovered that different calligraphy is not like different fonts in our culture and even not comparable to different handwritings. A more accurate comparison came from a Turkish student which gave the example of the IBM logo. In the (IBM) logo the typeface is set, but doesn't really represent the meaning. What really gives meaning and recognition is the way the letters are placed, how letters connect to each other as the lecturer -Çetin Sarıkartal- said.

Something with an even more open ending was the 'clash' of calligraphy and interaction design. Calligraphy is understood -even now- by a limited amount of people, not even all writer understand it. And it was kind of meant that way. It is not made with the idea to be easily understandable, unlike interaction design were you help the user to understand where she is working with. The idea behind it is that it is more pleasing to understand it after the considerably amount of work you spend on it and also the status you receive when reaching that point. Well, if I got this right. :)

It will be interesting to work out that difference between interaction design and calligraphy in the coming weeks. On the other hand, today I learned to not look at the concepts/ideas behind something but rather on the experience it gives you. With that in mind calligraphy and interaction design aren't each others counterparts anymore, both are about the interaction between the environment (the text) is in and the user on the other hand.