The video clip we watched about the IDEO company really emphasized the value of a relaxed, inclusive working atmosphere. There was no office hierarchy, and that balance truly impacted the outcome of their projects: no one felt like he or she was "lower" than someone else, and there was no pressure to be "the best." They all just worked together to come up with as many ideas as they could, and decided as a group what the final project should be. Even the head of the company stressed that he did not tell anyone what to do creatively; he realized that not everyone's ideas would match up with his, but that they may end up being the most innovative in the end. In the video, the team worked to create a new shopping cart design in one week, and although it seemed like an almost impossible task, they were able to do it because of the creative, equality-based atmosphere the company created.
Thursday, October 6, 2011
interviews--final prototype
Prototype Interviews
Questions
• Would you find this prototype more useful than the hangers you use now?
• What problems does this prototype have?
• Would you buy this hanger over other hangers?
• Are you interested in the eco-friendly material used in this hanger?
• Would a solid middle be more durable or do you like the hole in middle of the other types of hangers?
Male, 18
• Probably
• The clips don’t go all the way across so it’d be hard to hang clothes across.
• If it was cheaper.
• Yes; maybe recycled cardboard would be good
• Solid middle
Female, 20
• Yes
• The hooks and the maybe you could round the corners for sweaters
• If it was cheaper.
• Yes.
• It doesn’t matter.
Male, 19
• Yes
• The clips are a little small.
• Yeah, I guess.
• Yes, it’s good for the environment.
• I like the hole in other hangers.
Female, 18
• Probably the same.
• The fabric hook is hard to use.
• If it was cheap.
• Yes.
• I like the hole for pants.
Male, 17
• No
• Clips are too small to hold jeans, I think.
• I like the plastic ones
• As long as it’s not more expensive.
• Durable middle.
Female, 40
• Yes
• The clips can’t move all the way across.
• Yes
• Yes
• Durable middle; but the hole convenient too.
Male, 22
• Probably not.
• The strap, the clips, the solid middle.
• No
• Yeah
• I like the durable middle but the hole is useful too for pants and just throwing stuff around.
Male, 40
• Possibly, with bigger clips.
• The clips are small. But the strap is a good idea.
• Yeah, I guess.
• If it’s actually eco-friendly.
• Solid middle is sturdier.
Male, 30
• Yes
• The strap is too much for me.
• Hmm, probably not.
• Not really.
• I like the hole just to put stuff on it.
Male, 30
• Yeah, I like the indentions.
• There is no hole in the middle.
• I like the ones I have now.
• Yes.
• Like I said, I like the hole in the middle.
original interviews--hanger
Interviews- Original Object
Questions
How often do you use hangers?
What problems have you encountered while using them?
What types of clothes do you use them for most often?
What style of hangers do you use? Do you have different hangers for specific functions?
Do you have a preference of material for your hangers?
Are there any types of hangers you don’t like/don’t work?
Do you care about their appearance (color/shape/material)?
On average, how many hangers do you replace per year?
If so, why do you need to replace them?
Besides hanging up clothes, what else have you used hangers for?
26 year old female
Not often enough… Daily
They pinch the skirts and leave bumps in shoulders
Dresses, skirts, pants
What comes from the store/ with clothes and cheap plastic ones
Would prefer wood but can’t afford it
The kind that crimp the skirt’s material
No
Not many, get a few when buying clothes
I have stepped on them and they break…
Opening car doors, drying clothes
18 year old female
Every day, probably 3 to 4 times daily
Clothes—especially shirts and sweaters—ALWAYS fall off of them.
Shirts, dresses, some skirts
I have normal hangers for everything, but I have a scarf hanger and skirt hangers with clips on them
Colored plastic
I hate the clear plastic ones and especially the wire ones. They always get bent and are annoying. Plus they don’t ever have the little prong things, so clothes fall off more easily.
Yes, they have to have those prongs and also I have specific colors for different types of clothes
Probably 10-20 hangers per year, if not more.
They are broken or bent
Arts and crafts
18 year old male
Everyday
The metal ones bend very easily
T-shirts and dress shirts
The normal hangers, some of the ones made for dress pants
Plastic, wood
Wood hangers that don’t have a slick finish
Not really
Maybe 10
Plastic snaps easily
NA
18 year old male
Nearly everyday
Slippage of garments
Jackets and tank tops
I use plastic hangers with foam grips
Plastic
Yes! The wire-y metal ones, they don’t hold and they stretch clothing
Yes, the shape doesn’t matter, but I like colorful hangers for color-coding and just for fun!
10-15
Breaking, or not functioning well
Door hangers
15 year old female
Once a day
Clothes fall off; haven’t been big enough
T-shirts, jackets, dresses
Plastic, clippy ones
Plastic, as long as it’s wide
Wire—clothes didn’t stay on
Colors are nice, but I don’t care much
Never
Need more; new clothes
Stretch out wire to reach things
47 year old female
1-2 times a day
Wider necklines slide off; leaves crease in jeans; wire bends and doesn’t hold shape of clothes
Shirts, dresses, jeans, pants, coats, sweaters
Plastic, clippy, Huggables, padded
Fuzzy ones: they hold onto clothes and are thin
Wire: they bend too easily and don’t look nice and leave lines in clothes
Yes—would like them all to match
Every few years
Replace wire ones because I don’t like them; need more for more clothes
Untwist wire to clean drains…
47 year old male
Once a day
Pants don’t stay on well
Mostly shirts
Normal kind, and pants hangers (which leave creases on pants)
Plastic
Not really
No
Never
Sometimes I lose them
Unbend wire ones to roast marshmallows!
70 year old woman
Every day, 2-3 times daily
Straps slide off; wide necklines slide off; clips for skirts not far enough apart
Blouses, skirts, dresses, jackets, gowns, sweaters
Plastic, wire and paper, wooden (don’t like), wire, clips
Plastic—wire can rust and it gets on the clothes, they leave dents
Little plastic ones: too small for use for anything without straps
Yes—I have pink ones. Color matters. I get different colors for my husband.
Once a year, if that much
Bend out of shape, break, get lost, rust. Thick plastic ones are best.
Unlock car doors, transport linens
objectified reflection
- the best design is as little design as possible.
- everything, besides nature, has been designed at one point or another.
- design is about simplifying and rethinking ideas to make them easier to use.
- making it easier to reuse things/ want to keep them forever
- eco-friendly
- beauty
- sustainability
- the special, meaningful items in our lives
Thursday, September 8, 2011
Why is the bow hair clip good design?
I think that the bow hair clip is good design because it is simple yet effective and appealing. The folds in the fabric and the color give it a smooth, seamless look and make it visually appealing. It is sewn to a hidden metal clip, making it simple to use as opposed to having to pin the bow to the hair manually. It can be used to both hold hair in place and serve as a decoration because of its functionality. The metal clip itself is good design because it is easy to use and is concealed by the bow; it features a squeeze access instead of a more cumbersome or complicated variety.
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