Tuesday, 21 December 2010

The moral in never trying...

Today I proved my theory on why happy-go-lucky or instinctive working is the best way forward and that trying only leads to failure. This is not a negative theory, it is in fact a learning curve which in future will save time and energy. The lesson was learned from the following cake baking:

Cake One: A Banana and Lime Cake. This was initially going to be for the Mitchell family. Great time, care and attention was paid to the ingredients, the baking time, and the icing.

Cake Two: Also a Banana and Lime Cake. While 'cake one' was baking, I thought I would whip up some ingredients for the same cake, but this one was intended for my dad and myself. As this was the intended destination for the cake, the ingredients were just estimated, thrown together, baked then iced in quite a slap dash manor with little regard to the overall appearance etc etc. 

The results were quite alarming; in taking extreme care and attention the whole thing went wrong with cake one. The sponge was rock hard, slightly burnt and flat. The icing was too runny and didn't sit on the cake properly.
With cake two though... well, it couldn't have gone better. As a result, cake one is now for my dad and myself, while cake two is on it's way to the Mitchell family to enjoy. I took the liberty to photograph them as words can't really describe how badly care and attention ruined the cake. From now on, instinct is the way forward because the more you think and try at something, the more it fails.

Cake One:




















Cake Two:


Thursday, 16 December 2010

If I Knew Then What I Know Now...

As part of the critical studies module, an assignment was set to design three A2 posters for the first year design students detailing advice which we feel would have been helpful for us when starting the course.





"Three Little Words"

These cards are from an assignment whereby three words were chosen, their meaning deeply analyzed, then graphically shown on small cards.

One word was chosen for historical meaning, Schizophrenia, one for visual meaning, Communication, and the final one for an audio meaning, Gluttony.