The design process applied to office sanctioned crafting

design processCreative problem solving isn’t about sitting by yourself in a little corner hashing out some rigid step by step plan of action. It’s about responding to your materials, interacting with your environment, and fearlessly risking your time and ego by challenging your ideation at every step of the process.

When my boss asked me to design paper gauges for our two giant printers, I was thrilled; especially considering that despite my background, I’ve deliberately chosen a job that strictly confines me to rolling said paper when it comes out the other side of said behemoth printers (but that’s another story).

“Ooooo yes please!” I said, always eager to engage in any office sanctioned crafting. And really, is there any better kind?

I quizzed him on the design criteria: show amount of available paper (two sizes) without having to open the machines. And set to work, scouring our office for any potentially useful materials. A key exercise in creativity – feel free to try this at home – is to look at objects in terms of their inherent physical properties, not just by their associations (click here for classic candle/box experiment). For example, an elastic’s basic properties can allow it to become be a shock absorber, a vice, a sound generator, a friction enhancer, a weapon, a hinge, a sex toy… etc.

First attempt: I cut out the center of two paper plates (using small ceramic plate template), used Sharpie coloured wood coffee stirrers as indicators around a central pivot made of a paper clip (by first creating holes with thumbtacks and securing potential wood splitting with packing tape), then partook in label making to obscene excess. Brilliant!!

Except… for the fact that the resulting gauge looked exactly like two paper plates with coffee stirrers sandwiched in between, and carried the ugly evidence of someone with an obsessive fetish for label makers. And then there was the embarrassing discovery that moving one indicator influenced the rotation of the other. Sigh… not so brilliant after all.

Solution: Back to the drawing board. Always a sharp physical pain, but part of the creative process that must never smell your fear. There can be no mourning period. Huzza! Onwards and Upwards! I extended my foraging area to include resources available within walking distance on my lunchbreak.gauge design Brass spread-leg fasteners obtained! Cardstock… cardstock? After waiting for an eternity at the counter of a print shop, I’d almost given up hope. Then low and behold, a miracle! A dashing, ever so gallant, white knight of customer service came to my rescue with a stack of backroom off-of-stock-list sheets of two different weights. Huzza!

Sometimes, when you go out into the world with excitement, openness, and a clear mission, that world gets excited along with you and gives you what you so desperately need without asking anything in return. The gift of those few sheets were more than enough motivation to re-energize my demand for perfection from this project. No more compromises! This gauge was going to be perfect down to the mm… who are we kidding… the 1/2 mm!

Final design: So what if the heavier cardstock jammed the printer. I simply laminated the lighter version with packing tape and got on with X-acto-ing and blending my pencil crayons to a professional blur with strips of Kleenex. Brilliant! Perfection achieved! Perfectly proportioned, eminently easy to read, two super pro looking paper gauges = Mission accomplished?

“What do you think?” I asked my boss, proudly showing off my brand new twins.

“Hmmm,” he said, “I was thinking of something maybe a bit smaller.”

…oh for the lova’ pete.

7 thoughts on “The design process applied to office sanctioned crafting

    • It always surprises me when such a simple sounding technical problem can lead to such a complicated emotional rollercoaster. I must be a human or something~wink. That fellow in the print shop was such a hero! It’s amazing how a positive human interaction can change the course of an entire day, let alone design project. That’s why I always love your comments, Lynn. They make me feel like I could take on the world… on paper gauge at a time lol 🙂

  1. Dear Cymbria,

    Love the gauges.. so easy to read with large type and format….who knew they would be too easy to read, lost was the bending down to discover the amount of paper left. No, from home you can, at a glance, without imagination, know all you need to know about the extent of your paper inventory. Too big, whats wrong? small minded maybe?

    Here I unwittingly have started participating in a blog.

    Dave being Dave and no I did not fall on my back.

    http://blogs.ottawacitizen.com/2013/06/27/second-massive-artwork-being-made-of-beloved-300-year-old-ottawa-tree/?postpost=v2#content

    • Love your comment!! So true. Thanks Dave!

      Ok, so anyone reading this absolutely has to click on that link (and scroll down) to see what is, quite simply, the very best man-with-axe photo of…all…time.

    • Hi Katherine,Thanks so much for taking the time to look at my work and coinmetmng. Many people do see bones as a symbol of death. I look at them as a part of the cycle of life. They are the skeleton on which our bodies are built. I often look at the structural parts of things, the roots of trees, the bones of the body. These parts bear the birth of what is built around them. So why many see death I see life!

  2. It was tons of fun to work with Mission Local on this. We are asking all hyplerocal journalists about their perspective on the basic building blocks of hyplerocal journalism and using the canvas as a tool for discussing and collaborating on the business of hyplerocal publishing. We are also building an info-graphic that will be a roll up of all the data we collect and sharing it with the community.Its east to participate at: Hoping to get to to work with this awesome group of Journalists a bunch more! Clay

    • Hi Pera, not sure how this comment applies to this post, unless “Mission Local” was somehow designing this independent craft project telepathically lolz. But, as the author of Blank Canvas Living, I’m always in support of “using the canvas as a tool for discussing and collaborating.” Best of luck with all you journalistic endeavors 🙂

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