Sunday, November 7, 2010

Obregon's Presentation was Delicious!

On Thursday, November 4, I attended a presentation by Ismael Obregon in the music hall at CSULA organized by Gauge. He is the founder and creative director of Oishii Creative. The name of his company is in Japanese it means delicious and his logo is a piece of sushi which is his favorite food. He advised the students to come up with a unique name for their new business as a first step. His company name is pretty unique.

His career path is impressive. Started at an early age and has successfully worked with famous names, like NFL, Disney, HBO and more. He showcased slides of his work which was invigorating. His confidence and passion for what he does was infectious. According to Obregon I speak four languages; English, Armenian, Arabic and Visual. The visual language unites all languages together.

Couple of his comments that stuck with me were, "Always work with someone who's smarter than you." So true. Also, I appreciated the way he encouraged and supported the students to apply for a job confidently. He also talked about motion graphics and how sexy it is. He touched upon the importance of networking, but in reality not everybody has that charisma, courage or confidence to be social.

Similar to what Ismael was saying about how foreign countries want to work with Americans, I don't understand why Al Jazeera was seeking American Designers for their needs when they have excellent designers in the MEA.

In conclusion, although it was late in the evening and I was exhausted Ismael's presentation was delightful.

Thursday, November 4, 2010

Narratives of Space and Time

In the last chapter of his book, Tufte talks about narratives of space and time. I still find his book hard to read, but the images that he picks makes it easier to understand, like his redesign example of the New Haven Timetable. By showing a few design adjustments; getting rid of chart junk, good spacing and no serpentined data, the form reads and looks much better.

What is clear also, is what he has been preaching all throughout his book. The info of the timetable created should be direct and clear. Understood by any viewer. He simplifies the technique of how to tell a story of position and chronology through visual elements. Also known as representing spatial data.

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Monday, November 1, 2010