Friday, December 17, 2010

Final Project - Grandparent's Residence




This is probably the one project that I really feel proud of. Reading over the notes from my past projects, I learned to correct my mistakes and go forward. I also learned that a little extra work goes a long way. When I had started the project, I began with the bedroom and tried to visualize it first; but it was not necessary in the end product. To give a better sense of the space, I included all the rooms, albeit the dining room which is in the kitchen. I had tried to stay within the concept which was inspired by John Denver's "Country Roads" song. It was a challenge that I found to be easier accomplished than I thought. When I had finished giving my third presentation of this project, the reviewers reviewing me told me that my project had a semi-contemporary outlook to it; when others had picked olive green (it matched the Palouse palette much better), I had gone for a bright and lively apple martini green (counter tops). I had not noticed this and had always seen myself as more of a traditional designer with wood paneled doors instead of a steel or walnut wood door embedded with aluminum. I did like the verdict, however, and found myself fond of warm, dark, and lively colors. If I could change it, though, I would add more perspectives in the kitchen, showing the layout of the main counter tops area, and have two perspectives for every room. All sides of the rooms had important elements going back to my concept. I had visualized this in my floor plan and when designing the layout, everything had to have meaning, whether functional, psychological, or relating back to my concept. There were a few mistakes made such as the dishwasher and dryer stack being out of ADA compliance but I am sure that with all the technology and appliances out there, there should be one that could be useful to a person in a wheelchair. I did have trouble with the doors and trying to see how many different doors there were and which ones gave which kind of feeling so I stuck mainly to wood paneled doors, giving a sense of warmness and homeliness to the place. I also have trouble finding accessories to decorate the space so it seems like someone is living there and the space does not seem abandoned. I did learn that when working with a space that it is better to stick with one or two species of wood but after that it breaks up the flow; I used bamboo and oak to link the spaces together. I am really excited about the progress I have made and hope to learn and be able to design some more amazing spaces in the future! Although I spent around 7-11 hours for six to seven days working on this project, it really was worth it. I can honestly say that this is the project I am most proud on.

Friday, November 5, 2010

Bathroom Design




This project marks the point where I have fallen in love with my major! I had so much fun designing this bathroom! This is my grandparent's bathroom and I had to make it accessible to wheelchairs. The first thing I decided to do was separate the toilet from the shower. Two years ago, I visited my grandmother in France and my mom and I stayed at her apartment. In it the toilet and shower were separate, with a room for the shower and a sink and the toilet by itself in a small room. I found myself staring at the toilet and wondered how I would wash my hands; thus, I added a sink in the room with the toilet. Initially my inspiration came from European bathrooms and how warm and comfortable they can appear while being clean and from that I pulled out a neutral-brown palette; but it seemed too boring so I added a blue green (glass tiles for storage shelves). I had decided to bump in two of my walls to make the storage shelves because of safety concerns; when shelves stick straight out, they usually end up injuring the person in the room being they usually bump into them, so I decided to cut out a space for the shelves. They would be covered in blue-green glass tiles and have glass shelves, but there would be 24 inches of clear space underneath the last shelf to avoid injury. The shelves would only be 6 inches deep. Next I wanted a curved wall in the bathroom, this was so that it would aid the 5 foot wide turning circle for a wheelchair as well as add to the clear space in front of the toilet on the other side of the wall. I added grab bars around the toilet and in the shower for safety reasons. The shower would have a beige opaque glass door for added privacy and a soffit built to lower the ceiling for a more sheltered feeling yet there would be room between the soffit and glass door for ventilation. The fixtures in the bathroom would all be a traditional white ceramic and the toilet would be commercial with only the bowl sticking out of the wall for easier access for people in wheelchairs. I absolutely loved synthesizing accessibility/functionality with aesthetics. It really is rewarding after you finish your design and think that anyone could live there. This particular floor plan is my favorite I've designed and I really think I could build it! It's just so efficient. The one thing I'm not sure about is the area where the doors open; both of the doors open into the living room and the bedroom is right next to the room with the toilet, with no door opening into it. However, overall, I am satisfied with the design and hope that I can advance my designs in my final project!

Wheelchair Assessment





For an assignment in my class, my partner and I would travel around a part of the campus in a wheelchair and experience what it was like for people in wheelchairs. First of all I would like to say that while this assignment was a good experience and really allowed me to view the world from a paraplegic point of view, I feel bad for making people think I was really in a wheelchair. Everyone was so nice to me and I felt like I was lying. I did have fun though using my arms to wander around, especially in the library; I felt like a kid again. Secondly, it is so hard to roll around campus; there are many stairs and hills that a person in a wheelchair would have too much of a burden trying to get up a hill. A lot of people I see though that are in wheelchairs on campus have an electric wheelchair, which is better but scary to maneuver around the hills. It is difficult also to roll on carpet, there is a lot of friction. Bathrooms were also difficult to get into because of how heavy the doors were and also how little space I could maneuver in. When I did get to a spot where I could park my chair onto the side of the toilet, Ariel told me to get on the seat of the toilet but it seemed impossible! You really have to have strong arms to pull yourself around! Washington State University is not meant for people with physical limitations, it is more of an endurance exercise to get to class! I feel like I learned a lot on this assignment and I also strive to make places more accessible. My grandfather was in a wheelchair at one point and I never understood how demanding it is. I really hope to make people’s lives better and hope that I can weave this universal design and accessibility factor within all the designs I will be working on. I really understand now how important that is and how much easier it will make everyone’s lives.

Friday, October 22, 2010

Kitchen Process to Final



When told I was going to be designing a kitchen, I was completely lost. When picturing my future career in interior design, I somehow glossed over the fact that I would be designing kitchens. This was probably the most challenging project I ever had to do. My own kitchen, back home, is small and compact and sort of crammed with many cookbooks, random stuff, and there's dirt in cracks and mouse traps by the fridge. It is nothing at all glamorous but because it is my home, I love it so much. But thinking about a new kitchen with materials of my choice, I got excited. I immediately chose an apple green quartz counter top and ordered the sample online. I fell in love with the warm fresh green and went on to the rest of the design. At first I focused on functionality and accessibility within the 18x16 foot kitchen. I was designing for a woman in a wheelchair and I had to make sure she would not have trouble moving around; thus the majority of my project was dedicated to figuring out how the kitchen would be laid out. This caused me to forget my concept and only bring it in later on when I would come to the project's close. The most difficult part of this project was figuring out how the kitchen would work together. I had picked the green countertops, a beautiful material, but there was also a big brick wall that would dominate the room. Red and green made no sense to me and seemed almost impossible to put together. I added a yellow to the countertops as bamboo but again it was just so difficult. As you can see from the thumbnails above, I tried to experiment with color to try to figure out a solution to my problem. I ended up with something remotely decent but I still feel dissatisfied with the project's outcome. The one thing I do like though is the layout I had created. But I still feel like I need a lot of practice when it comes to kitchens; they are so difficult to lay out.
Overall I like the shapes and layout of the furniture but I am still troubled by color. These sketches were supposed to be rendered but I simply could not bring myself to do it. I feel like I should have been given more time for this project, being so new to kitchen design, I had never even thought about it. I have issues thinking "outside the box" creatively and it is a struggle I fight to overcome. I see magnificent kitchens and spaces by other interior designers and my classmates and I admire their imagination and ability to create something I would have never even thought possible. I want to be that good, I want to be able to catch someone's breath as they look at their new home and savor the moment knowing that I created it. I know it will take time but I am ready to take on the challenge.


Kid's bedroom Process Work to Final

This is one of the trace process sheets that I created for the Kid's Bedroom. First, I began brainstorming the needs the children would have in the space and began exploring different layouts for it. I was designing for two 6 year old twin girls and had to find a balance between public and privacy. Being sisters living in the same room for most of their life would be difficult if they cannot get away from each other. I knew siblings that shared the same room and it can get scary. Unfortunately, the layout I chose in the final is not on this sheet. I had decided to put a bunk bed against the back wall in the center of the room and one desk and dresser on each side, sort of a symmetrical layout. Again, brainstorming helps me come up with ideas I never knew I had! It's really liberating.

This concept model was created from one of many partis going back to a children's book called "Welcome to the Greenhouse;" I picked it for its wonderfully colored pages of the jungle and animals within the jungle. I used to love dinosaurs and rain forests when I was little because it was something I had never seen before and it was quite the stretch of imagination. So I used the quote written on the photo above as my inspiration and took three words from it: transformation, layers, and freedom. The layers I got from the layers of foliage. Freedom I got from the feeling you would get in the outdoors where there are no walls. And transformation I got from a page in the book featuring butterflies and I associated the caterpillar and pupa with it; also because these twin girls will live in this room presumably for a while, they will get to learn a little about growth and development from when small to out in college and even into the working world. As the photo shows, I wanted to symbolize freedom and transformation through the green strips of paper flowing out farther than the opening. The blue origami star in the inside represents the feeling of safety, innocence, the core of imagination. I'm very happy with this concept model. I probably would not change anything about this model because I really consider it successful.This bedroom way the model of the final layout of the bedroom. Constructing it in 3D really helps me process the information of what I'm doing and what it will look like and I use it many times for my perspective drawings. I originally had two doors on the far left wall of the bedroom leading to a closet and bathroom but decided to take out the closet at the last moment because they just was not enough room to make a comfortable bathroom for two girls. They would each have a dresser and a desk for their homework and clothes and a chest on the right wall. Thus they each have their own space on either side of the bunk bed and share a common space around the bottom of the bunk beds; this concept of separate but together was very important. Next the ceiling: the skylight is a direct abstraction of the narrow slots of light on the jungle rooftop and the propped down soffits represent the layers of leaves and foliage. Overall the limited space in which to design the bedroom was a bit disappointing. And I do wish I had put more storage space in the room but I did adore the design of the ceiling.
This is the final presentation of the Kid's Bedroom. I took a picture from the book portraying frogs and redrew them here, changing the composition as I wanted. My main colors in this are brown, bright orange, green,and white. I really liked how it came together although the transition from the parti and bedroom got a bit lost as I struggled in coming up with a functional room. I tend to put function before design whenever I design. Since I did not want to overpower the room in the rain forest theme and leaves, I left it as pieces they could easily be taken down once they moved in. Many of the pieces of furniture and the bed coverings with the paper lanterns are custom made. I struggled also with designing for teenagers and kids because of how trends change and how the two age groups differ from each other. It was a struggle that I had to push through though. I am satisfied with the results although there are so many things I would change if I did it again.

Concept Model Process Sheet

This is one of the trace process sheets that I created when trying to find a decent parti to go along with my concept of "home." I took the lyrics from John Denver's "Country Roads" and took from it the key words: memories, crossroads, layers, and anxiety. You will be able to see in the drawing what looks like a mountain, red zigzag lines to represent anxiety, and organic shapes that represent the country. I got stuck a couple of times but pushed on, in hopes of coming up with something better. I finished with 40 squares of ideas and chose one from it. It is not shown on this sheet but it incorporated ideas from this. I am very proud of my finished concept. Brainstorming is a great way to get ideas down and now I utilize this effect when starting anything. I feel more focused and on track this way.
This concept model was created from a parti taken from John Denver's "Country Roads." It was supposed to utilize the key words: layers, motion, and zigzag. The layers come from the memories within the song and how they appear in layers and not uniform. The motion comes from the road and how the author is in his car the entire way through the song. The zigzag represents the anxiety the author feels when in his car when he needs to make decisions and is far from home, making everything that much harder. The way I constructed this concept model was to have organic shapes, symbolizing the country, hung side by side onto a stick with zigzags on it. The shapes are colored red on the edges to represent pain in the memory but blue on the insides where the good feelings reside. When in your hands, you can twirl the shapes around the sticks; the oblong structure makes the motion appear more varied and inconsistent, like life. This was a wonderful way to get my concept off paper and aided in my design of the kitchen I next turned to. If I were to do it again though, I would put more time in the materials and make the stick out of wood. Funny thing too, when I was setting the model down, to keep it from falling to one side, I opened it up like the photo above and it looks like a human heart a little!

Friday, April 30, 2010

Coco Chanel Poster


For this project, I chose an old single cut onyx as my object that represents Coco Chanel and her work, then I conjured up a 2D model which I then used to design the 3D model with. My concept statement describes exactly what the concept was for it. It was a fun project which was so much fun putting together but the concept of the 3D model becoming a room was confusing and turned out to be just another concept model than a room. However, when I look at the work put into the model, I could see it as a monument, sheltering people from the rain as they draw or listen to music, and they can look up at the sky and see the rain collect. The tilted motion of the cover would also help the rain run off and not collect and cause tension. This is a possible design for my future career and I take pride in knowing that I designed it.

Friday, April 16, 2010


This is my resume, done in Adobe Indesign. I had fun with this, finding a picture of flowers and making them two colors on Adobe Illustrator and using that as my basis. I pulled the colors out of the print and even gradated the image to soften it up and draw more attention to the words of the resume. I am very happy on how it came out. I did not want too much pink to distract and irritate the eye so I made the colors darker. If I were to do another resume, I would want to try different themes. I enjoy how easy InDesign makes it and I would want to try out different formats for my resume.

Monday, April 12, 2010

Logo


This logo was inspired by my love for rabbits. I chose blue and white as my primary colors because of my love for them. My favorite color is white but it is hard to have a white logo with no other colors. I chose Tataouin Studios as the name because of my Deviantart website where I am most known for and if i was ever to make a company, it would have to be called Tataouin. The clock was added in as a reminder to not let time hold me back. It could also hint to the White Rabbit off of Alice in Wonderland which I have loved ever since i was a little girl. I am quite proud of this, being my first time using illustrator. If I were ever to change it, I would try to make the rabbit's edges rounder. I look forward to working with Adobe Illustrator more!

Monday, March 29, 2010

Negative Outlook


For this piece, I took a picture of a plant and shaded in all of the negative space. It was fun, easy, and I found the final product to look pretty cool! I would love to do something like this in the future.

Keys


For this sketch, I used a thin black felt tip to create it. I used cross-hatching and created a clear contrast from where the shadows differentiated from the light. It was easy and took little time.

Fruit at its Core


I've always loved apples. They are the essence of life and being. The forbidden fruit. I love working with graphite. It is easy to use as well as it can become something quite beautiful. I really liked the way the texture was captured. All in all, I quite enjoyed this sketch.

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Textile Pattern

I am French. This pattern was actually much harder than I thought it would be. I added in Edith Piaf because I love her music; she had the most incredible voice. I tried to add in generic French icons as well as postage stamps because my grandfather was a stamp collector and he was really close to me. I placed the items so randomly because it would repeat on a larger canvas and I wanted the items to flow freely rather than in a line. However, the overall look to me is ugly, boring, and not interesting. If I had a choice to redo it, I would.

Quilt Pattern

The initial pictures I picked had amazing textures and a lovely feel to them. However, when I was forced to change them, I felt everything get messy and now it is a melting pot of disaster. The colors do harmonize a little yet the red is too out of place. If I had a choice to redo it, I would definitely do it.

Monday, March 22, 2010

Introduction

My name is Aurelie Staker. I am currently pursuing a BA in Interior Design. I am a Freshman in my second semester in the program and although it is very time consuming and hard work, it has taught me many things and shown me that I have the ability to do anything if I really set my mind to it. I once heard someone say that what makes an artist is not the advancement of the tools they use but the ability to take something meager and create something marvelous. Although one has Prismacolor pencils does not make that person an artist. They could probably use them the same if not worse than regular 24 Crayola pencils. With all the expensive tools I was forced to buy, I believe I could of done a better job using less expensive tools. Beginners should start with something small and gradually grow. All those expensive Guache paints, the Prismacolor markers and pencils have been wasted on a beginner.
That said, I am enjoying my time at WSU and plan to continue through the program. :)