Monday, 13 April 2020

Skillshare Classes to Engage Your Creativity through Watercolor Flora, Striking Posters, and Houseplant Care

Considering many of you found our previous Skillshare picks useful, we thought we’d share another selection of courses from the popular online platform that we’re loving here at Colossal. This next round encompasses art, design, and even the basics of home gardening in simple, multi-lesson units. If you need some completely offline entertainment, check out these modern puzzles and DIY kits, too.

Designed for novices, this watercolor course by illustrator Rosalie Haizlett teaches the basics of rendering natural features. She’ll walk through taking reference photos, sketching, layering paint, and adding texture to create vibrant mushrooms and ferns.

 

Based in East Sussex, artist Seb Lester (previously) guides students through essential calligraphy techniques in his 15-lesson course. You’ll learn to write your name with elegant flourishes and even get a printable workbook for an extra dose of instruction.

 

Designers Ellen Lupton and Jennifer Cole Phillips offer a basic graphic design course that explains the principles of scale, framing, grids, and hierarchy. Previous students have designed a variety of spreads like the one above, and the instructors say the main takeaway is this: “Graphic design is all about relationships — the relationships between one design element and another, that element and the page, and that element and yourself.”

 

Learn to adorn hand-drawn letters with beautiful florals in Gemma O’Brien’s 12 lessons. The Australian artist utilizes drawing techniques with digital collage, creating a dramatic combination of the two.

 

Based on his own poster-a-day project, digital artist and photographer Temi Coker is offering a course focused on merging type and images into striking posters. He leads students through capturing the right images and Photoshop basics and even provides a guide for sharing work on social media.

 

While this pick has a slightly different focus, it’ll still get your hands just as dirty as learning to use watercolor or hand-lettering with ink. Botanist Chris Satch from The Sill teaches potting techniques, basic care, troubleshooting, and ways to ensure that your houseplants thrive.

 

Alanna Cartier knows that capturing high-quality and effective photographs of artwork can be difficult. In her 11-lesson course for all skill levels, the Toronto-based artist and illustrator teaches how to take effective images for social media and online shops without spending an entire day.

 

Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member and support independent arts publishing. Join a community of like-minded readers who are passionate about contemporary art, apply for our annual grant, and get exclusive access to interviews, partner discounts, and event tickets.



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Pink holiday home by KC Design Studio features dedicated cat room

Cats' Pink House by KC Design Studio

Cats' Pink House is a holiday home in Taiwan that includes cat ladders, a rotating carousel-shaped climbing frame and a fluffy pink swing for the owner's feline companions.

KC Design Studio made everything pink, even the basketball hoop and court for the human occupants.

Cats' Pink House by KC Design Studio

The three-storey house by the sea is a place for the client to "relax and have fun with her three cats on holiday" said the studio.

A whole room on the second floor is dedicated to the cats, viewable from the master bedroom via a wide picture window.

Cats' Pink House by KC Design Studio

Pink cat ladders lead up to a writing desk and connect to ledges running around the room.

"The owner can do what she likes to do and play with the cats at the same time," said KC Design Studio. "She can also stay in the master bedroom to observe the cats' moves next door before going to sleep."

Cats' Pink House by KC Design Studio

Another vantage point for the cats is a large metal spiral staircase that hangs from the ceiling. This cat tree rotates like a carousel for extra feline enrichment.

Pink fuzzy cat beds litter the floor, and a swing with a seat covered in pink fluff hangs from the ceiling, for human or cat enjoyment.

Cats' Pink House by KC Design Studio

In the master bedroom, a walk-in wardrobe is divided by floor-to-ceiling pink glass. Across the landing the bathroom opens onto the cats' room.

White terrazzo with large flecks of pink and grey forms a plinth that serves as the bathroom floor and the half-wall separating the bathroom. Pink glass, which can be dimmed for privacy, tops this plinth.

Cats' Pink House by KC Design Studio

Small white tiles line the back wall, with a circular mirror and a hanging globe light over the sink. A pink kitty litter box is tucked under the floating bathroom counter.

Larger square pink tiles continue across the bathroom floor, under and around the stand-alone bath and rose-gold shower.

Cats' Pink House by KC Design Studio

KC Design Studio used mineral-based paint to achieve the desired pink hue for the walls of the holiday home.

Downstairs on the first floor, the owner's collection of figurines are displayed on rose-gold shelves in arched niches. Podiums dotted around the room display some of the larger art pieces.

Cats' Pink House by KC Design Studio

A kitchen with a breakfast bar is tucked under a built-in archway lined with curving panels of wood, with the ends painted to match the terrazzo used upstairs.

Pepto-bismol pink stools sit along the breakfast bar, which has a curve carved into the underside.

Cats' Pink House by KC Design Studio

Another kitchen island turns into an oblong dining table topped with white marble.

A long, low pink bench upholstered with pink velvet has matching rounded edges. Three pink velvet chairs with high rounded backs sit on the other side, under the arch niches.

Cats' Pink House by KC Design Studio

A seating area with an L-shaped sofa sits across from the dining area.

The guest bathroom is screened by a gauzy pink curtain and features a recessed sink that's been painted to look like stone.

Cats' Pink House by KC Design Studio

Outside, a triangular space surrounding the plot has been turned into a basketball practice area.

The hoop backboard is pink, and stylised markings have been painted onto the floor in candy-colours.

Cats' Pink House by KC Design Studio

On the roof, there's a room outfitted in more sombre tones, finished with dark wood floors and grey concrete surfaces.

Dark metal shelves line the walls and more figurines sit on matching metal podiums, their chrome surfaces reflected in a mirrored back wall.

This room opens completely to a decked rooftop terrace.

Cats' Pink House by KC Design Studio

KC Design Studio is based in Taiwan and recently completed a house with bespoke space-saving furniture.

Other residential projects for clients who want to include their pets include a house in Beijing designed around the needs of a dog with joint disease, and an apartment in Hong Kong that keeps their pet parrot and cat separate at all times.

Photography is by Hey! Cheese.


Project credits:

Client: Ms Yeh
Interior design: KC Design Studio
Lead designer: Kuan-huan Liu

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Microlibrary Warak Kayu features a hammock-style floor and a swing

Microlibrary Warak Kayu by Shau

Architecture firm Shau has built a library in Semarang, Indonesia, featuring a grand staircase, a net floor and a large communal swing.

Microlibrary Warak Kayu is a public reading room for the Central Java city, but also functions as a mini community centre.

Not only does it offer a variety of spaces for reading and study, it can also be used to host group events and workshops.

Microlibrary Warak Kayu by Shau wooden structure

It is the fifth "microlibrary" that Shau – a studio with offices in Rotterdam, Munich and Bandung – has built in Indonesia. Shau's aim is to improve access to learning for those living in the country's poorest communities.

The architecture studio deliberately added some playful details, so that the library would engage children and families. But most of its unusual features also serve some kind of function.

Microlibrary Warak Kayu by Shau first floor

For instance, the hammock-like net floor creates a comfortable setting for children to sit down and read a book, while parents can observes them from below. Similarly, the giant staircase creates an auditorium-style seating area for watching performances or movies.

"It is important to have this multi-programmatic approach to make the library a popular place, since reading alone is not yet considered a fun activity in the country," explained architects Florian Heinzelmann and Daliana Suryawinata.

Microlibrary Warak Kayu by Shau hammock-style net floor

The building is raised up from the ground on wooden columns, which creates a reading room on the first floor and a sheltered, open space at ground level. This layout is designed to make the building appear more welcoming to new visitors.

The entire structure is built from a variety of FSC-certified woods including bangkirai, a locally sourced tropical hardwood.

Microlibrary Warak Kayu by Shau swing seat

The architecture studio knew from the outset that all elements would be prefabricated by local timber manufacturer PT Kayu Lapis Indonesia. So the microlibrary was designed around the company's existing product line, reducing both waste and cost.

The Zollinger Bauweise construction system was used to create the diagonal-patterned brise soleil that naturally shade the bookshelves. The name, Microlibrary Warak Kayu, stems from this element.

Microlibrary Warak Kayu by Shau staircase auditorium

"It is a form of reciprocal system, resulting in a distinctive slightly shifted diamond pattern," said Heinzelmann and Suryawinata.

"This pattern happens to resemble a local mythical creature, Warak Ngendog, and its dragon-like skin, displayed during annual festivals in Semarang. Hence the name Warak Kayu in Indonesian, meaning 'wooden warak'."

Microlibrary Warak Kayu by Shau is located in Semarang, Indonesia

The structural system is highly decorative, even though it is largely made from offcuts. An overhanging roof, which offers passive shading, is supported on neat, crisscrossing beams, as is the floorplate below.

Thanks to these various elements, the building doesn't need any air conditioning, despite the tropical climate.

"The building could be seen as a living educational spot for wood material and construction techniques," said the architects.

Microlibrary Warak Kayu by Shau is located in Semarang, Indonesia

Shau built its first microlibrary in Bandung in 2016, using recycled ice cream tubs as cladding. It has since designed several others for the city, and completed another in Bojonegoro.

Microlibrary Warak Kayu was funded through through a donation from the Arkatama Isvara Foundation and will be managed by Harvey Center, a local charity group. It will become part of the city's tourism route, served by a free bus tour, to encourage as many visitors as possible.

Photography is by KIE.


Project credits:

Client: Arkatama Isvara Foundation
Architect: Shau Indonesia
Project team: Florian Heinzelmann, Daliana Suryawinata, Rizki Maulid Supratman, Muhammad Ichsan, Alfian Reza Almadjid, Multazam Akbar Junaedi
Structural engineer: Joko Agus Catur Wibowo
Prefabrication: PT Kayu Lapis Indonesia
Contractor: RAH Contractor

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“Create an image inspired by a scene/moment from your favourite movie or TV show” - Naomi Anderson-Subryan’s Weekly Brief

Lessen the guilt from all your binge watching by recreating something from your screens.



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Eight face shields designed to protect coronavirus healthcare workers

Eight face shields created to protect coronavirus health care workers

With health workers in many parts of the world facing shortages of personal protective equipment as they treat coronavirus patients, architects, designers, institutions and brands around the world are making face shields.

Face shields are simple, transparent screens that cover the face and help prevent infectious droplets from entering the eyes, nose and mouth. They are usually worn in conjunction with masks or respirators, blocking splashes and sprays from reaching the face and making it preventing workers from touching their faces.

"Face shields are generally not used alone, but in conjunction with other protective equipment and are therefore classified as adjunctive personal protective equipment," states a 2016 review of face shields by the US National Center for Biotechnology.

"Little research" into face shields

However, the NCBI review added that guidelines for their use and standards for their manufacture vary widely. "Although there are millions of potential users of face shields, guidelines for their use vary between governmental agencies and professional societies and little research is available regarding their efficacy," it said.

But Mike Edmond, a healthcare epidemiologist and physician based in Iowa City, believes that face shields "offer a better solution" than masks.

"The advantages of face shields are their durability allowing them to be worn an indefinite number of times, the ability to easily clean them after use, their comfort, and they prevent the wearer from touching their face," Edmond wrote on his blog.

"We have a product that is reusable, cleanable, covers more of your face, decreases the risk of autoinoculation, and keeps us from burning through our mask supply," he wrote in another post.

"Importantly, they cover all the portals of entry for this virus: the eyes, the nose, and the mouth. Moreover, the supply chain is significantly more diversified than that of face masks, so availability is much greater."

Simple to make

Face shields are the easiest type of personal protective equipment (PPE) to make. They typically consist of just two parts: a visor that covers the face and which is usually made of plastics such as polycarbonate, propionate, acetate, polyvinyl chloride (PVC), and polyethylene terephthalate glycol (PETG); and a method of holding the visor in place, such as a headband or strap.

The strap can be made of moulded plastic, 3D-printed plastic or even elastic. Some are designed to be thrown away after a single use while others can be sterilised and reused.

"Because the design of face shields is simple, massive production should not be difficult," wrote Edmond. "Individuals and groups are making them via 3D printing, and they can even be made from materials that are readily available from stores that sell office or craft supplies."

However, people wanting to help out by producing the devices should first check with local healthcare organisations to ensure their designs meet their requirements.

Architects, brands and institutions making shields

Brands including Nike and Apple, architects including Foster + Partners and BIG and educational institutions including Cambridge University and MIT have all developed or adapted designs for face shields recently, utilising 3D printing, laser cutting and even origami. In addition, many open-source designs are available for people to download and customise.

Here are eight examples:


Seven face shields created to protect coronavirus health care workers

Reusable face shield by Foster + Partners

Architecture studio Foster + Partners designed a face shield that can be manufactured extremely quickly, and disassembled, sanitised and reused after wearing.

Made with a laser cutter, the studio managed to make 1,000 of the shields in one day using a single machine.

"Protecting front-line health workers is key and we felt this was an obvious way that we could contribute," Grant Brooker, head of studio at Foster + Partners, told Dezeen.


Origami face shield by University of Cambridge and the University of Queensland

The HappyShield face shield designed by researchers at the University of Cambridge's Centre for Natural Material Innovation and the University of Queensland's Folded Structures Lab is assembled by folding a piece of plastic using curved-crease origami.

Created from simple materials and fabricated without the need for specialist machinery, the shield is designed so that it can be made anywhere in the world.

"It's not expensive to make at all," said Michael Ramage, head of the Centre for Natural Material Innovation at the University of Cambridge. "It's viable anywhere in the world, whatever your resources."


One-piece face shield by MIT

Researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology designed a disposable face shield that is made from a single piece of plastic. The shields can be rapidly mass-produced and delivered flat-packed before being folded into shape when needed.

"These face shields have to be made rapidly and at low cost because they need to be disposable," said Martin Culpepper, professor of mechanical engineering and project leader.

"Our technique combines low-cost materials with high-rate manufacturing that has the potential of meeting the need for face shields nationwide."


Seven face shields created to protect coronavirus health care workers

Face shields from footwear by Nike

Sportswear brand Nike has used materials usually found in its shoes and clothing to create a face shield that it is distributing to hospitals in Oregon, USA.

The face shield is made from polyurethane film, which is usually used for the airbag in the sole of its Air shoes and for the padding that is normally found in collars. The shield can be tightened with a cord typically used on Nike's items of clothing.


Coronavirus design briefing

Open-source face shield by Erik Cederberg

Erik Cederberg of Swedish 3D-printing company 3DVerkstan created an open-source design for a face shield that architecture studios across America have been using.

Studios including Handel Architects, Bjarke Ingels Group (BIG) and Kohn Pedersen Fox (KPF) are manufacturing the face shields and distributing them to hospitals in America.


Apple face shields

Flat-pack face shield by Apple

Technology company Apple has created a fully adjustable face shield and has begun manufacturing the protective equipment in the US and China. The company is planning to make and ship one million of the face shields to hospitals in the US every week.

"We've launched a company-wide effort, bringing together product designers, engineering, operations, and packaging teams, and our suppliers, to design, produce, and ship face shields for health workers," said Apple CEO Tim Cook.


Seven face shields created to protect coronavirus health care workers

3D-printed face shield by Nagami Design

Spanish 3D-printing brand Nagami Design is utilising its facilities, which are usually used to print furniture for companies like Zaha Hadid Design, to make face shields for medical staff.

The face shields are being donated to Hospital Provincial de Ávila, near Nagami Design's factory in Spain.


Seven face shields created to protect coronavirus health care workers

Simple face shield by Jungil Hong and Matt Muller

Graduates from the Rhode Island School of Design, Jungil Hong and Matt Muller, have designed a simple face shield that is made from a curved piece of vinyl and a head strap.

"We can sustain our business and provide a product that's a quarter the price of what's out there because our design is so much simpler," said Muller. "We have the capacity to make between 1,500 and 3,000 shields per day once we get going."

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