Andrew Wilson gave us a talk about starting a small business during our professional studies week. Someone asked him to define the difference between the two and his answer was this. It's about the client. Garden design is about designing for basically one person or a family, but essentially the client is who you are designing for. Landscape architecture is designing for a client on behalf of many others. You are designing public spaces and large facilities which essentially have to please a much broader 'clentelle'.
So I am side tracking again. My plan. I accept my annotation is pretty week at the moment and I should be going into alot more detail. In fact looking back at my 1:2000, I have shown more layers of thought here than in the 1:500! Blow....am I going backwards, I'm ment to be getting better at this. As my Saltwater Marsh Habitat is key to my design I have not really communicated more than this. This I fear needs to be addressed and fast. I need to show the planting for each level. It's essential a large pond by the sea, so why I have such a problem with this I do not know.
I'm not going to put the plan on the blog now as it is not important and looks very similar to how it was on my last post. I will however, get it up there very shortly when I get it finalised and looking like something I can be proud of.
The Sequential sketches are yet another stumbling block. Again, annotation is key and I have not put enough thought into what I am communicating. I don't think I have an issue with this, I just need to give myself some time and thought and get it on paper. The big issue is how I am visually communicating. My style is sloppy, the choice of media (dry pastel) is certainly not helping. It lacks punch and depth, having said that they did look better once I had shrunk them down and got them printed.
Looking from the harbour entrance towards Martello Tower
Looking from the boardwalk over the new saltwater marsh
Looking towards the eco build education centre through the wave landfroms
The promenade towards the harbour entrance
Connecting pathways of the main promenade, boardwalk and entarnce to education centre
The woodland shelter picnic area
I think I should get myself I descent set of coloured pencils. What does everyone else think? Is this just too limited on detail and tonal quality.? I initially drew on A3 trace in pencil. I then traced the pencil work with black ink onto another set of trace. Then I rendered with dry pastels on a separate sheet of trace, placed the inked line work underneath and scanned through the two sheets. I felt this took the blacknes out of the line work, but in saying that I have no line hierachy. Is that where I am going wrong? This is so frustrating because there really isn't the time to be experimenting. I need a process that works and that I can achieve productively.
Bahhhhhhh!......Hopefully one of these blogs soon will read how happy I am with what I am doing and that 'it' has finally clicked. I have more luck learnig french......even though the 'click' hasn't happenened there either!
Thank you for my post Paul it was so sweet. I think maybe you should just do it on normal paper? You probably need that blackness to give it the strength but the trace and layers is making you loose it. Although you could just take it into photoshop and bring up the hue and saturation which will bring the colours up then you can go over the lines for hierarchy once you've printed it. Anyway you've probably already thought about all of this! It is crazy isn't it, all the work? I haven't even re-visited my plan! xxx
ReplyDeletep.s I wish I could be in your drawings x
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