September 1, 2010

Experience The Planets: an update

sound

The new version of Greg Martin’s Experience The Planets project was launched this week. After working on and off over the last few months, I’ve been able to contribute 3 new tracks (plus the remastered original ‘Earth’) to  the project. Progress continues on the complete set of 8 for The Planets, which I am aiming for the end of the year. You can stream the 4 completed tracks here:

Venus

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

Earth

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

Uranus

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

Neptune

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

About the tracks

The challenge with these tracks has been extending the creative process that led to the creation of the original track for ‘Earth’ to adequately express the  beauty, mystery and hostility of our other planets. Like the Experience the Planets project itself, I am trying to interpret our modern understanding of these planets as real ‘places.’ I’ve tried to  take the music beyond the litanny of ambient music’s sci-fi tones to a more somber and cinematic interpretation of these environments, but still blending in an expression of  the mythological heritage so deeply rooted in our thinking about them.

Outside of the warm familiarity of Earth, I’ve thought about the ‘terrible beauty’ of Venus, embraced the strangeness of Uranus and the distant frigidity of Neptune. It’s been a fun challenge.

Since starting the project, I’ve upgraded to Logic Express for my primary editing software. I’ve also added some new tools with Native Instruments Kore2, and recently a set of KRK v4 monitors. All in all I couldn’t be happier with the production setup. Look for more updates soon.

July 11, 2010

Home Studio

This post has been a long time coming, but with a recent mass cleaning and some inspiring lighting I wanted to get it out of the way.

When we moved into our house in Southeast Portland in March of 2007, one of the features we were most excited about was the finished attic space. We knew it would make a perfect home studio for Sarah and I. It was a bit of a blank canvas to create a custom environment suited to our prospective hobbies.

Even though this process took place over two years ago, I’ve always wanted to share the result, as well as the “design” process, even though this was a small personal project.

BEFORE
I had a home-made but impractical door-desk on sawhorses and my old iMac. The space itself is lit by two North-facing skylights. A built-in bookshelf near the stairs set the theme of finding efficient storage solutions for this limited space.

Our requirements for the studio:

  • One desk area for each person
  • A separate “meeting” area with table and chairs that can serve as a sewing station for Sarah
  • Storage for Sarah’s fabric in her antique green drawers
  • Location for my Yamaha keyboard
  • Placement for my large Epson printer
  • As much extra storage as possible

DESIGN PROCESS

We figured we only really had one shot at getting it right. The space could quickly become cramped with too much in it, or awkward if everything didn’t fit just right. So I decided that as part of the process I would use Sketchup to refine the design as we went.

We started by measuring the room as accurately as possible, just using a tape measure. There was some very basic trigonometry for the angled roof, made easier through Sketchup to get the volume of the space.

Next we just started to find items in the Ikea catalog that we thought might work. I would just plug in the overall dimensions, and then roughly model in any additional detail as needed.

We considered keeping the door-desk to use jointly as a work table but it didn’t seem to fit. Although we loved this one-of-a-kind table, it didn’t really fit well into the space and had to go to a new home. Amazingly, that new home ended up being right down the street at a small company whose entire office decor was doors.

Then we started thinking we could have separate L-shaped desks which would give each of us a “digital” and “analog” area on our workspace. But, this option unfairly made one person sit in the corner away from the skylights. We did find a round white table that provided a nice extra bit of work surface for big projects.

Things really got interesting when we found a few additional items from Ikea. The Alex Drawers were perfect for the numerous flat storage needs we had. And they provided a lot of extra top surface area too.

The glass countertops fit almost across the entire length of the room under the skylights. Perfect for natural light during the day. We found these storage stands (technically table legs for a different table surface) for under-desk storage. A shelf above each desk would create some additional storage.

We created a shopping list right from our SketchUp components. This was several months before the Portland Ikea opened (if you can believe it), so we were off to Seattle to pick up everything (and then some).

AFTER

Space for two

Storage areas and room for Sarah’s serger.

The design library and Sarah’s dress form.

The reading nook, with long-term storage consisting of another Ikea unit and some antique crates from Sarah’s grandparents.

It originally took about a solid week of after-work unboxing and assembling to get everything in its place. But we love continuing to improve the studio for our numerous projects.

June 20, 2010

Hidden Messages

These images started off as a small series of hand painted canvases I gave as gifts last year to my family. I have created digital versions now and I am looking into getting silkscreen printed. Interested in one? Let me know.

fly all day

see the sky

run for it

October 25, 2009

The Eternal Questions

google suggest

Is there a God? Is the world going to end in 2012? Is he the one? Is the iPhone coming to Verizon? Or maybe most importantly, is Michael Jackson dead?

Since Google has updated its home page to include search suggestions as you type, I’ve been curious about how people pray to the Google gods. To understand this, I simply started a search query with “is a” and recorded what came up, then went through each letter of the alphabet, to end up with 260 of the top questions that the Google Suggest feature provides. Yes there’s lots of other ways to ask questions, but this is how I did it for now.

In our connected society, a working knowledge of virtually any subject is a search phrase away. But, I guess it shouldn’t be surprising that there is a predominance of pop culture trivia around gender uncertainty, sexual orientation, pregnancy status, or even whether someone is alive or dead. There’s also undercurrents of guilt and confession, asking questions into the void that most people probably wouldn’t even ask their doctor. And of course a bunch of ridiculous and funny nonsense I would have never thought anyone would ask.

Perhaps looking at these eternal questions helps us answer: is Google making us stupid?

My top 10:

Check out the full list here:

A

  • Is Adam Lambert straight?
  • Is anybody there?
  • Is a tomato a fruit or a vegetable?
  • Is a peanut a fruit?
  • Is Adam Lambert jewish?
  • Is Angelina Jolie pregnant again?
  • Is anybody there movie
  • Is Adam Lambert married?
  • Is a DUI a felony?
  • Is a sinus infection contagious?

B

  • Is bronchitis contagious?
  • Is Billy Mays dead?
  • Is Beyonce pregnant?
  • Is Bret Michaels still with Tanya?
  • Is black a color?
  • Is Bigfoot real?
  • Is Bloody Mary real?
  • Is Bam Margera stil married?
  • Is blood blue?
  • Is Birdman Lil Wayne’s dad?

C

  • Is coffee bad for you?
  • Is convertible?
  • Is Ciara a man?
  • Is corn a vegetable?
  • Is coffee good for you?
  • Is creatine safe?
  • Is clinical?
  • Is Channing Tatum bi?
  • Is creatine bad for you?
  • Is Chuck cancelled?

D

  • Is diarrhea a sign of pregnancy?
  • Is diet soda bad for you?
  • Is Dolla dead?
  • Is Drake from Degrassi?
  • Is Daisy de la Hoya related to Oscar de la Hoya?
  • Is Diet Coke bad for you?
  • Is Daisy still with London?
  • Is David Canary leaving All My Children?
  • Is Demi Lovato?
  • Is DUI a felony?

E

  • Is Easy Google Profit a scam?
  • Is England a country?
  • Is eczema contagious?
  • Is Elvis alive?
  • Is Ephedra legal?
  • Is Elizabeth Taylor dead?
  • Is Erin Andrews married?
  • Is Eminem dead?
  • Is Emma Watson a virgin?
  • Is Europe a country?

F

  • Is Facebook safe?
  • Is Farrah Fawcett dead?
  • Is Facebook down?
  • Is Frostwire legal?
  • Is flirting cheating?
  • Is Farrah Fawcett still alive?
  • Is Farrah Fawcett dying?
  • Is Frostwire illegal?
  • Is fish meat?

G

  • Is God real?
  • Is global warming real?
  • Is Google making us stupid?
  • Is Gmail down?
  • Is Gilmore Girls coming back?
  • Is Google a number?
  • Is glass a liquid?
  • Is green tea good for you?
  • Is Gatorade good for you?
  • Is George Leaving Grey’s Anatomy?

H

  • Is hookah bad for you?
  • Is he the one?
  • Is he cheating?
  • Is he into me?
  • Is hummus good for you?
  • Is he the one quiz?
  • Is honey good for you?
  • Is he interested?
  • Is he into you?
  • Is House over?

I

  • Is it low t
  • Is it safe to travel to Mexico?
  • Is it possible to be pregnant and still get your period?
  • Is it better to eat before or after exercise?
  • Is it possible to curve a bullet?
  • Is it a boy or a girl?
  • Is it you lyrics
  • Is Lizzy leaving Grey’s Anatomy?
  • Is it down?
  • Is it true that the world is going to end in 2012

J

  • Is Jennifer Hudson pregnant?
  • Is Julie Chen pregnant?
  • Is Jeff Goldblum dead?
  • Is Janet Jackson pregnant?
  • Is july 3 2009 a federal holiday?
  • Is Jon and Kate getting a divorce?
  • Is Jermaine Jackson still married to Hazel Gordy?
  • Is Jessica Simpson pregnant?
  • Is Jesus God?
  • Is Jon cheating on Kate

K

  • Is Kristen Stewart pregnant?
  • Is Kevin Jonas engaged?
  • Is Katherine Heigl leaving Grey’s Anatomy?
  • Is Kris Allen married?
  • Is Kendra Wilkinson pregnant?
  • Is Kevin Jonas getting married?
  • Is Kristen Stewart dating Robert Pattinson?
  • Is Kendra pregnant?
  • Is Kari Byron pregnant?
  • Is Kings cancelled?

L

  • Is Limewire illegal?
  • Is Lauren London pregnant?
  • Is Lady Gaga a man?
  • Is Lauren London pregnant by Lil Wayne?
  • Is Lil Wayne dead?
  • Is Limewire safe?
  • Is Lady Gaga bi?
  • Is Love Alive lyrics
  • Is Lady Gaga a transvestite?
  • Is Lady Gaga a hermaphrodite?

M

  • Is Michael Jackson dead?
  • Is Miley Cyrus pregnant?
  • Is Michelle Obama pregnant?
  • Is Michael Jackson really dead?
  • Is Michael Jackson really the biological father of his children?
  • Is Megan Fox a man?
  • Is Mia Michaels sick?
  • Is Miley Cyrus a virgin?
  • Is Michael Jackson muslim?
  • Is Mariah Carey pregnant?

N

  • Is Nivea pregnant by Lil Wayne
  • Is not a valid win32 application
  • Is noon am or pm?
  • Is Neil Armstrong still alive?
  • Is Nivea pregnant?
  • Is not accessible. You might not have permission to use this network resource
  • Is Nicole Richie adopted?
  • Is Naruto cancelled?
  • Is Nicole Richie black?
  • Is Nicotine bad for you?

O

  • Is Obama the Antichrist?
  • Is Operation Repo real?
  • Is Obama a US citizen?
  • Is One Tree Hill coming back for a 7th season?
  • Is Operation Repo staged?
  • Is Obama a muslim?
  • Is oatmeal good for you?
  • Is One Tree Hill over?
  • Is Obama a socialist?
  • Is olive oil good for you?

P

  • Is pneumonia contagious?
  • Is poison ivy contagious?
  • Is Pluto a planet?
  • Is peanut butter good for you?
  • Is Puerto Rico part of the United States?
  • Is Patrick Swayze dead?
  • Is Paypal safe?
  • Is popcorn healthy?
  • Is peanut a fruit?
  • Is poison oak contagious?

Q

  • Is Queen Latifah married to a woman?
  • Is Queen Latifah straight?
  • Is quinoa gluten free?
  • Is Quicken Online safe?
  • Is Queen Latifah married?
  • Is Queen Mary haunted?
  • Is Quarantine based on a true story?
  • Is quicksand real?
  • Is Queen Latifah homosexual?
  • Is Quaker oatmeal gluten free?

R

  • Is Randy Jackson Michael Jackson’s brother?
  • Is Randy Jackson related to Michael Jackson?
  • Is Randy Jackson from American Idol Michael Jackson’s brother?
  • Is Robert Pattinson and Kristen Stewart dating?
  • Is ringworm contagious?
  • Is Red Bull bad for you?
  • Is Ray J still with Cocktail?
  • Is Rihanna pregnant from Chris Brown?
  • Is Robert Pattinson dating Kristen Stewart?
  • Is Ray J and Cocktail still together?

S

  • Is she really going out with him
  • Is shingles contagious?
  • Is Scrubs over?
  • Is Santa real?
  • Is sushi healthy?
  • Is splenda bad for you?
  • Is strep throat contagious?
  • Is Skype free?
  • Is Swoopo a scam?
  • Is she really going out with him lyrics

T

  • Is the world going to end in 2012?
  • Is Tupac alive?
  • Is This Love lyrics
  • Is there a god?
  • Is there anyway I can get this popular guy to get me pregnant?
  • Is the iPhone coming to Verizon?
  • Is tonsillitis contagious?
  • Is there life after death?
  • Is the game cancelled?
  • Is there a way to see who views your Facebook?

U

  • Is urine sterile?
  • Is University of Phoenix accredited?
  • Is Usher getting a divorce?
  • Is unemployment taxable?
  • Is utorrent safe?
  • Is University of Phoenix a good school?
  • Is Ultram a narcotic?
  • Is Usher Haitian?
  • Is UFC fake?
  • Is US Fidelis a scam?

V

  • Is Verizon getting the iPhone?
  • Is Vin Diesel straight?
  • Is Vitamin Water good for you?
  • Is Vanessa Hudgens pregnant?
  • Is vector marketing a scam?
  • Is vinegar good for you?
  • Is V8 good for you?
  • Is vector a scam?
  • Is venue Charlottesville?
  • Is Vuze legal?

W

  • Is Wendy Williams a man?
  • Is watermelon good for you?
  • Is weed bad for you?
  • Is Washington DC a state?
  • Is watermelon fattening?
  • Is white a color?
  • Is Walmart good for America?
  • Is wrestling fake?
  • Is Windows 7 better than Vista?
  • Is watermelon healthy?

X

  • Is XBox Live down?
  • Is XBox Live down today?
  • Is XBox Live still down?
  • Is XBox Live free?
  • Is Xanax addictive?
  • Is Xenadrine safe?
  • Is Xanax a narcotic?
  • Is XBox Live down right now?
  • Is XBox 360 better than PS3?
  • Is Xylitol safe?

Y

  • Is yogurt good for you?
  • Is you or is you aint my baby
  • Is youtube down?
  • Is your mama a llama?
  • Is y a vowel?
  • Is yawning contagious?
  • Is you rollin lyrics
  • Is yogurt healthy
  • Is yahoo down?
  • Is yogurt good for dogs?

Z

  • Is Zango safe?
  • Is Ziva leaving NCIS?
  • Is Zachary Quinto straight?
  • Is zero an integer?
  • Is Zach Braff leaving scrubs?
  • Is zero a number?
  • Is zillow accurate?
  • Is Zac Efron jewish?
  • Is Zac Efron a virgin?
  • Is Zachary Quinto single?

October 24, 2009

Music for Experience The Planets

sound

Experience the Planets - Design by Greg Martin

I meant to post this a few months ago, but earlier this year I had the opportunity to collaborate with Greg Martin to produce some original music for his Experience The Planets project.

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

Ultimately, my goal is to produce a unique piece for each planet. I already have a variety of sound sketches for some of the others. So we’ll see how that goes.

The music was produced in Apple Garageband with a variety of custom instruments and effects, and of course no built-in loops.

Apple Garageband - Earth - Experience The Planets

Apple Garageband - Earth - Experience The Planets

February 10, 2009

Everything that’s ever been made will one day be thrown away

Courtesy of dnorman
Courtesy of dnorman

 

One of the things about growing up in the Northwest in the 80s and 90s is that you are indoctrinated into a lifestyle that makes you very careful about littering. Bestowed with the virtues of “reduce, reuse, recycle,” I’ve felt genuine guilt whenever I cannot find a recycle bin in which to drop a discarded plastic bottle. So when visiting my family’s cabin in remote Teton Valley, Idaho a couple years back, I had an amazing realization about the true nature of waste disposal.

There is no garbage service in the valley. Most residents have to collect and haul their own garbage to the county landfill located South of the town of Driggs. At the end of a visit to the cabin with my family, I rode out to the landfill one day with my parents to help drop off some garbage.

The landfill was simply a large depression carved into a field off the highway, dirt walls held back by a bulldozer. Trash is piled into a heap, to be eventually buried under a couple feet of dirt by heavy machinery. Recycling service for metal and glass only. We drive in, the car is weighed, drive up to the pile, get out and throw our garbage onto the heap. A plastic bottle I drank from the day before rattled across the ground. I wondered if I should pick it up, and realized it was pointless. This was it. This field is what was at the bottom of the trash can.

We got back in the car, paid a few dollars, and left. 

As innocuous as this experience may seem, I left with a very strong impression that we had proverbially swept our trash under the rug. We just put it out there in that field and they bury it? 

Looking at the things around me in the landfill, a lot of the things were designed: empty bottles of consumables, outdated consumer electronics, old furniture, shredded clothes. Small armies of designers, engineers and manufacturers had spent their time creating these things, modeling bottles in Rhino, debating color choices in Illustrator, setting up manufacturing, distribution and sales of these things. People who, just like me, probably loved the creative challenge to do what they do.

Whether a product’s life span is one day, one year, or one thousand, eventually the product will be discarded, no matter if it’s mundane or precious.  

Working in the product design field, it can be difficult to face this realization. Which means that getting in touch with the difficult reality of your product’s end-of-life (in consumer speak, this means trash disposal) makes you much more aware of your impact on the environment.

As product designers (broadly speaking), we are successful if our work has provided some genuine service and value as a tool for the user during its useful life. Minimizing the environmental impact of our work is simply another design challenge to be solved. And we even know how to do this, even if it is sometimes expensive today: design for disassembly, use of recycled and recyclable components, eliminate the use of toxic materials, minimize power consumption, etc.

As product design continues to evolve into the more holistic concept of Experience Design, we will have more opportunities to embrace these these design challenges. 

In the meantime, if you haven’t already, try to experience the landfill at the bottom of the trash can for yourself.

February 8, 2009

Audio setup: Mixing old and new

design

There are many compact home audio systems nowadays that try to integrate audio from iPods and FM radio. But in almost every product I checked out, there was some compromise that sacrificed connectivity or sound quality.

I wanted true stereo separation that is not possible with small all-in-one units. I wanted to feel the sound. I wanted “easy to use”, (difficult to quantify, I know). What this meant for me was an elimination of the “digital stuff” of audio setup (apart from the iPhone of course). I didn’t want a glorified clock radio.

And it still had to be a compact system to satisfy Sarah’s desires, and the constraints of our living room.

Back in December, Sarah bought me this very cool 1970s Sony FM tuner from Hawthorne Vintage. This unit is radio only (no amplifier) and offered a great retro centerpiece that was very easy and satisfying to use. Tuning the radio is a fun experience itself: turning the physical knob, watching the large dial turn and hearing each station blur past, aligning it so that the signal is strongest. It’s an activity that I think is missed on modern digital systems. It’s a bit like the fun you get from a manual transmission on a car: its probably not the most efficient system, but it can be more fun.

Next I set about finding the appropriate speakers to go with it. A subwoofer was out since there was no place for it. I settled on these AudioEngine A2 speakers purchased from Amazon. In addition to their great reviews for sound quality, I purchased them for their extremely simple and iconic design. They were just “speakers”. They sound great, and for the most part look great. The company did decide somewhere along the way to slap their logo on the front in the most unconsidered way, which does detract from their appearance.

So overall I am very happy with this setup, apart from the logo. Sometimes you just have to create your own setup to meet your needs.

Shape

Rift

A photo-illustration composite.

November 25, 2008

The Trees

 

This illustration started as a sketch I created about 5 years ago in an old sketchbook. I completed it using textures and found-images painted together in Photoshop.

Next Page »