An aesthetics of touch: investigating the language of design relating to form
An aesthetics of touch: investigating the language of design relating to form
How well can designers communicate qualities of touch? This paper presents evidence that they have some capability to do so, much of which appears to have been learned, but at present make limited use of such language. Interviews with graduate designer-makers suggest that they are aware of and value the importance of touch and materiality in their work, but lack a vocabulary to fully relate to their detailed explanations of other aspects such as their intent or selection of materials. We believe that more attention should be paid to the verbal dialogue that happens in the design process, particularly as other researchers show that even making-based learning also has a strong verbal element to it. However, verbal language alone does not appear to be adequate for a comprehensive language of touch. Graduate designers-makers? descriptive practices combined non-verbal manipulation within verbal accounts. We thus argue that haptic vocabularies do not simply describe material qualities, but rather are situated competences that physically demonstrate the presence of haptic qualities. Such competencies are more important than groups of verbal vocabularies in isolation. Design support for developing and extending haptic competences must take this wide range of considerations into account to comprehensively improve designers? capabilities.
haptics, product semantics, sensory design.
170-179
School of Design Innovation, Victoria University of Wellington
Teinaki, Vicky
275947c7-b0f1-47dd-80d9-77c5ef3317b8
Montgomery, Bruce
3a508803-5eae-4249-9443-743aa476d73b
Spencer, Nick
66a30a93-6bf7-43ea-90ae-c8a7c57536dd
Cockton, Gilbert
b36210ad-683b-4e68-ac31-a926a32c52c0
18 April 2012
Teinaki, Vicky
275947c7-b0f1-47dd-80d9-77c5ef3317b8
Montgomery, Bruce
3a508803-5eae-4249-9443-743aa476d73b
Spencer, Nick
66a30a93-6bf7-43ea-90ae-c8a7c57536dd
Cockton, Gilbert
b36210ad-683b-4e68-ac31-a926a32c52c0
Teinaki, Vicky, Montgomery, Bruce, Spencer, Nick and Cockton, Gilbert
(2012)
An aesthetics of touch: investigating the language of design relating to form.
In Proceedings of Design and Semantics of Form and Movement (DeSForM) Conference.
School of Design Innovation, Victoria University of Wellington.
.
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Conference or Workshop Item
(Paper)
Abstract
How well can designers communicate qualities of touch? This paper presents evidence that they have some capability to do so, much of which appears to have been learned, but at present make limited use of such language. Interviews with graduate designer-makers suggest that they are aware of and value the importance of touch and materiality in their work, but lack a vocabulary to fully relate to their detailed explanations of other aspects such as their intent or selection of materials. We believe that more attention should be paid to the verbal dialogue that happens in the design process, particularly as other researchers show that even making-based learning also has a strong verbal element to it. However, verbal language alone does not appear to be adequate for a comprehensive language of touch. Graduate designers-makers? descriptive practices combined non-verbal manipulation within verbal accounts. We thus argue that haptic vocabularies do not simply describe material qualities, but rather are situated competences that physically demonstrate the presence of haptic qualities. Such competencies are more important than groups of verbal vocabularies in isolation. Design support for developing and extending haptic competences must take this wide range of considerations into account to comprehensively improve designers? capabilities.
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More information
Published date: 18 April 2012
Keywords:
haptics, product semantics, sensory design.
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Local EPrints ID: 484545
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/484545
PURE UUID: 288c4288-923e-4e81-b87f-ab8ff1c3b9f5
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Date deposited: 16 Nov 2023 14:52
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 05:52
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Contributors
Author:
Vicky Teinaki
Author:
Bruce Montgomery
Author:
Nick Spencer
Author:
Gilbert Cockton
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