Three new sketching exercises, plus a three-step sketching approach and mathematical rules that when followed produce realistic sketches.
All in Design Methods
Three new sketching exercises, plus a three-step sketching approach and mathematical rules that when followed produce realistic sketches.
Evaluation matrices are one of the most misused, misunderstood, tools of product development. However, a simple shift in the way we think about them can help us all get the most out of evaluation matrices.
Almost all product development is done in a team setting, owing largely to the strongly held belief that the collective thinking of a group outperforms that of “the lone genius."
Have you ever wondered, “when am I going to have a breakthrough idea?” If so, then maybe the better question to ask is “what am I doing to come up with that idea?”
She doesn’t know it, but Bon Appétit pastry chef Claire Saffitz has taught me and my students what I wish all engineers could know and practice. She’s taught us how to approach design problems with the right skill and attitude.
Explore TRIZ, an inventive way of problem solving invented by Genrich Altshuller.
Many of the things we design are not going to work the way we thought they would at first. There are just too many unknowns until we try it. In anticipation of this, great designers always have a back-up solution.
The fundamental goal of product development is to evolve the product from an abstract idea to a specific manufacturable design.