(Source: folklifestyle, via wildexpeditions)

This was posted 1 year ago. It has 2,418 notes. .

Is this why wedding planners can charge so much money?

endashemdash:

Planning an event is really really hard. Maybe that’s obvious to some people, but for Janel and I, planning the event around which our kickstarter project revolves resulted in a pattern of excited ideation, followed by fearful anticipation of the mountain of work needed to realise our ideas, then paring things back until they felt manageable, and then repeating the whole thing by having more ideas. The deeper we dug into the details, the more overwhelming things became, with details seeming impossible to decide on or resolve.

Here are a few things we discussed:

  1. The event is strcutured around our VR experience, but what do people do while they’re waiting for their turn, or for their friends to finish up? This question led us to imagine a gallery space attached to the VR room, where people can hang out and enjoy the vibes. (Christina suggested it could be a party!)
  2. But what should that space be? We boiled it down to music, food and drinks, art, and maybe a presentation by an artist we admire.
  3. Food is tricky because if it’s more than just simple snacks then it becomes a cost, and if it’s just simple snacks then it’s not really a draw.
  4. We had a lot of questions around drinks. Should we charge for them? Do we need a license for that? Can we do BYOB?
  5. We love the idea of having art installations that are somehow related to our VR experience, but have no idea what that involves. What do you need to pay an artist to exhibit their work? Would they even want to be associated with two students doing some weird VR project?
  6. Even the music and presentations present potential points of failure in terms of the techincal set up at the event.
  7. Speaking of technical, we had a lengthy discussion about how guests would be fitted into the VR headset and start the experience. Does it happen outside the VR room, and then they take the headset off again and it is magically transported into the room, waiting for them? Do they have to figure out the adjustments on their own? Does someone walk into the room with them and help them get set up, then exit quickly?

We haven’t answered all the questions, but we now have specific things to test for when we show our prototype this weekend, and have a better idea of what kind of space we’re looking for and what level of effort it might take to pull the event off if we get funded.

(Source: endashemdash)

This was posted 1 year ago. It has 2 notes.
Hey, this post may contain adult content, so we’ve hidden it from public view.
Learn more.

Hey, this post may contain adult content, so we’ve hidden it from public view.

Learn more.

This was posted 1 year ago. It has 0 notes. .

(via definedbypassion)

This was posted 1 year ago. It has 33,450 notes. .
butteryplanet:
“ I think I could watch dust forever.
so I stayed at this cabin earlier this summer. one day I woke up at 5a.m. and saw the incredible light coming through the front door. I couldn’t just let it go and fall asleep again. I set my...

butteryplanet:

I think I could watch dust forever.

so I stayed at this cabin earlier this summer. one day I woke up at 5a.m. and saw the incredible light coming through the front door. I couldn’t just let it go and fall asleep again. I set my camera up, shook some old pillows and caught this beautiful second before the wind blew all of this out

(via whatsthebeta)

This was posted 1 year ago. It has 119,319 notes. .

(Source: industrialentertainment)

This was posted 1 year ago. It has 5 notes. .

(Source: ruescenic, via industrialentertainment)

This was posted 1 year ago. It has 95,414 notes. .
jamiemclellan:
“Teenage prototyping
”

jamiemclellan:

Teenage prototyping

(via industrialentertainment)

This was posted 1 year ago. It has 7 notes. .

(Source: industrialentertainment)

This was posted 1 year ago. It has 3 notes. .

(Source: industrialentertainment)

This was posted 1 year ago. It has 3 notes. .
studio-hansen:
“ Van Moof
”

studio-hansen:

Van Moof

(via standard_stepin_frame_modal_1.jpg (537×655))

(Source: vanmoof.com, via johnadamsdesign)

This was posted 1 year ago. It has 78 notes. .
huestockholm:
“ Lugerin Igor - “Ti-table” ”

huestockholm:

Lugerin Igor - “Ti-table”

(Source: huestockholm, via johnadamsdesign)

This was posted 1 year ago. It has 252 notes. .

(Source: plus-eks, via johnadamsdesign)

This was posted 1 year ago. It has 40 notes. .
look-at-stuff:
“Chee Chair I Tom Fereday (2016)
”

look-at-stuff:

Chee Chair I Tom Fereday (2016)

(via johnadamsdesign)

This was posted 1 year ago. It has 71 notes. .

npr:

Last month, Nike released a new digital ad targeted to women in the Arab world. It features different women athletes in the Middle East, including figure skater Zahra Lari from the United Arab Emirates; fencer Inès Boubakri from Tunisia and boxer Arifa Bseiso from Jordan.

For me, there was one scene, portrayed by actors, that struck home. As a young woman in a hijab skateboards along a street, stared down by a middle-age woman, the narrator asks, “What will they say about you?”

Commentary: Nike’s New Ad Asks A Question Arab Women Know All Too Well

(Source: NPR)

This was posted 1 year ago. It has 447 notes.