Articles
Popular searches: Service Design, Experience Design, Design Thinking, Psychology, Japan, Design Process, Inspiration, Design Philosophy, Design Travel
What you can read about here
The most important message I took away from Design School was: ‘designers need to be responsible’. We achieve that by considering intended and unintended consequences of our designs. As a scientist/designer, I want to dissect design - to know how, and why, it works. By understanding the mechanisms, we can be more intentional.
This collection of writing especially explores the psychological elements of design - asking questions like:
How do designs impact people’s behavior?
How does that influence human interaction?
And how does that go on to change societies, values, and even culture?
I hope you find inspiration and discover new ways of working!
Would it be so ambitious to say that design can change the world?
Toyo Ito’s work reminds us that design is about more than utility or aesthetics. It’s about creating spaces, objects, or systems that make people feel more connected and more alive. Whether designing chairs, apps, or medical devices, there’s a greater purpose for our designs to achieve.
Improving sustainability by increasing an object’s value over time
We often think about sustainability by the way of recycling, reuse, and renewable materials in from a process perspective. Yoshiyuki offers another way - by designing for how we can improve a product’s lifespan by designing for longer-term usage. It focuses on reducing the waste by improving the value and desirability with time.
Tokyo design pilgrimage: top spots for design and architecture inspiration
Best spots to go in Tokyo for design inspiration, with a focus on design research, speculative design, innovation, and architecture. Plus recommended spots to find cafes and nearby parks for those necessary breaks.
The psychology behind Design Thinking and how it will revolutionise your innovation process
Psychologically, humans seek logic, certainty, control, direction, and aim to save face. But these tendencies restrict creativity. The Double Diamond separates these processes and the Design Thinking Framework has some genius ground rules to help us embrace ambiguity and beat the unbearable feeling of uncertainty.
Designerless Service Design
How does Japan achieve service excellence naturally, without designers? Japanese service is globally revered. Surprisingly, this excellence often emerges without the formal frameworks of Customer Experience or Service Design. This article explores how Japanese cultural values inherently promote human-centricity, offering insights that could elevate design practices in the West.
Posture Design
What’s the relationship between posture and design? This article showcases how posture changes physiology, psychology, behaviour, interactions, and ultimately cultures (micro and macro). With a greater awareness of how posture influences the products, services, and spaces we design, we can be more intentional to use it to foster the type of society we want to live in.