Being a design engineer for 30 years, I always marveled at a few of my co-workers that had that skill of designing mechanisms that not only worked well, but also were pleasing to the eye. My stuff usually worked, and worked quite well, but it always had a stern nuts & bolts look to it. Later, I lucked into consulting for an art studio that needed a little engineering expertise building audio-kinetic machines, and ended up working there for 10 years. I became one of the "builders" and came up with some entertaining, creative designs that got incorporated into the final builds, but I never was able to get that "look" that was pleasing to the eye. Not for lack of trying. My true artist co-workers were appreciative of the skills that I brought to the table, and we talked endlessly of form, function, balance and density, but if it needed that artist's touch, I did the inventing, and they did the build. And we were all rewarded with things that performed well and looked beautiful too.
That sounds like an interesting career! I'm sure you're not giving yourself enough credit. Even trying for it puts you ahead of most. Maybe your style is just more industrial chic haha.
There's a book you might enjoy checking into: "Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain" by Betty Edwards; although I think from your example that you might already be doing this.
I'm pretty sure I tried using that book a few years ago and it just didn't resonate with me for whatever reason. I was thinking too hard about not thinking too hard if that makes sense. With this workbook, it's more instinctual. Works for me at least. Thanks for the suggestion though! Maybe I'll give it a second try soon.
Being a design engineer for 30 years, I always marveled at a few of my co-workers that had that skill of designing mechanisms that not only worked well, but also were pleasing to the eye. My stuff usually worked, and worked quite well, but it always had a stern nuts & bolts look to it. Later, I lucked into consulting for an art studio that needed a little engineering expertise building audio-kinetic machines, and ended up working there for 10 years. I became one of the "builders" and came up with some entertaining, creative designs that got incorporated into the final builds, but I never was able to get that "look" that was pleasing to the eye. Not for lack of trying. My true artist co-workers were appreciative of the skills that I brought to the table, and we talked endlessly of form, function, balance and density, but if it needed that artist's touch, I did the inventing, and they did the build. And we were all rewarded with things that performed well and looked beautiful too.
That sounds like an interesting career! I'm sure you're not giving yourself enough credit. Even trying for it puts you ahead of most. Maybe your style is just more industrial chic haha.
There's a book you might enjoy checking into: "Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain" by Betty Edwards; although I think from your example that you might already be doing this.
I'm pretty sure I tried using that book a few years ago and it just didn't resonate with me for whatever reason. I was thinking too hard about not thinking too hard if that makes sense. With this workbook, it's more instinctual. Works for me at least. Thanks for the suggestion though! Maybe I'll give it a second try soon.