kerby
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Hey PSG! When I was in college I got to take part in a really cool pilot program called the Integrative Design Experience Laboratory. Our task was to design and build a farmers market in a rural area of North Carolina. Overall the experiment was a colossal learning experience and provided immense benefits to an increasingly agricultural area... but that's a story for a different day. I wanted to share something our team designed and I painted for the exterior of the market.
One cultural symbol where I live is something called barn quilt patterns. When you drive through the countryside, everywhere on various buildings there are these colorful emblems. They are symbolic and represent the nature of the surrounding land, profession, or people who live there. For instance, near a Christmas tree farm, you might see a barn quilt that looks like a tree (go figure).
The concept behind the barn quilt design that we chose represents our team. This project was a collaborative effort among eight students, so the basic geometric form is octagonal. Each color represents one person who helped with the project. The premise is that all eight of us are different, with our own individual backgrounds and ideas. Throughout the design process, we integrated our ideas together, which is why the colors are interlocking inwardly toward a center focal point. The white center represents the completed idea and the building we constructed. When you pull up to the building, this is the first piece of the design that will catch your eye.
I won't go too much into the painting process, but I simply used painters tape and careful measurements to paint the symmetry. The triangles are right and isosceles, and each edge is in a ratio of thirds relative to the largest triangle. Below is the final design.
...a photo of me the day of the grand opening. Hopefully it puts the scale of the painting into perspective. This was taken nine months after we first were assigned the project. As you can tell, I was elated when the moment finally came for the building to be functional.
...the structure itself, on the day of the grand opening. (let me know if this isn't relevant enough)
I hope you enjoyed my story and the artwork; if anyone is interested in the project itself or wants to know more about the process of painting the barn quilt I'd be glad to fill you in!
One cultural symbol where I live is something called barn quilt patterns. When you drive through the countryside, everywhere on various buildings there are these colorful emblems. They are symbolic and represent the nature of the surrounding land, profession, or people who live there. For instance, near a Christmas tree farm, you might see a barn quilt that looks like a tree (go figure).
The concept behind the barn quilt design that we chose represents our team. This project was a collaborative effort among eight students, so the basic geometric form is octagonal. Each color represents one person who helped with the project. The premise is that all eight of us are different, with our own individual backgrounds and ideas. Throughout the design process, we integrated our ideas together, which is why the colors are interlocking inwardly toward a center focal point. The white center represents the completed idea and the building we constructed. When you pull up to the building, this is the first piece of the design that will catch your eye.
I won't go too much into the painting process, but I simply used painters tape and careful measurements to paint the symmetry. The triangles are right and isosceles, and each edge is in a ratio of thirds relative to the largest triangle. Below is the final design.
...a photo of me the day of the grand opening. Hopefully it puts the scale of the painting into perspective. This was taken nine months after we first were assigned the project. As you can tell, I was elated when the moment finally came for the building to be functional.
...the structure itself, on the day of the grand opening. (let me know if this isn't relevant enough)
I hope you enjoyed my story and the artwork; if anyone is interested in the project itself or wants to know more about the process of painting the barn quilt I'd be glad to fill you in!