Reader question: the organized shift worker

In a comment to my post about working hard, not a lot, Kenneth in Virginia asked what the information in the post meant for someone who like his father drove a truck for a living. It’s an excellent question, because to be honest, few of us have the luxury of choosing how much we work. Most jobs have a fixed schedule, and require a physical presence during that period.

There’s no working better or faster to reduce the workload and no putting in extra hours to advance. A truck driver has to go from Point A to Point B, a cashier has to ring up purchases, and a factory worker has to run the machine for the entire eight hour shift.

This is completely different from someone who works in an office and has projects to fulfill or objectives to achieve. The previous post was addressed to these latter people, and in looking around at the literature, most business organizing books focus almost exclusively on them as well.

That doesn’t mean, however, that the former group can’t be organized or reduce their workload through efficiencies.

My husband is a factory worker, and one of the most organized people I know. Over the years, I’ve seen him develop a sort of set of rules that help him in whatever position he has.

  • Pay attention. Repetitive jobs can become mind-numbing, and if you’re not careful mistakes can start slipping in if you do not focus on each detail. You might choose the wrong lot of a product to add to a mixture. Or you might let quality slip, which may cause a serious problem for the company, with perhaps long-term negative consequences for you.
  • Don’t make more work for others. In many time-based jobs, workers operate in a sort of vacuum. They may be part of a team, but only are aware of their own part of the process. Take for example someone who works in a supermarket in the meat section. Part of her job may be to add the labels to packages of meat for sale. If the label isn’t applied flat, the scanner at the checkout won’t read it and the cashier has to either enter the barcode in manually or call someone to come give him the correct code.
  • Take your time, but not too much. The proverb haste not waste applies here. The best way to be organized and to make the time pass quickly in any job is to work consistently and carefully. No matter the pressure from above to work faster and produce more, sure and steady wins the race (to use another famous proverb). Speed produces errors which often means having to go back and doing it again. Or in the case of a truck driver, speed literally can kill you. On the other end of the spectrum, however, working more slowly than necessary relates back to the previous point: the less you work, the more someone else will have to.

Now it’s your turn. Do you have any other “rules” to add to these three for shift-based work? If you work by hours, what tricks and tips can you offer others to make sure you are working efficiently and effectively?

Post written by Alex Fayle

A Camera I Could Get Behind

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There are two types of people: those who believe no true photography happens without using a camera… and those of us who think our smartphones will do the trick! Admittedly, I’m the latter. I think a big part of why I never got into cameras (even a point-and-shoot) is because of their mechanical, not-so-user-friendly look to be quite intimidating. The Lytro Lüm, however, looks like one I might actually be able to wrestle with… which is exactly what designer Michael Soleo was aiming for.

From the mode dial to the power button, its controls are oversized and intuitive to use. Its fluid form looks robust and less delicate, inspiring confidence in the user’s grip. Even the tactile finish (seen here in a stunning pure white) is designed to look soft and inviting to touch. No word on specs, but it was built around Lytro’s revolutionary Light Field platform that allows post-photo custom focusing, it’s more than enough for beginners!

Designer: Michael Soleo

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A Wearable for Feels

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AURA is a twist on wearable tech that isn’t focused on your steps or trying to help you build muscle, rather, it’s aim is to help you master your mental fitness! Designed for anyone struggling with mental illness, depression or distress, it uses biometric sensors to detect stress, anger, sadness and happiness.

You can gain perspective of your current mental state by looking at the e-ink display that looks much like a simple watch face. Your overall data history can then be reviewed over time to track the moments you were experiencing different emotions in order to make informed behavioral or situational changes.

Designer: Pritika Sekar

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Cutting Edge Futuristic Fashion Portraits

Ces collages de portraits fantastiques et avant-gardistes sont l’oeuvre d’Alexander Berdin-Lazursky, photographe, artiste numérique et designer russe basé à New York. Il combine la photographie de mode, les éléments graphiques très goth et le portrait pour créer des images surréalistes qui sont intenses et empreintes de science-fiction. Plus de son travail sur Behance et Instagram.









Explaining Why the U.S. Speedskating Team's Outfits are Designed That Way

More than a few viewers have been puzzled by Team U.S.A.’s speedskating outfits. They seem to be designed purely to draw one’s eye towards their junk:

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The speed skating events are a terrific show but the @TeamUSA uniforms are terrible. What is with the crotch patch? #Olympics2018 pic.twitter.com/xm1TztsXAV

— Joseph W. Roberts (@prof_jwroberts) February 19, 2018

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Uniform designer 1: Our new uniforms need to reflect the elegant and strong aesthetic of speed skating.

Uniform designer 2: And highlight the crotch.

Uniform designer 1: duh of course. Gotta pull the eye right there! pic.twitter.com/BEpWBB2xLN

— sarah_haskins (@sarah_haskins) February 8, 2018

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The uniforms were designed by Under Armour, and InStyle asked them about the crotch bling. Here’s UA’s statement:

“The contrasting material in the inner thigh (friction guards) has been commonplace for speed skate skins for decades, to reduce friction. The 2014 UA skin had one panel instead of two, but in testing the new skin, the addition of a second panel reduced friction even more—by 60 percent.”

Okay, but why not make the inner thigh panel the same freaking color as the rest of the outfit?

“We tested a multitude of friction guard materials to find the material that reduces friction the most. Altering the color or using a material that comes in a different color would have rendered it considerably less effective. The athletes love the look of the skins and how they perform and are getting compliments from other countries.”

I’d have thought that they could simply make the entire suit silver, but presumably each nation’s predominant uniform colors are pre-agreed-upon to avoid on-rink confusion.

Still, when we look at other countries’ thigh panels that are a different color…

…they don’t appear to be quite as prominent, nor do they extend as far north as the American uniforms.

I understand function over aesthetics, but I can’t help thinking “Who designed these, Borat?”

This Bridge is Cleverly Designed to Slice Ice Into 250-Meter-Wide Strips

Flight instructor Paul Tymstra was flying 7,500 feet over Canada’s Confederation Bridge when he spotted this unusual site. Tymstra snapped a pic and Tweeted it:

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Flying over the Confederation Bridge, PEI at 7500″ ,=”” notice=”” the=”” huge=”” rectangles=”” formed=”” from=”” tides=”” and=”” westerly=”” winds=”” today.=””

Here’s a closer look:

So what’s going on here? The Confederation Bridge, which connects Prince Edward Island with the mainland, has been designed to mitigate the considerable lateral force presented by enormous floating sheets of ice. Rather than beef the piers up to withstand the force, which could require enough material to make the bridge unaffordable, the bridge’s designers introduced a very clever bit of engineering. Look at this elevation view of one of the piers:

The waterline is above the pressure panels, level with the beginning of that 52-degree-angle cone. When a moving sheet of ice contacts the cone, it has nowhere to go but up. This generates a bit of “ice rubble,” and then a crack is induced in the ice, as the sheet simply breaks at that point under its own weight. 

The ice can then flow beneath the bridge in neat, rectangular sheets.

Also, to give you an idea of scale, those piers are 250 meters apart. So those ice floes are massive: You could lay the length of nearly two and a half football fields across their width.

Via Kottke

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Today's Urban Design Observation: Minimally-Connected Scaffolding Levelers

We think of sidewalks as level, until the first time you drop something round or cylindrical and watch it roll towards the curb. Sidewalks are of course graded to send rainwater into the gutters. Just how sharply they are graded can be seen anywhere there is scaffolding. Look at the height difference between these two parallel uprights, which by necessity must have level bases.

The base of the outermost uprights are always, at least in New York, raised up on a stack of 2×12 Douglas Fir cut-offs.

The cut-offs are toe-nailed together.

Here you can see a couple of nails are driven in the usual manner through holes in the base of the upright, and then the clinched nail technique is employed.

You might think that’s not a very secure way to hold a scaffold upright in place. But in fact, the nails are not there to hold the uprights in place. They are there to prevent the 2×12 cut-offs from sliding around.

The weight of the scaffold, which consists of many members, is such that simple gravity will hold it securely in place. The cross-members prevent racking. It reminds me of those Chinese earthquake-proof temples, where the uprights are not even fastened to the stone pilings they rest on.

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Link About It: The Flying Car from Airbus, Make its First Flight

The Flying Car from Airbus, Make its First Flight


For 53 seconds an autonomous air taxi rose up and hovered at roughly 16 feet above ground. It was a milestone moment in the race to develop and release an un-piloted flying car. The video was filmed in late January and documents Airbus’ Vahana vehicle……

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Link About It: Iridescent Paint Made from Bacteria

Iridescent Paint Made from Bacteria


In nature, color occurs in two ways, as Artsy explains: “through pigmentation, where color appears the same from every angle, or structural color, where color changes according to interactions with light.” However, a new study exploring which genes……

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Jay Osgerby selects 14 designers to create installations for Collect Open craft exhibition

Jay Osgerby has curated 14 designers working with craft to present “thought-provoking” installations based on timely issues for this year’s Collect Open exhibition.

The Collect Open installations are on show as part of the wider international Collect art fair, which is returning to London’s Saatchi Gallery for its 14th edition this year.

While the art fair as a whole showcases “museum-quality” contemporary craft works from around the world, Collect Open focuses on individual makers.

Each of the 14 makers from across the UK have made new works specifically for the fair and are being exhibited there for the first time.

“Collect every year gives us an insight into international craft culture, and for me, Collect Open is one of the most dynamic parts of the fair,” said Osgerby.

“This year I’m pleased to have been part of the team that has chosen the 12 makers and works for 2018, I hope that it’ll prove to be one of the most thought-provoking selections yet.”

Following on from last year’s selector Faye Toogood, Osgerby – from design duo Barber & Osgerby – has chosen the 14 exhibiting artists this year, along with the Crafts Council’s head of exhibitions and collections Annabelle Campbell, and project curator Julia Ravenscroft.

“We look for conceptually strong ideas which show a clear vision and skill in making,” said Ravenscroft. “I am struck this year by the seriousness of some of the themes that have inspired the works. The pollution of our seas, scarcity of clean water, child welfare and the environment are just some of the ideas explored.”

Collect is open to the public from the 22 until 25 February 2018 at the Saatchi Gallery in London’s Sloane Square.

Read on for more information about the 14 works on show.


Jay Osgerby selects 14 craftmakers to present at Saatchi's Collect Open show

Harvest by Mella Shaw

Documentary-maker-turned-ceramic artist Mella Shaw combines traditional and digital techniques to make objects and site-specific installations from clay – digitally applying patterns to her objects’ surfaces before firing.

Her Harvest installation is made up of hundreds of handmade, smoke-fired ceramic fish, and ceramic versions of plastic containers – representing the impact of plastic pollution on our oceans and its inhabitants.


Jay Osgerby selects 14 craftmakers to present at Saatchi's Collect Open show

Numen by OMA Space

Seoul-based textile studio OMA Space has created a large-scale tapestry installation called Numen – named after the divine energy believed to animate individual objects.

Made from a mixture of handwoven silk, wool, cotton, and hemp, the floating textiles represent the cycle of nature, from birth to death.


Jay Osgerby selects 14 craftmakers to present at Saatchi's Collect Open show

Aquatopia by Katrin Spranger

Conceptual jewellery artist and metalsmith Katrin Spranger incorporates natural materials in her work that are in danger of depletion, like crude oil, honey and water, to comment on consumption and the scarcity of resources.

Aquatopia is comprised of a collection of objects associated with water, whose shapes are inspired by piping and plumbing parts made from copper and glass. The pieces also experiment with the use of limescale.


Jay Osgerby selects 14 craftmakers to present at Saatchi's Collect Open show

Fallen Women by Alison Lowry

Northern Ireland-based glass artist Alison Lowry draws on her background in textiles to create fabric-like sculptures in glass, using the pâte de verre, or “glass paste”, technique, which sees her combine finely crushed glass with a binding agent, to then cast the mixture in a kiln, where it is fused into a solid form.

Her Fallen Woman installation uses this method to commemorate the women that were confined in Ireland’s Magdalene Laundries – Roman Catholic institutions of confinement – where around 30,000 women were imprisoned between the late-19th and 20th centuries.


Jay Osgerby selects 14 craftmakers to present at Saatchi's Collect Open show

A Circle of Porcelain by Sue Paraskeva

Once a maker of functional objects and tableware, Porcelain-worker Sue Paraskeva now creates sculptural installations and performances in a bid to explore the potential of porcelain in communicating meaning.

For Collect Open, Paraskeva has produced a circular installation of 300 thrown vessels, linked with silver wire. The dimensions of the vessels match the weight and measurements of the average human body and have been deliberately damaged in some way to represent the vulnerability of the human condition, while their circular grouping suggests collective strength.


Jay Osgerby selects 14 craftmakers to present at Saatchi's Collect Open show

Ersilia by Hannah Robson

Using a combination of loom-weaving and lace-making, RCA graduate Hannah Robson has woven three-dimensional textile structures for her Ersilia installation, inspired by Italian writer Italo Calvino’s story.

The story writes of a city where dwellers would stretch strings from the corners of their houses to establish relationships, in colours corresponding to the type of relationship. When there were so many strings that people could no longer get past them, the inhabitants left, the houses were dismantled, and only the strings would remain.


Jay Osgerby selects 14 craftmakers to present at Saatchi's Collect Open show

Elements by Jilly Edwards

Bristol-based tapestry weaver Jilly Edwards has documented the emotions she experienced on a weekly basis for a year in a tapestry, representing them in different colours and textures within 13 sections, each depicting a four-week period.


Jay Osgerby selects 14 craftmakers to present at Saatchi's Collect Open show

What Lies Beneath by Jan Hendzel Studio

Jan Hendzel is exhibiting a collection of furniture and vessels for Collect Open, which has been made using both digital techniques and traditional woodworking methods to explore “what lies beneath” the materials.


Table by Juliette Bigley

Classical musician-turned-metalsmith Juliette Bigley created 20 unique tabletop vessels including a wine bottle, a jug, and water glasses, crafted from a mixture of patinated copper, brass, nickel silver and silver.

Her Table installation takes its cues from the idea of domestic ritual, emulating a table at the completion of a meal, when eating is over but the “ritual communion of dining” continues.


Jay Osgerby selects 14 designers to create installations for Collect Open craft exhibition

The Value of Making by Emily Jo Gibbs

Textile artist Emily Jo Gibbs is presenting a new body of portrait work for Collect Open. Rather than her usual silk organza hand-stitched portraits and still life compositions, she will be depicting various making disciplines through to-scale representations of tools to comment on the social and cultural importance of craft.


Jay Osgerby selects 14 craftmakers to present at Saatchi's Collect Open show

The Between by Forest + Found

East London design duo Max Bainbridge and Abigail Booth from Forest + Found use wood, natural pigments, and textiles to create sculptural works, such as standing vessels and pots.

Using traditional, physically demanding methods such as dyeing, scorching and carving, their installation The Between explores the way humans interact with the made object.


Jay Osgerby selects 14 craftmakers to present at Saatchi's Collect Open show

Tapestry by Eva Rothschild and West Dean Tapestry Studio

Winner of West Dean Tapestry Studio’s first ever open call commission, Irish sculptor Eva Rothschild was selected from 150 artists who submitted a design or concept to be hand woven by the studio’s weavers in early 2017.

Their Collect Open installation saw Rothschild work with tapestry for the first time, incorporating some of the geometric designs and colours from her What the Eye Wants project into the 1.4 x 2.6-metre tapestry.


Jay Osgerby selects 14 craftmakers to present at Saatchi's Collect Open show

Hortus Conclusus by Donna Brennan

London-based fine art jeweller and photographer Donna Brennan has created a series of wearable sculptural art pieces from a mixture of minerals, stones, gold, bronze and silver.

Taking its name from the Latin term for “enclosed garden,” Hortus Conclusus is presented against a backdrop of dye-sublimation floral images printed on aluminium. Brennan extracts parts of these images and incorporates them into her objects, referencing “shakkei” – a Japanese term meaning “borrowed scenery.”


Jay Osgerby selects 14 craftmakers to present at Saatchi's Collect Open show

Pipeline by Alison Cooke

Pipeline by London-based ceramic artist Alison Cooke pays tribute to ceramicist Henry Doulton and engineer Joseph Bazalgette who built London’s Victorian sewer system. The work uses clay excavated from the construction of London’s new supersewer, referencing both historic and future design.

The post Jay Osgerby selects 14 designers to create installations for Collect Open craft exhibition appeared first on Dezeen.

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