000 | 06974 a2200157 4500 | ||
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020 | _a9780128192443 | ||
082 |
_a620.11 _bPED |
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100 | _aPedgley, Owain & Others Eds. | ||
245 | _aMaterials experience 2 : expanding territories of materials and design | ||
260 |
_aCambridge _bElsevier _c2021 |
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300 | _axxiv,304p. | ||
505 | _aContents List of Contributors xi Biographies xv Foreword xix Preface xxiii Chapter 1. Expanding territories of materials and design 1 Owain Pedgley, Valentina Rognoli and Elvin Karana 1.1 Introduction 1 1.2 Expanding territories 4 1.3 Where next? 10 References 10 Chapter 2. How new materials speak: analyzing the language of emerging materials in architecture 13 Blaine Brownell 2.1 Introduction 13 2.2 Emerging materials 15 2.3 The language of materials 16 2.4 Establishing a dialog 18 2.5 Common materials, uncommon applications 21 2.6 Uncommon materials, common applications 23 2.7 Uncommon materials, uncommon applications 25 2.8 Advancing material linguistics 27 References 30 Chapter 3. Experiential craft: knowing through analog and digital materials experience 33 Nithikul Nimkulrat 3.1 Introduction: crafting with analog and digital materials 33 3.2 Three concepts of materials experience: materialness, material-driven design, and material agency 34 3.3 Handcrafting through digital tools 37 3.4 Material engagement in digital fabrication 39 3.5 Gestural crafting in virtual reality 43 3.6 Translational craft: when digital meets analog materials experience 44 3.7 Discussion: knowing through analog and digital materials experience 47 Acknowledgments 50 References 51 Chapter 4. Digital crafting: a new frontier for material design 53 Manuel Kretzer 4.1 Introduction 53 4.2 A brief history of digital design and fabrication 55 4.3 The digital continuum 56 4.4 Individual production 58 4.5 Toward a new esthetics 59 4.6 Digital crafting in educational practice 61 Acknowledgments 65 References 65 Chapter 5. Surface texture as a designed material-product attribute 67 Bahar Sener and Owain Pedgley 5.1 Introduction 67 5.2 Texture interpretations 68 5.3 Visual versus tactile texture 70 5.4 Micro- versus macro-texture 73 5.5 Inherent texture versus texturization 74 5.6 Surface texture roadmap 76 5.7 Functional texture 76 5.8 Discussion and conclusions 81 5.9 Conclusion 84 Acknowledgments 84 References 85 Chapter 6. Material change: transforming experience 89 Debra Lilley and Ben Bridgens 6.1 Introduction 89 6.2 The interaction of material change and material experience 91 6.3 Material change as a design strategy 98 6.4 Conclusion 100 References 101 Around The Corner: Recent and Ongoing Projects in Materials and Design Project 1. Design touch matters: bending and stretching the potentials of smart material composites 105 Bahareh Barati Project 2. Design for hybrid material systems: a material augmentation framework for meaningful experiences 111 Stefano Parisi Project 3. An investigation of the esthetics and technologies of photochromic textiles 117 Dilusha Rajapakse Project 4. Reflective weaving practice in smart textile material development process 123 Emmi Anna Maria Pouta and Jussi Ville Mikkonen Project 5. Sound as a project requirement: evolution of an experimental tool for psychoacoustic evaluation of materials in architecture and design 127 Doriana Dal Palu Project 6. Animated puppet skin design: material narratives in visually experienced objects 131 Vincenzo Maselli Project 7. Material visualization and perception in virtual environments 135 Mutian Niu Project 8. End-of-life care through design: visualizing places of death 141 Michelle Knox Project 9. Material experiences of menstruation through symbiotic technologies 147 Marie Louise Juul Sqndergaard, Ozgun Kilic Afsar and Madeline Balaam Project 10. The salt material house project: designing for death 153 SunMin May Hwang Project 11. Reflecting on material interactions as a way of being with the world 159 Bilge Merve Aktas and Camilla Groth Project 12. Beyond biomimicry: developing a living building realm for a postanthropocene era 163 Assia Stefanova Project 13. Healing materialities from a biodesign perspective 167 Barbara Pollini Project 14. Demonstrating a material making process through the cultivation of fungal growth 171 Dilan Ozkan Project 15. Malfunction, maintenance, and materials 175 Alexandra Karakas Project 16. Open-Ended Design: how to intentionally support change by designing with imperfection 179 Francesca Ostuzzi Project 17. Material information platform for designing environmentally friendly products 183 Indji Selim Project 18. Material education in design: engaging material experimentation and speculation 189 Ziyu Zhou Chapter 7. A renewed recognition of the materiality of design in a circular economy: the case of bio-based plastics 193 Conny Bakker and Ruud Balkenende 7.1 Introduction 193 7.2 Bio-based and biodegradable plastics: a short review 194 7.3 Circular economy 198 7.4 Designing with bio-based polymers in a circular economy: opportunities and challenges 203 7.5 Conclusion 204 References 205 Chapter 8. Biotextiles: making textiles in a context of climate and biodiversity emergency 207 Carole Collet 8.1 Introduction 207 8.2 Textile material innovation in an environmental crisis context 208 8.3 Textile innovation in the context of the emergence of biodesign 212 8.4 Strategies for designing textiles with living systems 214 8.5 Conclusion 224 References 224 Chapter 9. Defining the DIY-Materials approach 227 Valentina Rognoli and Camilo Ayala-Garcia 9.1 The DIY-Materials phenomenon 228 9.2 DIY-Materials: theoretical foundations 230 9.3 DIY-Materials cases: collection and classification 235 9.4 DIY-Materials classification: the five kingdoms 238 9.5 Interrelationships between kingdoms and their updated definition 251 Acknowledgments 254 References 254 Chapter 10. Design and science: a pathway for material design 259 Carla Langella 10.1 Intersections between design and science 259 10.2 Divergences and convergences 261 10.3 The evolution of the relationship between design and materials science 264 10.4 The new material experience generated by the intersection between design and science 268 10.5 Conclusion 275 Acknowledgments 275 References 276 Chapter 11. Materialdesign: design with designed materials 279 Markus Holzbach 11.1 Introduction 279 11.2 Design with designed materials 280 11.3 Sensitive properties 281 11.4 Informed materials 282 11.5 Institute for Materialdesign IMD case studies 283 11.6 Hybrid—material, properties, …, communication 293 11.7 Nomenclature_Interdependence and In-Between 295 11.8 Outlook 296 References 297 Index 299 | ||
890 | _aUSA | ||
891 | _aFA | ||
942 | _2ddc | ||
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_c71142 _d71142 |
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650 |
_aUrban policy _aProduct Design |
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650 | _aFurniture design | ||
650 | _aDesign |