Ganesh Iyer

SAFE AND EFFICIENT (Main set)
Contrast of Space: Minimal foreground elements
Shape of form: Square 1×1″ and Rectangle 1×2″
Orientation of Forms: 90 degrees ALWAYS
Size of Forms: small; varies between 1×1″ and 1×2″
Placement of Form: central; either a square or an axis
Space between Forms : thickness of 2 canford card papers stuck together
Unit Form: Foreground: Square, Background: thickness of 2 canford squares

Objective Rule #1: Balance is along vertical and horizontal axis
Objective Rule #2: Any emphasis has strong gravity towards the rest of the body and is temporary

What did you interpret to apply the rules?
I interpreted safe and efficient as reliable and predictable. The angles are safe, deviations are minimal yet unambiguously effective. The overall personality of safe and efficient I had perceived to be more on the conservative side.

Explain your process.
I stuck two canford squares together to create a thickness element. This I used as an instrument to decide the unit spacing. Why I wanted the spacing to be small is to be able to unambigiously show the various elements of balance, hierarchy, rhythm and emphasis using the smallest possible (efficient) spacing. This made the elements tighter. To show emphasis, I used the notion of white space and this was a multiple of the unit thickness. So I cut out more sheets of canford paper and stuck them to create a multiple of the width. I had also cut out an L shape so that I can consistently be able to place a square at the center of the canvas.

WHIMSICAL AND DELICATE
Contrast of Space: Minimal foreground elements
Shape of Forms: Square 1×1″ and Rectangles 1×2″, 1×3″
Orientation of Forms: A fixed small angle decide flimsiness of cohesion
Size of Forms: small; varies between 1×1″ and 1×3″
Placement of Form: mostly central; either a square, rectangle or an axis
Space between Forms : The small angle and its positioning decided the space between the forms
Unit Form: Foreground: Squares and Rectangles Background: the fixed small angle

Objective Rule #1: Balance is along the spine of the body.
Objective Rule #2: Indicate the start of an unravelling or collapse with an indication of what the form could have been if it stayed completely stable.

What did you interpret to apply your rules?
An intentional chink the armor of stability is how I had interpreted Whimsical and Delicate. Showing a small angle as opposed to placing forms in parallel was enough to indicate a deviation from stability and this also gave a curvature to the overall form creating an appearance of whim and mysticism. What held the forms together despite the breakdown in stability was the existence of a ‘spine’.

Explain your process.
For the small angle, I cut out a triangle with a very small angle and repeatedly used that as the fixed unit form to decide the spacing between the squares. I also made variations in where the corners and the edges were attached to balance the overall composition.

FIERCE AND DYNAMIC
Contrast of Space : Angular white space
Shape of Forms: Jagged, connected forms created by rectangles and squares
Orientation of Forms: 90 degrees to each other; variations of 45 degrees to the canvas
Size of Forms: Variable – to create variations in white space too
Placement of Form: Off-centered
Space between Forms: Variable – to create variations in white space too
Unit Form: Foreground: Squares and Rectangles Background: 45 degree angles

Objective Rule #1: Using background white space to create balance with an off-center body
Objective Rule #2: Create interesting diagonal white space forms using minimal foreground elements

What did you interpret to apply your rules?
Using a single foreground element and studying the white space immediately next to it helped in the conception of a lot of ideas and the overall alignment of that foreground element was also used to make sure that the compositions in this set go together. The white space next to this foreground element was angular and had opposite orientations, so this white space was also used to convey rhythm, hierarchy wherever necessary.

Explain your process.
The angular white space was a guiding element to help organize the compositions. It helped me perceive rhythm in not just spatial formats but also conceptual as the rhythm that my composition deals with is the rhythm of aggregation in white space. In one composition (balance with 3 forms and using space), I adjusted the white space (or a concept of it) to create an impression of the existence of the form in the Z-axis.

Gestalt Principles and Affordances on WSJ.com

Gestalt in the News

Analysis of rules seen in the front-page of www.wsj.com (The Wall Street Journal)

Rule #1 – Headings
Consistent formatting helps show what kind of text something is – tab, article title, body, or subsection header. The tabs are indicated by sans serif font (Whitney SSM or Arial), a slightly heavier weight font, small size, black. The titles of articles are indicated by serif font (Chronic Display or Georgia), bold, larger size, black. The body text of articles is serif font (Chronicle SSM or Georgia), regular font weight, small size, black. The subsection/topic headers are sans serif font (Whitney SSM or Helvetica), small caps, of various colors, but all colors have similar value.

Rule #2 – Borders
Borders divide up the page, and the border thickness and color denote how “deep” this divide is. Between completely different sections such as between the tabs and the content, there is a strong black thick border. Between different articles in the same section, there is a pale thin gray border.

Rule #3 – “Read More” Arrow
There is a “right arrow” for each section to read more. This rule is somewhat inconsistently applied. For the “Opinion” section this arrow is at the top to the right of the section title, and is close enough to the section title to be associated with the section title. The “Markets” section has its arrow at the bottom with an additional smaller “MARKETS” label. The “What’s News” has it at the top, but this header bar is so wide that the arrow all the way to the right is so far away from the “What’s News” at the left that in my mind they are not clearly associated.

Rule #4 – Data Visualizations
Data visualizations use a consistent shade of blue for the graphs. The text is gray sans serif.

Rule #5 – 12 Column Grid
The page appears to be laid out on a 12 column grid. In its widest layout, the four columns on the page are, from left to right, width 3, width 4, width 2, width 3.

Rule #6 – Image Aspect Ratio
The image aspect ratio is usually the same for images. This helps gives rhythm rather than chaos to the webpage, which is crowded with text and images.

*Gestalt Principles in play*

Contrast:
The WSJ website uses a reverse-contrast to distinguish between static content on the site (black foreground on white background) and the dynamic content represented by the stock ticker at the top (white foreground on black background). This according to us is a very good use of contrast as it in terms of scale (thin strip compared to the rest of the site), it creates a different context of lower relative emphasis.

Emphasis:

There are a few different ways the WSJ hompage communicates emphasis. The first one is through space. Note that the headings for each subsection of the paper are not much bigger than the rest of the text on the page. The way they stand out is that their entire right side is cleared, giving that word notable prominence, as nothing is on its same level, vertically, until you get to the next section. Another (more obvious) way is font size, as demonstrated by the top left headline. A third way is the use of center alignment for Opinion articles. Everything else is right-aligned, and the disruption of the rhythm created by this alignment is what sets off the section as important.

Balance:

We noticed some imbalance in WSJ.com’s header. The designers seem to have placed all the “extras” in the header on the right side, with nothing on the left to balance it. Subscribe and Sign In links are there, along with a red 50% OFF indicator.

Harmony:

All of the images in WSJ’s layout seem to be of the same 1.5 aspect ratio, despite their varying sizes. This adds a sense of consistency throughout. Also, they tend to use a consistent accent color (a mid-blue) seen in mouse-over transitions and in the Market section’s line graph.

Rhythm:

As I mentioned above, left justification is used almost exclusively throughout. There also seems to be consistent horizontal space between columns and consistent vertical space between vertical elements. As the eye travels down the page, one can see which articles are related through alignment of photos and text, such as the strategy employed with stacked boxes in the business section containing right-aligned photos of the same size surrounded by left-aligned text

Other Case Studies

In getting away from traditional new outlets, we wanted to consider NPR.org, whose news is generally disseminated in audio format, with text being secondary. This website is much simpler than WSJ.com, and after a menu on top, takes advantage of a pattern called “cards” to create a nice sense of rhythm. Each card is the same width with the same amount of space between itself and the next one. Each card is labeled with a category, and most feature a headline, a picture, and a button that allows the user to listen to a story. The type treatment is consistent across roles, so without reading the text, you know what information it’s going to tell you.

Another news website that our group studied which is quite unconventional in terms of visual representation was Slate (www.slate.com). Slate again used reverse contrast but this time, augmented it with scale to add emphasis to the most important article on the front page. To indicate difference in context of the link to the Facebook page as well as the request to disable the Ad Blocker (both of which are lower in hierarchy compared to the main news content), Slate glued thin strips of reverse contrast to the top and bottom of the page. As you scroll down further, there is a clear shift in weight to the top right as the heavy Slate logo stays glued to the top right of the page. This, we thought was an excellent manipulation of balance as users can find the menu and the search option on this ‘heavy’ block.

Al Jazeera, as we studied also had some interesting variations on contrast, emphasis and overall balance across its American, English and Arabic versions. The American version had a visual identity that was quite distant from its English and Arabic counterparts and used scale to indicate hierarchical difference in menu, space to indicate emphasis of the titles and contrast to indicate selected menu item. The English and Arabic version, while more similar at a glance, had some differences in the way they used balance and contrast. The English website was a more Left-to-Right oriented website with the emphatic elements predominantly on the left while the Arabic version followed the opposite trend. However, while the live news update was reverse contrasted, it stayed on the left side of the screen for both versions.

The Guatemalan newspaper Prensa Libre appears well-balanced at the top of the web page, but the design rules do not stay consistent as one scrolls down. In the header, the wide white side bars, use of free space and symmetrical layout create a feeling of balance. The distinctive brush-like font used for “Prensa Libre” contrasts dramatically with the Palatino/ Arial font of the rest of the page. The consistency of the font types, blue/gray colors and balanced arrangement create a sense of harmony. The main content is arranged in three columns of unequal width, with some emphasis given to the headline photo on the upper-left that takes up two columns, and greater emphasis given to the column on the right which is slightly wider than the rest and demarcated with a red line and small red clock symbols highlighting the latest news updates. Since the rest of the text and formatting lines are blue, black or gray, the red contrasts dramatically. The red clock symbols match the one in the drop-down menu, creating a clear consistency. On the other side of the page, the upper-left corner is grounded by a large black box with a simple white outline of a house; our eye is clearly drawn to the homepage link. As we scroll down the page, we see a balanced rhythm of column layout alternating image/ text/ image / text. However, as we scroll further down the page, we hit a shadowed line break where the “headlining news” ends and the “Mas noticias” and “Editorial” sections begin. The right column drops out and the other columns do not realign; instead, we are left with a glaring white space which feels unbalanced. For the first time, we have a left-aligned column of bullet points. The inconsistency is startling – I suppose that it is effective in making us feel like we have moved into another section of the paper.. At the bottom of the page, we hit another shadowed line break and the layout shifts entirely for the “Opinion” section; now we have four equal columns with titles that are center-aligned. If we were to study the “Opinion” section in isolation it would appear well-balanced, but the dramatic shifts in layout between sections destroys the overall harmonicity of the page.

Unexpected Object – Private Diary

Typical Associations: Privacy, emotional release, teenage troubles, one-person reader-writer universe, confidante.

This idea was inspired from a Sting song ‘ Fortress Around Your Heart’ where in the chorus he mentions that in order to protect his lover he builds a fortified security where he almost keeps her prisoner, only to later find that he has to watch his step to reach her. The idea extended naturally to diaries where we can get irrationally overprotective of what we write and vent out. However, in the day and age of Facebook, did our venting of our emotions through paper stop? Did we stop musing to ourselves and search for an audience instead? This shift in behavior intrigued me in the context of the diary where something extremely private is holding information that unbeknownst to most of us is visible to a lot of watching agents. The visual cues from the diary gave my test audience the impression that it was adolescent, even feminine; the button loop emphasizing the protection. While most of us would still keep our crushes confined in the scrim of pages in a diary, I thought it would be interesting to not repurpose my chosen object but to highlight a behavior that we have already moved on from a while ago.

Another idea that I was toying around with was to stick all the pages of the diary together, as a direct extension of Sting’s song. However, I thought the idea of Facebook was more multi-layered and made a stronger statement.

New associations: vulnerable, violation of privacy, lack of trust

Gestalt Assignment – Ganesh

Fierce and Dynamic:
Burning
Fiery
Mob
Momentum
Big cities
Underwater
Speed
Childhood
Attack
Universe

Whimsical and Delicate:
Wispy
Unanticipated
Layered
Subtle
Incense
Erratic
Passive-aggressive
Ghostly
Mirage
Fleeting

Safe and Efficient:
Mathematical
German
Clean
Poignant
Routine
Default
Vector
Two-birds-one-stone
Obvious
Anchor

IAWorkshop2016: DIBS (Iyer, Lasa, Nazar)

Mood Board can be found here: https://www.pinterest.com/carlooos/interface-aesthetics-ideo-workshop-mood-board/

> Who is your product made for?

Our product is made for someone who has newly moved in town, especially to a university town where there is no shortage of people selling stuff.

> What’s the existing problem? What’s the need of the user?

The existing problem is that there is a deluge of people selling stuff as well as an unseen queue of people lining up to buy these things. Existing solutions like Facebook groups (Free and For Sale) which are a lot more clearer and more trustworthy than Craigslist are still difficult to navigate through and it is impossible to understand if you have any chance of obtaining a product despite your reaching out to the buyer.

> How does your design solve for it?

Our design creates a dibs system that manages queues of users for a particular product. A user can call dibs on any product if she’s first in line but can get dibs if another user ahead of line drops out due to various reasons; some of which are through our system itself. We have a limit of three dibs per user so that the dibs actually translate to buys and do not obstruct other users.

> Walk us through the design flow.

The user sees a list of products on a mobile app and the interaction at the first layer is to call dibs or stand in queue with the availability of other meta information like distance from the buyer and the Amazon rating of the product being sold. Once the user calls dibs, she is prompted to talk to the buyer. But she can still browse through the rest of the list and call dibs on other products that she likes. In case she is not first in line for a product on sale, she can opt to stand in line. For such products the information at the first layer shows her, her chances of getting the product which is based on the anonymous usage patterns of those ahead of her in the queue, in the same way that her buying patterns would be used to decide the probabilities for those after her in the queue.

> How do you want users to feel when they use your product?

We wanted the users to think of this product as a quirky extension of Craigslist and hence, we went with a color scheme that reflects this mentality. We also wanted the browsing to be uninterrupted and the calling of dibs to be choosy and our main intention was to plot at the intersection of these feelings. This decided how we designed the navigation patterns for the application.

Ganesh Iyer

I was actually looking forward to this experience as the build-up to it involved people telling me that vinegar would taste different. Vinegar is too evil to change, I thought. Whether I’m proven wrong or right, I would have been rejoicing for my taste buds or my ego respectively.

Despite my skepticism in miracle berries transforming vinegar, I still overestimated the ‘miracle’ tag to change flavors for all foods which led me to clutching at a flavor different from what my taste buds were already telling me. Only after a few food trials did I learn to not just accept the change but to also accept that some things like peanut butter wouldn’t change. Which meant that my nemesis could still win.

But it didn’t. After the berry, vinegar tasted like a sour apple drink (like the cheap, guilty pleasure ones you get in Indian shops) and I still have no idea where the apple flavor came from. Maybe taste is just as varied as color; if you manipulate the light in which you see them, you can trick your receptors into seeing a different color, like an optical illusion. Even if the facts are clear, you can’t help but be awed at this momentary change in character. I must also note that the change in perception did not consistently overwhelm me for all the foods that I had tried, but it changed vinegar enough for me to have 3 more shots of it.

Despite my pleasant surprise, I would be apprehensive of living in a world where jalapenos had just raw heat and no flavor, bananas had only texture and fresh cherry tomatoes taste like rotten cherry tomatoes. A surprise is good in short bursts but if its sustained over a period of time, I’d feel an overkill and lose interest. If foods did taste differently for a whole year, I feel those 12 months won’t be enough to recalibrate associations that are upto a decade long.

Surprises at an increasing frequency would certainly make me a more curious person than I already am, however it would also make me lose some of my identity that my anticipations and beliefs constitute. I believe there is a frequency sweet spot beyond which you knowingly predict an outcome different from what you know. Sameness in that case becomes the surprise.

Ganesh Iyer

Part 1 – What does this object mean to you?
While I was familiar with the idea of music boxes, the first time I saw a transparent one with the comb and the rotating cylinders, it took my breath away in the same way that studying about harmonicas did. Only this was visual and hence, it reserved a permanent spot in my memory. Right then in that shop in Salzburg, after stopping by to buy souvenirs, I bought my first music boxes (three of them – Fur Elise, Zauberflöte, Swan Lake) as gifts for my family and friends. Time away from my family saw all three of them lost somewhere in the scrim of time and I felt like I lost three friends in whose company I felt transparent.

Part 3 –
1. What if we looked at all objects,people,thoughts, and things in the world this way?
Sometimes an experience would hit multiple notes of a person at once. How does that person sound? Would losing a note make that person sound better? What if different music sheets crossed paths? Through our will we can alter and practise our response to certain kind of events in life while being completely unprepared for most and maybe an incoming experience can be overwhelming enough to alter the way we respond to life from thereon. Maybe we stop ringing the discordant notes that we’re born or brainwashed with. Thinking in this way even took me back to some of the times where I felt painfully low and I continue to see them in a better light and as making me a stronger person. This perception also holds good for those who believe in a divine plan and those who don’t.

2. When would we need to look at the world this way?
All the time. Not every life experience was, is and will be a pleasant one. Constantly tuning and improving ourselves pushes us to be ready for what will come our way. It also lends credence to a vast diversity in how other people are tuned. Not everyone is made or develops the same way. If we embrace that fact, we might learn to accept that we may not be tuned well enough for an incoming experience and need someone different than us to make the right chord together.

3. Has the meaning of this object changed?
Very much so. Playing it at a patiently slow speed revealed that not all protrusions on the cylinder are weighted the same. There were so many other aspects of the music box that were structurally important like the shape of the chassis and the screws, and while they don’t directly make the sound, they hold the music box together and lend the sound its unique resonance. Being patient with another person or thought might lend us the same depth of insight. The music box has now become a friend with important lessons for life.

Bonus:
Fur Elise: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uIrlTpl1uJY
Zauberflöte: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=issHDXCNriY
Swan Lake: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ze5lbFMwAnM