Archive for the ‘In the air - current affair’ Category

Ontario Province Elections

Wednesday, October 10th, 2007

It’s the Ontario general election day today and the air is electric with excitement. People are voting to elect members of the Legislative Assembly (Members of Provincial Parliament, or MPPs) of the Province of Ontario, Canada.

It’s interesting to see what elections in Toronto mean. What is it that the candidates promise to the public?

Health Care is turning out to be a huge issue in Canada with people complaining about wait times in hospitals and the fact that each citizen does not have a family doctor. It astounds me as I compare this to India where certain places, especially in the Himalayas, don’t have even 1 doctor for miles and miles.

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Clockwise from top left: Liberal Leader Dalton McGuinty, Progressive Conservative Leader John Tory, Green Party Leader Frank De Jong and NDP Leader Howard Hampton.

What I did notice is that in 1 month of living in Toronto, the manifesto of each candidate is very clear to me. That is something that did not happen in 20 years of my life in India. In India, elections meant (more…)

Nuit Blanche 2007

Sunday, September 30th, 2007

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A Bad Day For Limousines

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Nuit Blanche - White Night is an annual art and design festival in Toronto and it was held on the streets of downtown T last night. Roads were cleared of traffic and it was OUT there. SO many people were out on the roads, a novelty for Canadians and commonplace for an Indian!

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(Photo by WordFreak on www.Flickr.com . You can see Ricky and me talking to the corseted girl)

Here are some of the things I did -

Walking in a Red Light Area that had been created by some artists. The entry was very morbid as my friend Ricky and I saw a girl walking around in a bridal dress with a goat’s carcass. The carcass was complete with head and hooves and tail. It was skinned. She was holding it in her arms and caressing it, then raising it over her head as the internal organs of the goat threatened to collapse over her head. Next we saw she was playing with its intestines. (more…)

Review of OSIANs cinefest and the films screened

Sunday, July 29th, 2007

untitled-1.jpgPicture taken from www.Osians.com

Attended half of OSIANs film festival, from the 20th to 25th of July. I would wake up and really get cranky about procuring food. I had nothing to do and no will to work, having just finished my internship. The only highlight in the day was the time spent in Audi 1, 2, 3 or 4 at Siri fort in the darkness catching movies. Soon I was craving for AC, fridge and Mummy and I hit home in Chandigarh after half the film festival was over.
It was good to watch the thin Neville Tully around the festival with his light cotton, well ironed clothes and the characteristic loop in his posture.

I caught the following films-
Curiosity killed the Cat
Dor
Fourteen
Tender is the Wolf
Driving to ZigZigland
Where to
Vanaja
Frozen
Mr and Mrs 55
Cafe Lumiere

If you watched any of these films do give your opinion on it as a comment on this blog.
Some films had a very strong plot that kept the viewer glued to his seat while others seemed like drifters with a surrealistic touch. I am a fan of strong plots and films that are too abstract lose my attention.

Vanaja (Telegu), Frozen (Shot in Ladakh), Dor and Mr and Mrs.55 (Guru Dutt) were the Indian movies I watched.
Vanaja is the story of a fisherman’s 15 year old daughter and how she tries to climb up in life. She works at an influential woman’s house as domestic help and wins a bet against her mistress to learn classical dance from her. Vanaja is at the verge of womanhood. Its crazy how certain scenes titillate you without any skin show. Its mind twisting. A simple story otherwise, very interesting to watch with lots of Andhra Pradesh landscape and lifestyle to observe.
Frozen has very very very beautiful shots. Its all in black and white. The snow, the glare of the sun in frozen Ladakh, the wolf like dogs make it a beautiful calender. No story. No fun.
Mr and Mrs 55. Fat and happy and beautiful Madhubala. Guru Dutt in a lighter mood and Johnny Walker flirting with Ms Julie by singing songs with her while crawling under office desks. Loved the movie.
Dor - a Nagesh Kukunoor movie with Ayesha Takia, Gul PAnag and Shreyas Talpade. Strong story. Beautiful shots. Great film in too many aspects to point out.

Fourteen was about crazy adolescents in Japan. It was also about adults coming to terms with the craziness of their own childhoods. Didn’t identify with it as we Indians are still a sane lot in our teenage lives except for the occasional young guy who features on reality shows like Deewanagi.
Cafe Lumiere - another Japanese movie. Boring. Japanese movies are non-noisy non-pushy like Japanese people themselves. They pause. One scene was shot with a girl bending and putting on her shoe, stopping to think and finally does up her laces to sit up straight and thinking and then finally going and pulling out her cycle from the stand to pedal away. The way they make films, the way Japanese people shoot scenes and the way they give the viewer lots of room for thought is a breath of fresh air for people accustomed to racy Hollywood. Sounds are like water dripping, the sound of putting down a tea cup on the table or the short answer “Hai (yes)” to a question.

The Chinese movie Curiosity Killed the Cat is one of the movies I enjoyed the most. It is the story of betrayal and revenge. Main characters - a man, his wife and his mistress. It is all about she knows and she knows that she knows but she doesn’t let him know that she knows, he doesn’t want to let her know. The same scenes are shown again and again but each time a new angle in the story has been revealed to you so that you see it in a new light each time. Its a whodunit. Very well made film that grabs you by your eyeballs.

Tender is the wolf (Tunisian) had me cringing with its rape scene. Its about weird characters, a girl who takes revenge and even makes up with one of the men after rape, a girl with no fear and lots of spunk, a mentally sick albino, a coward who is beaten to pulp and rushed to hospital by strangers in a trash wagon. The story of the movie is made up of the happenings of one night. It is a very involving movie.

Where to - strikes a chord in the heart of anyone who longs for home. Its a 12 minute film on an immigrant taxi cab driver.
Drivingto Zigzigland is a movie made in USA but the theme is not USA. Its inclusion in OSIANs is justified by the fact that the main protagonist belongs to Jerusalem and this affects the thought-base of the movie. This man too is a taxi cab driver. Each time he tells his passengers he is from Palestine it strikes up a political debate or calls for a history lesson. So he prefers to say he is from Zigzigland and even gets away from it. The passengers are often racists - not the extreme types, but the everyday types - you and me. The film has comedy, sadness and damn! kick-the-object-closest-to-you, bang-your-fist moments. It was the best film I watched at the film festival. It was introduced by the director and cast of the movie which was an honour.

Waiting for a movie to start- Looking around - silver haired flowing tresses women with silver jewelery and exclamation mark bindis on the forehead - the gaggle of students- a woman from some country left for you to guess with a scary spice hairdo sitting in the seat in front of a short man - the old man who sang along lustily with all the songs in the Guru Dutt’s movie - the people sitting around that old man who did not have the heart to ask him to stop although they are very sensitive to the backseat chatter in a movie usually - the security guards at the door who were very sincere in their duty but a little scared lest they be stopping some high and mighty dignitary who is a chief guest for the movie screening and not to be disallowed anything - the aunty sitting in the food court handing out coupons to soggy bhelpuri - the sound of the projector running just before the video appeared on the screen - the gol gappa fellow outside making hay while the sun shone by doubling the price of his aloo tikki and papri chaat and chutney burger - the art student studying the posters and understanding the development of painting to printing techniques over the years - fearless Nadia - Lawrence of Arabia - toilets that don’t lock from inside- beautiful signage, direction pointers.

Rainy Day Fashion

Thursday, July 12th, 2007

Rain down on Me
And sweep me away
In scented winds
And scattered drops
Let them whiplash here and there
Let me look up heavenwards
Let the drops trickle down my throat
Down the collar
Into my printed windy dress
The abandon of the rain
The abandon of my colours
The abandon of my shape
No running away
No saving leather shoes
No scampering to the sheltered kerb
Only running, dashing, wildly spinning
Or walking with the calm of a ramp scorcher
Hands in my pockets,
Walking down with a haute the pouring rain cant cool

I called upon my sources (I will have to kill you if I tell you), my powers and a fashion stylist, editor and writer and here are five looks for this monsoon season. Here is telling you before the junta knows it!

1 Slouchy Sporty
In the summer the Kate Moss look was a rage. This look meant a long clingy jersey top over tights or leggings. The ensemble was completed with a belt strapped low over the jersey top. This look has changed into a less dressy version for the monsoon. Wear a large voluminous bubble-silhouette top over fitting shorts or capris. For those who can carry it off, really short shorts are in. More movement and prance in this look. Go for draping tops, ones with interesting folds and necklines.

2 Strawberry Frog
strawberry : pink, bright, candy
frog: translucent (Lookah at the veins under my throat skin), waterproof, pretty, glossy, rain-lover
Be a strawberry frog this monsoon. Have fun with colours and plastic. No subtleity. Its the only time in the year when even yellow Zens look pretty zipping down the road. Its a colour party.
Checklist >
Crocs - the toy like plastic footwear in yellow, orange, pink, green
Jelly sandals and slippers
Clear plastic raincoats
Chunky bangles
Neon colours
Bug eyes shades - pink, green, blue
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3 Bold abstract prints
Huge prints are in. Look like a splash of colour on the street. Dresses are majorly in - Shift dresses, babydoll dresses, tent dresses. Hemlines below the knee are criminal. Let your legs be happily bare and sexy. Accessorize with chunky bangles. Its all BOLD. The prints are Pucci style - abstract and dynamic made up of swirls and organic motifs. Try a parka dress - a lil conversation with the hip-hoppers.
Here are some designs by Pucci -
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4 Romantic look
A girl’s gotta feel like a girl and bless the fashion mechanism, the romantic look is back! Its simple floral, pastoral dresses this monsoon to make you feel like an innocent country lass. Keep the colours light like leaf-green for a dewy fresh feeling. Says designer Anjana Bhargava “Its all about elegance, grace and femininity. This monsoon, flaunt your femininity in calf-length skirts and dresses with frills, lace, romantic necklines and puff sleeves that look girly and chic. ”

5 Metallics
Yes. Its still going on. Watch out for metallic parkas, shimmering tops, shiny sportswear. Flash and glint under the sombre nimbus clouds. Break the dullness, thunder and opaque rain. The metallic look generally makes for rocking nightlife, but it can be incorporated in casuals by means of detailing like metallic strips, pockets, zippers. Its not the classic metallic of the mellow golden ages. Its the metallic of Techno Glam.

So don’t get bored this monsoon. Don’t weep inside your stupid raincoat for the lack of oomph and style. These are the five looks, inspiration material, green signals, imagination stimulants or simply working solutions to adopt. Last of all, a fashion tip that guarantees to transform you into a head turner - wear whites with no underwear!

Avoid
- Leather
- Ankle length skirts, pants
- Dark colours
- Socks
- Mixing looks (Strawberry frog + Metallics)

Design course and centre selection at NIFT

Monday, May 28th, 2007

View complete NIFT info at http://blog.malvikajain.com/nift-admission/

Design course and centre selection at NIFT

In 2008, NIFT offered a total of 1350 seats for the UG courses over the 7 centres of NIFT. 240 seats in Fashion Design, 60 in Leather Design, 180 in Accessory Design, 120 in Knitwear Design, 180 in Textile Design, 60 in Fashion Communication, 210 in Apparel Production (UG Tech course). For detailed information on the no. of seats in each centre look at http://niftindia.com/seats.html

The next meet after the situation test is for course selection. Everyone sits in a hall and is called one by one to an adjacent room to get his/her papers verified. This is where you also specify what stream and NIFT centre that you want.The candidates are summoned to this room in order of all India rank in the entrance exam. The first ranker goes first.

In the large hall itself, there is a screen on which the availability of seats in various courses is displayed. This gives all those people sitting an opportunity to make up their mind while they are waiting to be called. So if you dont have a good rank, have your second and third options ready. Having said that, if you perform very well in your first year at NIFT you can change your stream second year onwards. You can change our centre at the end of the first or second year.

The first year at NIFT is a common foundation programme in which the stream chosen is unimportant. Fashion Communication and Fashion Design seats get filled up first. These are the most coveted courses. The competition gets even tougher for Fashion Communication as it is offered only at Delhi and Mumbai NIFT centres.

At the orientation programme they also ask you if (more…)

NIFT situation test

Friday, May 25th, 2007

View complete NIFT info at http://blog.malvikajain.com/nift-admission/

NIFT situation test

 

A lot has changed since I joined as a clueless student with a Science background.

I remember wondering what the situation test was about. Did they throw the candidate into various situations and judge his natural reactions? Imagine a dark room with disturbing lights and distant howls. No they don’t, in case you are still wondering!
So what is a situation test? Here is letting you know about the pitch before you go out to play your innings.

If you have passed the written test for NIFT, you will now appear for the practical test – called the situation test. It is held at the various NIFT centres.
In this 3 hour test you are given a set of things like adhesive, needle, thread, plastic sheets, straws, paper, ice cream sticks and aluminum foil. Out of this material you have to make a prototype of a design. Our batch was asked to design a shopping mall. Earlier batches have been asked to make a city bus, ladies handbag, magazine stand and a police kiosk.

You also get a sheet of paper on which to write about your design. It is advisable to write in a tabular fashion pointing out a particular feature of your design in each line.

Most candidates are eager to get cracking and begin to stick and cut as soon as they get the Question paper. It is a much better idea to use the time to think, ideate and then create. The whole test is about managing space and filling it with a few appropriate elements. Leave enough time to change your plan though, if your earlier vision is not taking shape.

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Nitasha Gaurav, an ex-faculty member of NIFT and the new fashion editor at Femina, has judged the entries of the situation test innumerable times. Here is her advice to candidates:

1.
Have a proper concept
Spend time thinking and planning
Make some sketches
Don’t just start without planning
And make sure you leave your work-sheets behind

2.
Remember you are working within a time limit.
So don’t be overambitious.
It’s better to have a good idea that’s simple than a messy complication

3.
Try and use as much of the material as u can.
Use all the different types of things provided but don’t force it.

4.
When you leave, make sure all your stuff is properly placed on the table with the necessary roll number, write-up, work sheets. Throw the rubbish in a dustbin.

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One information-seeker wrote to me –

Hey,

That’s really awesome!!! I am sorry I didn’t write earlier. I had a cold and was sleeping all this week. I let my brother Vipul know about you and also directed him to your blog.

I think the basic things he wanted to know about NIFT situation test are:

1. How much time do they give for the exam and how did you manage the time?
2. How did you go about creating your shopping mall model?
3. How did you create little objects like people and other things quickly and creatively?

Hope you had a fun time in Kashmir and back to normal now.

Vividh

Answer 1: Time

They gave 3 hours. I used half the time to think and the other half to execute my idea.

Answer 2: Going about it

Here is the design procedure of the shopping mall I made.

First I thought of the overall shape and size and checked whether I
had the material for it. The main thing was that the mall should be free-standing and look very 3D.

I didn’t want to waste time making the walls. So, I simply made the wall of the mall by making a wide cylinder with the plastic sheets we were given. I could have been more innovative with the shape, of course. A cylinder, I reasoned, was quite a stable structure, not wonky or to liable to collapse.

Walls and staircase
So I started thinking of how to make all the 2D material into 3D elements. Making plastic sheets stand does not make it 3D. I used a flat plastic sheet to make a 3D winding staircase. This I did by cutting a spiral out of the sheet. I raised this spiral from the middle point to give me a dropping spiral in the way some Diwali decorations are. Then I ran a stick through this spiral so that it could stand on its own. I put in the centre of the mall. I called it an escalator though, now that I think of it, I have never
seen a winding escalator.

I did not cover the mall so that the judges could admire my spiral escalator by peeping in from above!

Floors
I made shelf like levels inside the mall to indicate floors.

The floors were divided according to what was sold on each floor.

Now how does one show the product divisions on all these floors?

I made an icon/ a symbol to represent each product type and stick it on the floor level. I drew this symbol on a 1×1 piece of plastic with a marker.

Ground floor Apparel dress symbol
First floor Sports and technology racquet and TV symbol
Second floor Food coffee cup symbol

Front Face
Then I put promotional cut outs on the front of the mall. This is called giving the mall a façade – a front face. I enjoyed sticking a piece of rectangular plastic sheet that represented the front of the mall. I used a marker to give the mall a name and further stuck cut-outs of human figures in postures of wild abandon. This was the detailing I incorporated in my design. I did not mess about making noses and eyes on the figures.

Environment
I also gave it a boundary and a car park as I thought that the judges would notice that I thought beyond the mall, about its environment too. I thought about the person who comes to the mall from the moment he parks his car. Yes, it is very important to
consider the WHOLE EXPERIENCE of the person you are designing for.
One of the ways to go about your design and also writing about it is
to imagine the experience and design at various ‘interaction points’.
For example -
The mall goer parks his car.
He enters the mall (from inside or outside?)
What does he do on entering? He looks at a mall directory/map perhaps.
Where does he want to go? He wants skates and goes to the first floor where the sale of sports goods is indicated by an icon showing a racquet.

So maybe he just ran into the mall as he wished to go to the washroom. I added signs indicating the washroom. I threw in fire exits for good measure. I made the doors as plastic flaps on the walls.

And then he goes to the car park and goes home. Anything missing?

Keep the TARGET CONSUMER in mind.
Use the word ‘target customer’ in your write up.


Something New

All these elements like escalators and floors are always found in a mall. Do you have any new idea? Something totally innovative? An idea would really score with the judges. It would be the USP of your situation test.
Lets see -
Maybe you could have a babysitting corner on the ground floor
Maybe u could have a timepass cafe on the ground floor where it says
that people are here to mix with no strings attached and no future
obligations - this is for people who come with families. They are bored and
don’t want to walk around but would like to chit chat a bit.
A platform for events - education info stalls, Greenpeace campaigns,
college street-plays perhaps.
Thematic game stall - Valentine’s day, Diwali, Halloween
Or yes, a PCO! A basic need, not found in malls.

I made no details like people although it might be a good idea if youare good at details. However one has to remember that the main job to achieve is a good mall design and people should be thought of later, if one has time left.

Designing smaller objects

The situation test was taken in batches as there are so many people who attempt it. The other batch was asked to make a coffee table. Now this design would not require the intricacies and the elaboration of a mall but would require a simpler and more thought out design. Every curve of the table, every leg should contribute to the overall designvision you have. In this design ERGONOMICS is important. This means that the design and its contact with the human body should be easy and pleasant. For example, by curving the sides of the table inwards you could make it easier for the person sitting at the table to lean further inwards.

I would attempt a coffee table by first deciding whether I am making an elaborate carved table,
minimalistic curvy table,

portable lightweight table

or a multipurpose table.

After my decision I would mould all the features of the table along my primary decision. Do not treat a design in parts. First have the whole view in place.
I might also try to incorporate the MOOD of coffee drinking by making the table-top by laying a glass top over a layer of dark coffee beans. Now how would you make this? Make tiny paper balls by scrunching up bits of paper, pack them together in a layer and press down with a transparent/translucent plastic sheet. Explain in your write-up.

I am sure Vividh’s third question has been answered too!

The write-up

Mention-
Material (for example if you used a pink sheet over which you drew the patterns of wood, mention that the pink sheet is wood in your design)
Dimensions
Surface treatment
Purpose of design
Target consumer
Interaction points between the consumer and the design

Mood of the design (Luxurious, Masculine, Minimal or Plasticky)

If your English in not too good, Just list points instead of messing with tenses and stuff..

Tips

  • Finishing is very important in the situation test. Your product must look polished, a design at a pro level, not a crafty school kid thing with glue and cello tape all over.
  • There is not much space to write. It’s about half an A4 sheet, if I remember correctly. It is a good idea to keep the writing simple and tabular and meaningful. It’s quite a job for judges to read through so many write ups.
  • Name your design if u have a great name
  • Put in a USP - never been done before idea- something special about your design.

What they judge

Aesthetic sense

· Practical sense - usefulness of design

· Technical soundness

· BANG idea!

· Integrity of your design

· Sense of 3D

· Exploitation of materials provided

Hope that helps,

Best of luck!