With the tools available to us design can be so much more than it is right now and we're only scratching the surface of what is possible with new materials and the power of 3d print to take us from the assembly line.
3d printing can use living materials in some cases
synthetic vs organic design philosophies and examples of both
This was good I got it I was fine for most of it I got the flow
I still got the flow of things, and I could do some stuff I just couldn't figure out how to move the things with grasshopper.
All the steps here made sense and I got all the steps fine, but my computer didn't want it to work for some reason so after a while I stopped trying to force it to do the extension of the thing
I understood more or less how to do everything I just didn't understand why we were doing anything on this tutorial.
This is where it started to get grimy and icky for me this was the first time I didn't totally understand how everything worked together and what some of the components did - you can see the confusion.
I didn't really understand the stuff here but we got it to work ok either way - I got help from talen, the seed and amount of things makes sense though.
I thought this one was cool, I understood how to work with the functions and everything but the understanding of how things connected and why isn't quite there yet.
Very similar experience to the one above but I thought the possibilities of this tutorial were really cool.
This one was a Maelstrom (wink wink) to understand. I didn't really get most of it but when we were making our own designs in the end and I had to make it 3d and stuff it went well.
I wasn't able to get weaverbird to work so I couldn't go all the way but the process seemed ok even though it was shaky.
This one was just weird I didn't get it too much.