Photo credit to Michael Liao
The inspiration for this post came from a speaker at the most recent career day at our school. The speaker was Mart Noorma. Specifically, one sentence was the inspiration for this post and it was the following:
The best way to learn something new is to dive straight in without knowing anything.
The idea behind this is that if you're forced into a situation in which you have to "figure it out" then your learning pace is quicker than just learning for the sake of learning. It, of course, shouldn't be a life or death situation, but there should be consequences that are not negligible.
Creativity
This got me thinking about creativity and how my best work has come at the moment when I don't have a lot of time. I believe this is because my brain is then kicked into the mystical "work hard" mode, which helps me actually produce somewhat good work.
I've always had difficulties working ahead of time and I've done most things at the last minute. Part of this is usually "the panic monster" waking up, which kicks me off of my procrastinating ass into proper gear, but I think that I produce better work creatively when there are strict limits on what I can create. These limits can be of any kind: time, colour, shape, applications etc.
It's incredible what designers have been able to do in the past with limited resources and tools available to them. What they created has lasted for a long time and I think there's charm to that kind of logo - the timeless kind.
Conclusion
This is a collection of my thoughts on limiting creative processes and how those limits can actually help the process along. I hope you enjoyed this post and I look forward to the responses to the call to action!