Portfolio class work

Page 1

DIGITAL EXCERCISE BOOK HIEN TRAN |KRIST| DIGITAL DESIGN | DD1 2022

DIGITAL EXCERCISE BOOK June2020DD1Fashion-Speciality SmithJane

ROCHAS SKETCHNAME: HIEN TRAN (KRIST)

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing elit, sed diam nonummy nibh euismod tincidunt ut laoreet dolore magna aliquam erat volutpat. Ut wisi enim ad minim veniam,

IMAGE

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing elit, sed diam nonummy nibh euismod tincidunt ut laoreet dolore magna aliquam erat volutpat. Ut wisi enim ad minim veniam,

.

.

In this class work, I used PEN TOOL , EYE DROPPER TOOL , K SIDER TOOL Also , I used GAUSSIAN BLUR effect. In this personal work, I used PEN TOOL , EYE DROPPER TOOL , K SIDER TOOL same as class exercise

IMAGE SKETCHNAME: HIEN TRAN (KRIST)

Focusing to use LAYERS and ADJUSTMENT MASKS, PLACING AND TRANSFORM ING. In this work base on Winter mood board. I created the SUMMER MOOD board which inspired from Aesthetic Vibe mix with vintage style.

The techniques are same as class work included: LAYER and using EYEDROPPER TOOL to create colour pallet.

In this class work,I created moodboard on Photoshop on A4 canvas.

AFTERBEFORE In this personal work, I want to create a Hologram moodboard . My idea inspired from Vaporwave , Futurnism style . I used LAYERS and ADJUSTMENT MASKS, PLACING AND TRANSFORMING. This work I want to focus in using EYE DROPPER to make colour pallet . Also follow the E&P TERM like shape , colour , contrast . In this class work, I used HEALING BRUSH and CLONE TOOLS in Photo shop

In

In this class work, I used RED EYES TOOL in Photoshop this class work, I used BRIGHTNESS, B&W , CURVES LAYER MASK and SPOT HEALING in Photoshop

AFTERBEFORE BEFOREAFTER

AfterBefore AfterBefore In this class work, I used HEALING BRUSH , LASSO TOOL in Photoshop. In this class work, I used HEALING BRUSH , LASSO TOOL and SELECTED TOOL in Photoshop.

Can you talk a bit about your career path in the design world? It’s a difficult industry to find success in, and you’ve spoken about how it was hard to maintain a business while you were a single mother. How did you overcome these hurdles? Shaynna Blaze: I think the hardest thing in the creative industry is the self-belief that you can do what you set out to achieve and that does take not only time but the confidence in your final works. Once you have the confidence in your own work and ideas, that really becomes the smallest part of running a successful business, especially when you are trying to do all the roles yourself. Being a single mum and a designer wasn’t the easiest thing and I did step out of the design world for a few years there as you do have to question sometimes the pressure you put on yourself and possibly missing out on the important things in life, and that for me was my kids growing up. I don’t regret taking five years of as it gave me such a great time with my children, and I feel I am better in design for it. What brought you onto television when you were already successful with your interior design career? I had my own business for five years and had been in my own studio space with a girlfriend for 12 months, so it wasn’t something I really thought was going to be part of the big picture. By the time we were in our third year of the show (we are now in our tenth) I knew I had to determine what the focus of my career was, and TV was playing a big part of it. My kids were now at the end of their high school years, so they didn’t need me so much on day-to-day things, so the timing of this show coming into my life, which allows me to travel all around the country, makes me feel this is the direction I was meant to go.

Most people think it is logical to lean to reds and oranges if they want to have a “life” in a room but you need to be careful how much you put in a room as it is a bit like fast food: it is fast and engulfs you quickly but its energy peaks and leaves you feeling exhausted. With warm colours you need to balance the strength of the color with natural surfaces like timber, stone and materials in softer colours to bring the tone down, so the room doesn’t feel all-consuming. For a soft and uplifting mood in a home or room look at cool colours as your base, as greens are mood-calming and blues are uplifting.

I love your own design studio space and its different designs in each room. Can you give some advice for our readers when designing multiple rooms such as office, living room, gym and other spaces for a harmonious and personal expression?

In my design studio I was able to be quite different in most of the rooms as they serve a different function and are broken up by different levels. Downstairs is an event space and gym that has an industrial feel and flows through with the structure of exposed bricks, render and concrete floors then different elements of surfaces and colours

https://theinteriorsaddict.com/4-biggest-bathrooms-questions-answered

Story Gia Ji- PHOTOS: Fernado Barazza, Vanessa Hall

AFORDESIGNLIFE

https://theinteriorsaddict.com/4-biggest-bathrooms-questions-answered

You’ve spanned careers from singer to designer to writer to TV host and artist, and the most difficult one: a mother of two children. At the same time, you are always gorgeous. What advice can you give to women juggling careers and family? Well thank you, that is such a lovely compliment and one thing I would like to say is my first advice: accept compliments. The biggest tips are possibly the ones that we try to do but find it too difficult to keep it going longterm, but you will thank me in the end. One: Your health.

What you eat and do is so important to achieve. A healthy body and mind are essential for good focus and energy and without that it is tough to push through when things get tough. We all need to find a way it works for us but for me I stopped eating meat in my teens and minimized the sugar and chemicals in my food the day I found out I was pregnant. I knew I had to do the right thing by my kids and in turn I also did it for me. Two: Be organized.

Shaynna Blaze is an interior designer, author and television personality. She is co-host of the hit television series Selling houses Australia and a judge on the design reality series The block. In this interview, Blaze shares her secrets for finding success in career and family, as well as hot tips on using color, space and flow in your own home design.

I am an eternal list maker and start a newone every day. What isn’t achieved one day is put on the list for the next day, sitting right at the top. This is the easiest action list you can do and is the constant in keeping the flow in your business and in your home (yes, doing the washing and picking up food makes its way on to the lists). And then cull clutter often from your car, your desk, your drawers (at home and in the office) as a clear space is a clear mind for focus. You wrote a book about color in design. Can you give us some tips to use color in home design to life a mood?

You’ve spanned careers from singer to designer to writer to TV host and artist, and the most difficult one: a mother of two children. At the same time, you are always gorgeous.

A healthy body and mind are essential for good focus and energy and without that it is tough to push through when things get tough. We all need to find a way it works for us but for me I stopped eating meat in my teens and minimized the sugar and chemicals in my food the day I found out I was pregnant. I knew I had The restaurant, taking over a wooden pavilion at the heart of the resort, follows a similar approach. Conceptualized by the minds behind Ubud’s hot-ticket table Locavore, the open-air kitchen dishes out Balinese classics and global-minded feel-good food from ingredients sourced no farther than an hour’s drive from the lobby. Lunches here are a family-style affair, with earthy soups from moringa leaves cooked in coconut shells, and packets of wild mushrooms wrapped in banana leaf—all served at communal tables in front of the kitchen. Dinner, though, errs on the finer side of dining, with a focus on plant-based creations. At night, my five-course dinner includes peanut and edamame croquettes served with a smokey chili dip, and a wonderful watermelon “tartar” with cashew cheese. The latter is flecked with the same herbs and flowers I foraged earlier that day on a tour with chef Eka Sunarya, who grew up hunting for birs and wild berries around Buahan Valley.

From the foot of my bed, Bali’s Buahan Valley un furls in layer upon lush layer of bamboo and palms in every conceivable shade of green. Wisps of steam float between the trees, whip-quick sparrows swoop in and out of the foliage below. In the background, Bali’s seven peaks are barely visible through their foggy veil. There’s a non-stop chorus of cica das, and just within earshot, a rooster makes sure that his village is awake. There are no windows separating me from this valley. In fact, my villa doesn’t even have walls. I’ve just woken up at Buahan, Bali’s newest nature resort. Named after the northern Ubud enclave it’s located in, Buahan opened on June 14 as the first outpost of the Banyan Tree Group’s new Escape brand—a wilder, more experimental sibling to the group’s other wellness-centric resorts. Wellbeing is also Buahan’s raison d’être, but it takes a special form. From its restaurant to its spa, the resort draws on the wisdoms Balinese have passed down for centuries. It shows everywhere: at the Toja Spa, scattered over a series of riverfront bamboo pavilions at the bottom of the valley, treatments could involve healing rituals derived from local shamans, or detoxifying body wraps career was, and TV was playing a big part of it. My kids were now at the end of their high school years, so they didn’t need me so much on day-to-day things, so the timing of this show coming into my life, which allows me to travel all around the country, makes me feel this is the direction I was meant to go.

Well thank you, that is such a lovely compliment and one thing I would like to say is my first advice: accept compliments. The biggest tips are possibly the ones that we try to do but find it too difficult to keep it going long-term, but you will thank me in the end. One: Your health.

WHAT YOU EAT AND DO IS SO IMPORTANT TO ACHIEVE?

WHAT ADVICE CAN YOU GIVE TO WOMEN JUGGLING CAREERS AND FAMILY?

hotel-without-wallshttps://www.vogue.com/article/at-buahan-in-bali-reconnecting-with-nature-in-a-

AT BUAHAN IN BALI, RECONNECTING WITH NATURE IN A HOTEL WITHOUT WALLS BY CHRIS SCHALKX

Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
Portfolio class work by Kristhientran - Issuu