Coke Studio Set Design

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Amie Mandy

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Aug 4, 2024, 10:45:48 PM8/4/24
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Thestudio is also fun, inspiring and supportive. The safe and functional atmosphere is nurturing and helps students concentrate for many hours at a time. All abilities are welcome and instruction is taught with heart warming commitment to everyone's well being.

The Atelier also hosts Open Portrait Studio three Thursday mornings each month. There is also Night Gallery Art Studio on Tuesday evenings specially designed for working professionals. Tuesday Morning Art Studio is from 10 am to 1 pm.


Thank you for committing to studying as improvement and learning takes time. Dates are all flexible and exchangeable and make up classes are always available Mondays through Thursdays with occasional Fridays and Saturdays.




Tuesday Morning Art Studio is a small class for personal instruction in Drawing and Oil Painting. This class is for adults who need personal guidance to build on existing strengths and discover skills they may not have found previously. Three hour sessions are good for working patiently to practice and improve over time.




Regular After School Art Studio classes happen August through May. Students attend Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays or Thursdays from 4 to 6 PM. Students come once per week and for make ups any time they are needed for missed classes.


Tuition is monthly and due at the first of each month. If your children miss any classes they are welcome to schedule make up classes. Missed classes do not roll over to future months or reduce tuition.




Thank you for helping restock the studio for things we all share. Your support provides everything from cleaning supplies to subject matter. This helps us restock paints, oils, drawing papers, paper towels, light bulbs, electrical cords, tape, clips, lamps, etc.


Architecture is a desperate enterprise. This is because in many ways designing is a race against time. As a designer you are always time poor. Deadlines are imposed externally. The more time you send on the design the more you burn up your fees. Fees that sometimes have already been cut to the bone. Whats worse is that it takes time to design properly. It is a labour intensive exercise that involves the consideration of different options and the exploration of different design pathways.


Most architects are always designing in a blind panic and this is what you need to get good at. But: too many architects procrastinate and too many architecture students leave things to the last minute. Finally, the procrastination can inevitably give way to blind panic. Its 5 days to go and you still need to do the layout and print ! OMG !!


As it is almost the end of semester here in my hemisphere I thought I would do a special Surviving the Design Studio blog outside of my normal weekly blogging routine. So here are a few last minute survival points to think about. Enjoy.


Timing is critical and working back form the end helps. Too often architects forget to allow for the print queue. There is nothing worse than having a great design but missing the deadline set by the project manager or the studio submission.


The quicker you can resolve issues around your design the better. At the end of the project it usually the medium and little things that need to be resolved. What is the profile of the roof or volume, where should openings or windows go, what happens at the entry conditions, is the circulation pattern easily communicated. Resolve as much as you can and as quickly as you can.These are design development decisions. If you think you are getting into a bind about anyone decision. Just make a choice. Its your design.


If you are really strapped for time the best you can do is work form 9 am to around 1 am with an hour for lunch and hour for dinner. Then make sure you get 6, maybe 7 to 8 hours sleep. It will help you to make better decisions.


Know when it is not worth it. At the end of the day it is not worth sacrificing your mental health for a better than average pass or wining the selected competition. There will be other design studios and other projects. Stop and get help if you feel your mental health is suffering.


Get your friends in. Get them to do stuff. Get them to lend you another eye when you are not sure about things. Ask your tutor, or a team member, about design and design development decisions. A good tutor or team member will relish the questions and help you to resolve issues more quickly rather than you agonise over something for hours.


There will be glitches of course. Once I printed out all of my final thesis drawings and looked at them only to realise they were all wrong. The line weights combined with the particular experimental printing process I employed led to unreadable drawings. It was a total disaster. The best thing to do was to have a sleep and not to panic.


After the sleep I could think straight and look at my drawings with a more evaluative eye. I then replanned my production technique and after a few days had reprinted my drawings. I lost time, but on the second print run my drawings were much better (see 2 above).


The above statement is my cardinal rule for deciding when to move onto the next task or micro task. If you are running out of time you need to suspend your own inner critic and inner perfectionist. If it looks good then use that and move onto the next task. There is no point having a great and perfect render if the rest of your drawings and images are awful.


Getting the balance right between different images and representation of your design at the end of semester or project is what will count. You are producing an integrated and wholistic design vision. Making one thing superbly refined at the expense of everything else is always remarked upon by the jury critics. But you will never win the competition if you do this. Jury critics usually want to see that how well your design proposal relates to everything.


Take notes as you work and different justifications, rationale or aspects of your project spring to mind. Use these notes to frame and articulate your own arguments if and when you have to stand in front of your project and discuss it. You can also use the notes to help you include any explanatory or annotative text that may need to go onto the drawings. These notes will also help you to take lessons and insights onto your next project.


All of the above should help if you are in desperation mode and you have kissed your significant others goodbye. You may think you will never see them again as you go into the vortex of the final days of a design project. But it will soon be over and then of course there is always the next project and it is actually the next project that all architects yearn for.


When the time is right, start small. This allows you to take risks and learn what works before people are relying on you to put food on the table. We started Output in Nottingham as three partners: Dan and I had worked together at our previous agency, and Ian was one of our clients. This gave us a good understanding of how a project develops between the designer and client, rather than in isolation.


One of our challenges was starting out as print designers. Like a lot of agencies, we had a period of trying to catch up and make sense of where things were going. It made us realise we could never really sit comfortably and say we knew one thing really well.


Our first experience of working with clients in a different way came when we won the Ministry of Sound club contract back in 2005. They wanted us to work in-house, and embedding designers with a client was a new challenge.


We adapted our methods and gained another perspective of the client-agency relationship. Over the years, the Ministry work became some of the most directional we did. It was a testing ground for new designers to really push themselves, and to work with a degree of independence.


In 2020, we decided to take this further and step back from running the studio. Because Gemma and Johanna had become so important to the company, it was an easy decision to offer them a partnership in it. Now, Output reflects their vision, taking the next step in building the brands that will reshape our world.


Coke Studio is a Pakistani television series and international music franchise which features live studio-recorded music performances by established and emerging artists. It is the longest-running annual TV music show in Pakistan since 2008.


The above logo design and the artwork you are about to download is the intellectual property of the copyright and/or trademark holder and is offered to you as a convenience for lawful use with proper permission from the copyright and/or trademark holder only. You hereby agree that you agree to the Terms of Use and that the artwork you download will be used for non-commercial use without infringing on the rights of the copyright and/or trademark holder and in compliance with the DMCA act of 1998. Before you use or reproduce this artwork in any manner, you agree to obtain the express permission of the copyright and/or trademark holder. Failure to obtain such permission is a violation of international copyright and trademark laws subject to specific financial and criminal penalties.


As a full-service DC Creative Agency, we provide comprehensive marketing services that span from branding and logo design to UX/UI design and web development, video production, digital marketing, market research, strategic communications, advertising, social media marketing, and public relations.


Our integrated approach to marketing ensures customized solutions tailored to your unique requirements, enabling you to attain maximum success. Leveraging our large state-of-the-art production studio facilities located just outside of Washington, DC, in Northern Virginia, we specialize in high-impact, results-oriented integrated marketing communications for online, print and broadcast media.


Based in Washington DC area, we have delivered top-notch integrated marketing, branding and multimedia production services to a diverse group of clients that range from small and medium-sized businesses to large corporations, government agencies, associations, non-profits, and educational institutions. Whether a company is evolving or new to the industry, we work with businesses and organizations of all sizes to clarify their purpose, find their voice, understand their customers, and communicate their message.

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