Difference between revisions of "Look Out"
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* '''Routeways''': The growth of travel has changed our environment and our way of life; what should our priorities be for the transport system and vehicles of the future? | * '''Routeways''': The growth of travel has changed our environment and our way of life; what should our priorities be for the transport system and vehicles of the future? | ||
* '''Eyecatch''': How do designers use non-verbal means to put across a message? | * '''Eyecatch''': How do designers use non-verbal means to put across a message? | ||
+ | |||
+ | =Papers= | ||
+ | <gallery> | ||
+ | Image:DD115254.jpg|[[DD115254]]: Delia's manuscript score | ||
+ | Image:DD115309.jpg|[[DD115309]]: Zoom on the top of [[DD115254]] | ||
+ | Image:DD115317.jpg|[[DD115317]]: Zoom on the bottom of [[DD115254]] | ||
+ | </gallery> | ||
=Availability= | =Availability= |
Latest revision as of 15:11, 20 June 2021
Delia is credited with a BBC TV programme for Schools and Colleges[1] Look Out produced by John Prescott Thomas.[2]
Its tape's catalogue entry is dated April 1970[2] and the BBC Genome Project lists ten programmes:
- More than meets the eye: Eyes and they see not ... But 'what things look like' is only part of their design; we have to look beneath surface appearances to discover how design decisions are made.
- A man is 1.725 metres tall: Short, tall, fat, thin, right-handed, left-handed ... How do designers cope with making things to fit the needs of different people and how is the science of ergonomics changing the shapes around us?
- Mind over matter equals shape?: Knife cuts paper wraps stone blunts knife... How do the materials and processes which are available to designers affect the nature and the form of the things around us - and our attitudes to them?
- Putting on the Style: 'The bit the artist adds on'... or an integral part of an object's function? Styling communicates information and ideas; how do designers use it to express these things?
- Designs on Your Time
- Action-shaped: Hand-operated devices are extensions of the human body; what are a designer's priorities in meeting our needs for them at work, at play and in the home?
- In-place: how do designers set about providing environments for different human activities?
- Peoplesville
- Routeways: The growth of travel has changed our environment and our way of life; what should our priorities be for the transport system and vehicles of the future?
- Eyecatch: How do designers use non-verbal means to put across a message?
Papers
DD115254: Delia's manuscript score
Availability
- Broadcast from 22nd September 1970 to 25th March 1971 on BBC 1.[1]
- In the BBC Sound Archive on tape TRW 7193.[2]
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Search results for Look Out on the BBC Gemnome Project.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 The Tape Library List's entry for TRW 7193.