Difference between revisions of "Look Out"

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Delia is credited with a BBC TV programme for Schools and Colleges<ref name=genome/> [[Look Out]] produced by [[John Prescott Thomas]].<ref name=TLL/>
 
Delia is credited with a BBC TV programme for Schools and Colleges<ref name=genome/> [[Look Out]] produced by [[John Prescott Thomas]].<ref name=TLL/>
  
Its tape's catalogue entry is dated April 1970<ref name=TLL/> and the BBC Genome Project lists the episodes:
+
Its tape's catalogue entry is dated April 1970<ref name=TLL/> 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.
 
* '''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?
 
* '''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?

Revision as of 18:01, 11 May 2017

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?

Availability

References

  1. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named genome
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 The Tape Library List's entry for TRW 7193.