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Shaping things: intended consumer response and other determinants of product form

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

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Abstract

Based on a series of interviews with practicing industrial designers, a framework is developed that represents designers as holding distinct intentions for how product visual form should be interpreted by consumers (e.g. perceived qualities). These intentions are driven by various motivating factors (e.g. the brand) and constrained by other factors (e.g. production costs). Designers seek to resolve these competing factors by referring to a broad range of visual sources (e.g. existing products), and by constructing visual representations (e.g. sketches) that describe the planned form for the product. Despite designers' efforts to specify the product's form, the eventual form may be outside their control because still other factors (e.g. manufacturing tolerances) modify the design in unanticipated ways.

Description

Journal Title

Design Studies

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0142-694X
1872-6909

Volume Title

30

Publisher

Elsevier

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