Tag: workshop 3
[Mood board] Mobile City Jiang Ziyan
Photographing the trams from different angles. For example, from the point of view of a passenger in a car, from the point of view of a person travelling on the road, or from the point of view of a distant observer. Jiang Ziyan 3036264602
[Mood Board] “Geometric humanist city” by Fung Yin Ho
moodboard The traveling for laundry unfolds the humanist senses inside the seemingly geometric-exclusive city, exposing the reality that the city can be both humanist and geometric
[Designing the video essay]: Temporary City Tan Yu Hahn
mood board_compressed In the city that we live in, things are susceptible to time as much as we are. The essay would focus on the temporality of everyday life. Street scenes are the main subject of the video with still camera shots interlaced with photographs taken on site.
[Mood Board] Warm Elegance: A Harmony of Brown–Xiong Na Zona
My mood board showcases staircases in a warm brown palette, featuring polished wood, rustic timber, and metal accents. Soft lighting and greenery add an inviting touch. The design blends traditional and modern elements, emphasizing sophistication and coziness, ideal for contemporary homes that cherish classic elegance and warmth. Xiong Na Zona 3036260345
[Mood Board]: Lively City by Zhang Yifan
The Central Market, a landmark building that carries the memories of countless “old Hong Kongers”, has reopened after a comprehensive restoration after an 18-year hiatus, and has become a vivid and lively business card for the preservation and promotion of traditional Chinese culture and Hong Kong’s cityscape.
[Mood Board]: ‘Hybrid City’ — Szeying Chan
Workshop3-Moodboard (See attachment) Szeying CHAN UID: 3036187725
Mood Board “Looking at our city through the gaze of craved patterns’ gates”(Workshop 3)
Four photos are overlapped on the mood board to create an atmosphere of nostalgia. I close up the gate with craved patterns and put it in the centre. Therefore, people can quickly catch up the main idea of this mood board is gates with craved patterns. The background is the street of Mong Kok, and it surprisingly matches the “Man Shing Street” I added previously. The reason behind this is that I want to bring out a message: gates with craved patterns are the street aesthetics in Hong Kong. Along with the mailboxes on the left side, this mood board