
Maybe More Will Come Out of This
At the beginning of any design journey, there’s uncertainty. We collect scattered references, sit through lectures that feel abstract at first, and stare at blank artboards hoping something will click. But slowly, through repetition and reflection, things begin to take shape. This semester, I’ve started to understand that design education is less about mastering tools or producing polished outcomes and more about questioning the world—and seeing what emerges in response.
Design, we’re learning, is not just about making things look good. It’s about making things mean something. The foundation of our course isn’t purely technical; it’s conceptual. We’re encouraged to view design as a practice of transformation—of culture, of environment, and of ourselves.
Common Objectives
Our course asks us to consider a series of bigger questions:
What is design for? Who is it for? What systems are we working within—and how can we challenge them?
We’re learning how to think like designers, not just act like them. That means engaging with the process as a rational, iterative way of reshaping reality. Whether working through typography exercises or speculative projects, we’re being pushed to make intentional choices and think critically. The emphasis isn’t on quick answers—it’s on long-term questions.
The goals are ambitious but necessary:
- To integrate social and environmental awareness into everything we do.
- To stimulate creative responses to current realities.
- To develop the curiosity and skepticism needed to ask better questions of the world.
- To become fluent in the languages of design—visual, typographic, critical.
Two-Dimensional Thinking
In the two-dimensional component of our studies, we’ve begun to explore graphic design not as decoration, but as communication. We’re asking: What does design say, and how does it say it?
Through exercises in typography, composition, and image-making, we’re not just learning tools—we’re learning tone. We’re developing visual narratives and beginning to understand how form can express intention. Even something as “simple” as a letterform becomes an expressive tool.
Our readings and lectures remind us that every poster, publication, or interface we design sits within a larger system of meaning. Graphic design is cultural, contextual, and political. It both shapes and reflects the world.
We’re also learning to use software as part of a broader conversation. Vector drawing, image editing, and layout tools are valuable—but only when guided by research, narrative clarity, and ethical consideration. We’re taught to question the how and the why.
What Design Might Be
One of the most challenging and rewarding aspects of this course has been speculative thinking. Instead of simply responding to given problems, we’re sometimes asked to invent them. What if a design project didn’t have a clear answer? What if its purpose wasn’t to solve but to provoke?
This way of working pushes us to stop chasing perfection and start engaging with possibility.
When we allow ourselves to be uncomfortable, when we design without knowing exactly where we’ll end up—that’s when something interesting happens. Maybe more comes out of it than we expected.
Moving Forward
There’s still a long way to go. We’re just beginning to map out what design can mean for each of us personally and professionally. But the values are clear: thoughtful research, intentional communication, ethical responsibility, and a willingness to experiment.
This isn’t about arriving at answers—it’s about learning how to look, how to think, and how to respond.
Maybe more will come out of this.
And maybe that’s the point.




