Landscape Architecture for Landscape Architects › Forums › GENERAL DISCUSSION › Inspiration Panic!
- This topic has 1 reply, 6 voices, and was last updated 12 years, 9 months ago by
Roland Beinert.
-
AuthorPosts
-
February 21, 2013 at 8:29 pm #155506
Shavawn ColemanParticipantThe boss comes to you, you have to have a design completed by the end of the day, week, etc. No big deal, right? Until you realize the creative juices just aren’t flowing! Then the panic starts in… How will I finish this? What am I going to do? Where is the inspiration?? AAAAHHHHH!!!!!
How do you get through this?? Check the rest out at, http://www.colemanconcepts.com/inspiration/
February 22, 2013 at 3:02 pm #155511
Roland BeinertParticipantIf possible, I go back over my notes from the client and analysis of the site. What always frustrated me was having a client say, “Meh, do whatever you want.” or not being able to visit the site. Remind yourself that not every project has to be something revolutionary. You can always recycle ideas or find something in your sketchbook that you drew a long time ago but never used. Training in permaculture and sustainable design is also helpful. It gives your work an underlying logic.
February 22, 2013 at 6:04 pm #155510
Andrew Garulay, RLAParticipantMy father taught me something a long time ago. If you get stuck in a design, just do something and as you work off of it, new ideas present themselves …. even if you wind up undoing what you did when you were stuck.
That was consistent with what he’d say if I were driving and came to a stop sign and ask him “which way?”. He’d say, in his thick eastern European accent, “always forward, never backward”.
February 23, 2013 at 1:54 am #155509
tobyParticipantI agree that, ‘Do whatever you want’ is about the worst. I’ve also never visited the site for two projects, except by Google, and I’ve given a retainer back on a job early in my career. Writing that check was actually a relief.
February 23, 2013 at 1:47 pm #155508
Rob HalpernParticipantGood advice, I think. Just start drawing and one thing will lead to another.
Also: design does not arise out of divine inspiration from nowhere. It must grow out of the conditions of the site, the functions the site must accommodate and augment, the budget, and any vision the client came with. When the “juices aren’t flowing” (ick!) start with the foundation and build. Part of the “creative block” problem is the ego insisting that it must spin gold out of thin air.
February 25, 2013 at 12:18 am #155507
Alan Ray, RLAParticipantwhen I get bogged down I remember an old professors’ advice, as a question,
“what is the simplest solution to the problem?”
-
AuthorPosts
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.

