Maybe because of Coca Cola's massive Open Happiness campaign for the 2010 Games, maybe because spring has come early and the cherry blossams make everything cheery. I am thinking about happiness. The Happiness Project recounts the author's daily adventures in pursuit of happiness, an instant NY Times bestseller, while the Future Well is a new design firm specializing in health and happiness. I'm thinking that the secret of happiness is simply discovering the things in the world that make us smile. For example this public poster series by the Dopludo Collective!
Monday, March 01, 2010
The Secret of Happiness
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Sarah Hay
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2:47 PM
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Labels: art, communication, culture, meaning
Monday, February 01, 2010
Desire to Communicate
Dr. Ron Burnett, President of Emily Carr University, and former teacher of mine shares his optimistic view of the Literate Future:
“The beauty of language is its flexibility and adaptability. The various modes of conversation to which we have become accustomed over centuries have a textured and rich quality that depends on our desire to communicate. That desire crosses nearly every cultural and political boundary on this shrinking earth. Rather than worry about whether text messaging will undermine literacy, we need to examine how to use all of the new modalities of communications now available to us to enhance the relationships we have with each other. That is the real challenge, quality of exchange, what we say and why and how all of that translates into modes of expression that can be understood and analyzed.”
What I take away from his closing paragraph is by simply having an open mind to our now multi modal existence, we may be able to better cherish and appreciate conversations, share knowledge and strengthen relationships; that the real challenge is to not waste our time and energy with mindless distraction. After all, feeling connected to family, friends and communities is the top sustainability issue for North Americans. Today, there have never been more ways to stay connected with one another.
I will be posting here more frequently, and am looking forward to it. Garnering information from multiple channels – feeds, tweets, newspapers, blogs and the SHIFT Report findings – to record and support the cultural shift to sustainability. It is happening, friends.
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12:33 PM
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Labels: communication, culture
Wednesday, January 20, 2010
The Challenge Series
The Challenge Series tells the story of the people and the work behind the planning, designing and building of Vancouver's Olympic Village. For the past few years, I have had my eye on the site, wondering how it would all unfold, not knowing how involved I would get in learning about the site's history, policies and the development process. A crash course in urban design and sustainable community building.
Beginning last April, I began working for this project, brought on to essentially manage all the visual information for the seven chapter publication that would launch each new chapter monthly. Each chapter covered a different topic from History and Policy to Public Space and Infrastructure, Architecture, Water and Building Landscape, Energy, and Community.
There were thousands of images to sift through, collect, review, and choose. I worked with illustrators from Letterbox Design Group and Cobalt Engineering to develop schematics. I created each chapter's wireframe for publication, liaised with writers (New Climate Strategies) with respect to appropriate images for each story. I liaised with graphic designers (Mizu Creative) with respect to each chapter's wireframe, image hierarchy etc. and I put forth recommendations for the front and back covers.
All in all it was a fabulous project to be involved with– great people full of optimism and passion.
You can access all chapters here. I recommend downloading the low res pdfs for a more graphical / magazine type experience.
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Sarah Hay
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11:43 AM
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Labels: communication, culture, design, politics, responsibility, vancouver
Wednesday, July 23, 2008
Human Development Index ~ for the developed
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Sarah Hay
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2:45 PM
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Labels: communication, culture, design, meaning
Tuesday, July 22, 2008
359 nodes and 2799 links
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Sarah Hay
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8:24 PM
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Labels: communication, design, meaning, nature, summer, travel
Friday, July 18, 2008
PSFK conference in SFO
Yesterday I went to my first conference as a creative strategist with Ci. Oooooh moving up! PSFK hosts creative idea conferences in cities around the world and yesterday's took place at an old military base near the water in San Fransisco. Many of the speakers focussed on technology enabling community building and one particular speaker from Apple - Chris Riley - spoke of three highly influential people - Stewart Brand, Alice Waters and Paul Hawken. I just had to thank him at the end of the day. Another highlight was Max Schor from GOOD Magazine. Very refreshing, humbling and thought provoking. He asked the audience as he was getting started - "How many people want to make things better?" Not a single person did not raise their hand. The room was certainly filled with optimistic bright creative (and nerdy) bodies, minds and souls.
The best surprise for me was the fact that the Long Now Foundation was just next door and I got to see the prototypes for the 10 000 year clock! I was in heaven. I had done quite a bit of research on Stewart Brand for my thesis. Some call him the smartest man in America. Look him up! The Foundation exists for the sole and brave purpose of encouraging us all to adopt a long term view. We're talking centuries and millenniums. What a breath of fresh air considering the conference was all about trends and what they mean and where we're going.
More in line with the 'short view', I couldn't get over how many people were talking about Twitter! This is something I have not really been interested in adopting - maybe because I find the name a bit irritating. Hmmmm.
Some of the recurring themes I noticed during the day - take risks, do the right thing the right way and the business model will follow, don't be afraid to fail, be considerate, listen to people, experiment, play, and of course - collaborate! Look outside your own discipline and geography for inspiration. Oh yes, and have fun!!!
Speaking of fun, here are some photos from the after party!
Thanks to Orange Exposure for the great photos.
Serge, Sarah and Rachel
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Sarah Hay
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12:45 PM
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Labels: communication, culture, design, summer, travel
Monday, July 14, 2008
Ci newsletter chock full of nuggets
Ci, the company I now work for as a 'creative strategist' publishes a juicy newsletter called soundbite once in a while that shares some intelligence surrounding the SHIFT Report. I've blogged about it before - What do 5000 main stream North American's think (and behave) around issues related to sustainability and social responsibility. In a nut shell, it's way more than green green green.

I encourage anyone reading this to sign up for the newsletter and stay in touch. This company is smart and ambitious. Two good things I like to see in an employer of mine. ( :
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3:38 PM
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Labels: communication, culture, meaning, responsibility
Monday, June 09, 2008
data art + love
"I Want You To Want Me", by Jonathan Harris and Sep Kamvar, commissioned by the Museum of Modern Art, for their "Design and the Elastic Mind" exhibition. It examines and organizes data from online dating sites and reveals some deep insights into who we are and what we are looking for. Of course, it also shows us how data can be turned into art.
:: via Ed Cotton at www.influxinsights.com
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Sarah Hay
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4:11 PM
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Labels: art, communication, culture, design, meaning
Sunday, June 08, 2008
hello, lawrence weiner
I recently saw a Lawrence Weiner (and John Baldessari) show at the Apt. I went with Alex and Katrin which was a treat in of itself. I hadn't heard of either of the artists before this week. It was a private showing so we learned a lot about conceptual art and 'the business of. Alex asks the best questions. And since then (of course) I recognize the names. So you can imagine the delight of seeing this short video which I first saw on Kara's fabulous oliveisgreen. Check it oot.
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Sarah Hay
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11:19 PM
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Labels: art, communication, culture, design, meaning, responsibility, slow design
Friday, May 09, 2008
green green green NOT
Since finishing school I've quickly made the transition to full time at Ci (conscientious innovation) where we have just conducted a comprehensive study across North America to find out what 5000 people are thinking about sustainability (issues, values, barriers, motivations, etc.), the brands they buy and the messaging that comes with it. The most relevant finding (I think) is how people rate things that I consider to be very important in terms of how i live my life (global warming, organic food) on the lower end and things like balanced life and connection with family, friends are WAY up in the high 80's.
We are getting press!.. mostly local for now (Vancouver Sun, Vancouver Province), also a great story in Environmental Leader that headlines - Green Marketing Campaigns Not Sticking, and in Sustainable Brands that headlined - Why Your Green Marketing May Be Hitting the Mark. A press release is posted on Kierstin's blog with some additional insight.
I've been busy making all of this data visual.. looking at the likes of Edward Tufte and Richard Saul Wurman and Kevin Kelly. All say the same thing - "What changes the world is not information alone, but communication" - and "Understanding information is power". This means my job is not only about visualizing these loooooong data runs, but trying to relate it to real world pressures i.e. cultural relevance and dare I say... business opportunities.
!These images are © Conscientious Innovation Ltd. 2008. All rights reserved.
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9:48 AM
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Labels: communication, culture, responsibility, vancouver