WIT Press

COMPLEX AND FRACTAL COMPONENTS IN INDUSTRIAL DESIGN

Price

Free (open access)

Volume

Volume 1 (2006), Issue 2

Pages

12

Page Range

161 - 173

Paper DOI

10.2495/D&N-V1-N2-161-173

Copyright

WIT Press

Author(s)

N. SALA

Abstract

Industrial design is an applied art where the aesthetics and the usability of products may be improved. During the 20th century, we have seen an interesting transformation in our society from hand-made consumer goods designed and made by skilled craftsmen to mass production using new materials and technologies. Design aspects specified by the industrial designer may include the object’s overall shape, the location of the details with respect to one another, colours, textures and ergonomics. Often, through the application of industrial design, a product’s appeal to the consumer is greatly improved. Industrial design consists of the ideation of a shape or configuration, or composition of a pattern or colour. An industrial design can be a twoor three-dimensional pattern used to produce an object. For many years designers were inspired by Euclidean geometry and Euclidean shapes (e.g. triangles, squares, Platonic solids and polyhedra), and it is not surprising that industrial design objects have Euclidean

Keywords

complexity, fractal geometry, industrial design, nature, self-similarity