This blog provides a forum for students, instructors and others to share information and ideas about the Spring Thesis Program at Parsons the New School for Design in New York City.
Hi Lauren, Congratulations on this poster. It is really clear and compelling, and it works both for overview and more in-depth description of your project's focus and concerns. I am looking forward now to seeing how your product solution will make a difference in improving post-surgical outcomes for breast cancer patients. This is a difficult problem, and you appear to be tackling it in the right way. If you are proposing a new garment, I am imaging that you will be experimenting with various kinds of fabrics and closure to allow for complete mobility, limited pain, and fast healing of wounds. Also, dealing with drainage tubes sounds important but tricky. Do you have to include a container for pus seeping from the wound? that could be challenging to do in a way that is not frightening or gross. I can't to see what you have in mind! steven
2 comments:
Hi Lauren,
Congratulations on this poster. It is really clear and compelling, and it works both for overview and more in-depth description of your project's focus and concerns. I am looking forward now to seeing how your product solution will make a difference in improving post-surgical outcomes for breast cancer patients. This is a difficult problem, and you appear to be tackling it in the right way. If you are proposing a new garment, I am imaging that you will be experimenting with various kinds of fabrics and closure to allow for complete mobility, limited pain, and fast healing of wounds. Also, dealing with drainage tubes sounds important but tricky. Do you have to include a container for pus seeping from the wound? that could be challenging to do in a way that is not frightening or gross. I can't to see what you have in mind!
steven
http://thesislaurenkatresa.blogspot.com/2009/11/notes-from-class.html
above is a summary of todays feedback
Post a Comment