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Visual Information Part III: Where Are We?. Chapter 4.3.1. Overview. Setting a scene is both geographic and emotional; it is both physical and social. For the DB person to feel connected to the environment and have basic information, it means that we must set the scene.
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Visual Information Part III: Where Are We? Chapter 4.3.1
Overview • Setting a scene is both geographic and emotional; it is both physical and social. • For the DB person to feel connected to the environment and have basic information, it means that we must set the scene. • Naming a city or store is not enough. A few specific details are essential. • Here too, use a top-down discourse style.
Grocery Shopping • On the way, what area of town are you going through? • City streets? • Suburban streets? • What kind of stores are these? • Supermarket? • Co-ops? • “Mom & Pop” grocery?
Inside the Store • What kind of mood does this store have? • What kind of values do you infer from the décor? Why would someone choose to shop here instead of another store? • The Safeway, Whole Foods and 7-Eleven are very different grocery stores. What distinguishes them from each other?
Groceries • Look at the following pictures of grocery stores. What distinguishes them? • What details do you notice that set the tone? • Which details would the DB person herself notice? • If this was the first time the DB person shopped here, how could you efficiently describe the store to set the scene?
Variation • Some stores are ‘big box stores’ designed to keep the costs as low as possible, buying in bulk and providing little sales assistance. • Other stores cater to a particular market such as healthy eating or lots of customer service. • Space, lighting, as well as added décor details signal the stores’ target audience. • Did you notice the piñatas in one of the previous pictures?
Distinguishing Marks • Size and a sense of space is definitely one marker. • Lighting and the use of color is another. • Style of organization is telling. Is everything in tall, neat rows on big shelves or is there an artful asymmetry? Is the focus efficiency or coziness?
Geography, Topography • What area are you going through? • City • Country • Suburbs • Strip malls • Small town • Desert • Thus begins the top-down description.
City • The city will be distinguished by its • Age (the era of the architecture) • Size • Overall prosperity • Overall energy (bustling, quiet, etc.) • Style • Look at the following photos and again, note what gives each its character.
Activities • Part of what gives a city its flavor is the kind of activities they promote there, e.g. great book stores and coffee shops vs. a great beach town with surfing, snorkeling, etc. • Of course this is influenced by the geography, weather and primary commercial activities. Both Portland and San Diego are port cities but they have a very different ethos or style.
History • History also influences the style and tone of a city. San Diego is close to Mexico and has its roots in that culture, although it is thoroughly of the United States today. • Portland, Oregon, on the other hand, was more influenced by the Native American cultures and its early logging industry. Trees are still very much a part of its identity.
Focus • Choose details that add meaning. This will take practice. • Choose details that set the mood or tone. • When possible, include a description of the people and what they are doing. • We will elaborate on describing people in the presentation, “Visual Information Part V: Describing People.”
Conclusion • Simply saying this is “a store,” “a bank,” or “a city” is not enough. It is important to set the scene by describing details that provide a sense of space, energy, style and so on. • It is important to ‘set the scene’ when you give visual information about a place.