NYC’s Annual Teen Design Fair: A Melting Pot of Ideas and Opportunities

This is a re-post from the Hive column on Huffington Post Teen.

By Othilla Wlodarczyk, Cooper-Hewitt DesignPrep Scholar

“It serves to underscore that you never know where life’s serendipitous path is going to take you,” exclaimed fashion consultant and educational mentor Tim Gunn while sitting on the stage of New York City’s Teen Design Fair hosted by the Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum. This event has been taking place annually in two locations, New York City and Washington, D.C. for the past six years. This year it took place at the Altman Building on 18th street between 6th and 7th Avenue. The space, lit with pink and purple lights, has two floors: the first with seating for the multiple designers that were invited to speak with the attendees, and the basement with a large selection of finger food. The basement level also housed numerous stations each with speakers from different design colleges.

Tim Gunn, most popularly for his presence on the reality series Project Runway, was one of the many important attendees. America’s Next Top Model‘s judge and runway couch Jay Alexander, also known as “Miss J” sat at one of the designer’s stations on the first floor. The fair contained an ideal variety of designers from different fields. Among these designers were architect Stephen Cassell, media/graphic designer Eric Mortensen from Hello Monday, founder of Biomimicry 3.8 Institute Janine Benyus and Facebook’s communication designer Kate Aronowitz. Each designer was able to bring something new and unique to the table.

The fair was successfully able to bring over 100 aspiring designers together to explore and go in depth about the different fields of design, an opportunity many students going into the field of design are not able to experience. “It’s really amazing. I never had anyone to go to who was an architect, to ask what it was like, and I think it’s really important to talk to people and see what it’s really like. Is that something you want to dedicate your life and move forward in? This is an amazing opportunity and there are some really great designers here. I would be happy to go from table to table and talk to them without a doubt,” said Stephen Cassell of ARO.

One issue addressed at the fair was whether or not jobs were available currently in the field of design, a concern that many parents of the teens and young designers had. While Gunn highlighted that one needs to be prepared for and nurture the opportunities that present themselves in order to succeed, Aronowitz replied, “As far as interaction design goes, I don’t have enough people to take the jobs I’m offering!” Either way, it was made clear that moving forward in any field of the practical art takes a lot of effort and determination. According to Gunn, another necessity is to pick a school that suits your needs. He stated, “You should visit the schools that you are really interested in attending and project yourself into the environment. See if you can see yourself being a successful student there.”

From the amazing designers attending, to the overall professional environment of the event, this years’ New York City Teen Design Fair was a major success.

Photo Credit: Angela Jimenez Photography

From Scissors to Circuits

We’re still buzzing from another exciting World Maker Faire! We had 13 Hive NYC members join us to facilitate exciting activities and showcase our work.

Once again hosted by our own NYSCI, the event was set against the backdrop of the 1964-1965 World’s Faire NYC –complete with two NASA rockets, a life-size mousetrap and Katy Perry the Unicorn–and brought hundreds of vendors and exhibitors and thousands of people (55,000) of all ages together around opportunities to explore, observe, create and produce.

Like last year, Hive NYC was based in the Young Makers Tent (sponsored by Cognizant), however unlike last year, there were more activities geared towards the tween and teen set. There was also a well-conceived program of engaging, facilitated workshops and discussions in the Education Cafe, the brainchild of AnnMarie Thomas, Executive Director of the Maker Education Initiative.

In the Hive corner of the Young Makers Tent, we had five tables, and were neighbored by the Central Jersey Robotics Group, HTINK, NYC Makery and others making marshmallow shooters and markerbots.

On Saturday, NYSCI, HabitatMap and Sonoma Tech brought the fog machine and pollution vest to help illustrate components of the C3 and Aircasting platform, which records, maps, and shares environmental data using a smartphone.

High school students from MOUSE Corps joined us to share their Legacy Project prototypes, which all solved unique challenges facing the blind and visually impaired – The Dining Band (Emoti-Con! 2012 Overall Winner!), Your Path, Fashionator & Smartchair.

Media-making and breaking was also in full-effect with The American Museum of Natural History and Reel Works working on an on-site filmmaking workshop, and The LAMP showing festival-goers how to “talk back” to and hack commercial advertising messages.

WNYC Radio Rookies were also on-board to help Maker Faire attendees create 30 on-site, DIY podcasts, which are all available on Broadcastr.com.

Liza Stark from Parsons showed off BOXES (Building Open Expandable Electronic Systems), which sparks computational thinking and STEM concepts through craft. At a mini-workshop at our booth, she helped people make circuits out of paper, conductive copper tape, and LEDs.

Teens from the Rubin Museum of Art transformed the pavement next to our tent, as well as arms and foreheads of many festival-goers with their henna tattoo and bindi station, and Rongoli floor designs!

Teen summer reading ambassadors from Brooklyn Public Library shared some of their favorite iPad apps. And DJ Spazecraft One from World UP had everyone recording and mixing beats as part of The Living Remix project.

On Sunday, Iridescent facilitated two activities based on their Curiosity Machine program, including making 3D balls out of paper and mini-catapults out of rubber bands and sticks. Also, City Lore revisited a popular activity from Maker Faire 2011 – the totem pole!

The ever-fabulous Cydney from DreamYard, along with help from some teens that participated in the DreamYard Summer Fashion Week program, were responsible for upping the trend factor at Maker Faire this year. They shared some seriously cool cut and tie techniques to make big, bland T-shirts into true fashion statements.

People’s Production House/REV- play-tested their World’s Fair 2.0 cell phone-enabled game that explores how the NY World’s Fairs determined NYC’s future!

And you know we had to bring the webmaker fun! Maker Faire marked our last official Hive Summer Code Party of 2012, and the X-Ray Goggles were in full effect! Watching kids’ faces once they’ve clicked “Commit Changes” is kinda priceless, in the sense that you get to witness both their creativity and their remix a-ha moment. Witness the unicorns and disestablishmentarianism!

With all of this awesomeness came TWO Make Educator’s Choice ribbons for the Hive booth! We’re so thankful to all of our members and friends who came out to make and learn and teach and share with us!

Hive Fashion Forward!

This summer we announced the launch of a new program supported by MacArthur Foundation in which Hive members in both NYC and Chicago would unify around a common theme–fashion–and bring Connected Learning principles to life. The charge is to develop programs and pathways that engage youth in creative production in fashion and multimedia storytelling. By linking youth interests with peer culture and potential academic and professional trajectories, the two-year Hive Fashion program aims to continue to inform this model of learning via innovative experiences for youth and a rich database of open source curricular resources.Now, we’re happy to announce the first round of Hive Fashion grantees! These projects range from wearable technology and documenting street fashion trends to creating a new teen apparel brand. Each will receive funds towards the development of their project and resources.

Brooklyn Public Library – NYC
What We Wear explores Brooklyn Hip Hop fashion through digital photography and style blogging, and will follow the library’s first major fashion exhibition and program series, Fashion Illustration: A Contemporary Look.

Cooper-Hewitt + Chris Bevans – NYC
A 24-session workshop builds fashion production skills leading to professional critiques and internships.

DreamYard + MIT Media Lab – NYC
Fashion Studio, which builds off this recent summer fashion intensive, blends creative expression and critical history with computationally programmable designs.

Eyebeam – NYC
Wearable tech becomes game controllers showcased in a teen-created Fashion Game Arcade, which builds on a recent grant awarded by the Rockefeller Foundation.

Northwestern FUSE – Chicago
Re-Fashioning STEAM develops five new fashion-themed challenges for the self-guided FUSE project.

NYPL + The LAMP – NYC
In Deconstructing Fashion, teens will critically examine the fashion industry with multi-media responses.

NYSCI + Habitat Map + Parsons – NYC
Fashion Your Environment combines fashion and wearable technology to broadcast environmental data.

Street-Level Youth Media – Chicago
SL Fashion produces multimedia explorations of creative expression, identity, and community.

YMCA – Chicago
The Y will leverage and rebrand its Black & Latino Achievers program to build toward a teen brand from logo to apparel.

YMCA + MFTA – NYC 
Through DEFYNE teens use recycled textiles and materials for their sustainable eco-friendly designs.

Yollocalli Arts Reach – Chicago
Oh Snap, Represent fills a void in fashion through street-wear documentation from a teen perspective.

In addition to these programs that directly result in youth program development, Hive Fashion also awarded separate funds to Special Project Partners to help build collaborations between Hive and fashion/documentary professionals to create opportunities for youth internships, pilot programs, and design challenges. These partners are The Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum in NYC and YOUmedia in Chicago.

Progress on the development of these programs can be found at http://hivefashion.tumblr.com or by following @HiveFashion on Twitter. For more details please contact  ReFashionLearning@gmail.com.