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INTRODUCTION TO

DESIGN AND
PRODUCTION

EVICEN C. FLORES
Design and Production Process
ESENTATION OUTLIN
PR E
UNDERSTANDING THE HISTORICAL
SIGNIFICANCE OF THE DESIGN PERSPECTIVES ON
AND PRODUCTION PROCESS DESIGN AND
PRODUCTION

OVERVIEW OF OPEN FORUM


INDUSTRIES WHERE THE
PROCESS IS APPLIED
UNDERSTANDING
THE
SIGNIFICANCE
DEFINE DESIGN AND
PRODUCTION
Design: The creative and
systematic process of conceiving,
planning, and visualizing ideas.
Production: The phase where
ideas are transformed into
tangible products, services, or
content.
IMPORTANCE OF
THE PROCESS
It ensures the efficient creation of
high-quality products.
It enables innovation and problem-
solving.
It impacts various aspects of our
daily lives.
INDUSTRIES
WHERE THE
PROCESS IS
APPLIED
EXAMPLE INDUSTRIES
INCLUDE:
Manufacturing (e.g., automobiles, electronics)
Graphic design and advertising
Fashion and textiles
Film and entertainment
Architecture and construction
Software development and UX/UI design
Food and culinary arts
Interior design
HISTORICAL TIMELINE
PERSPECTIVES ACTIVITY
HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE
Invention of the printing press Emergence of modern design
by Gutenberg (1450) movements (e.g., Bauhaus, Art
Industrial Revolution and mass Deco)
production (18th-19th centuries) Digital revolution and the rise of
computer-aided design (CAD)
TIMELINE
ACTIVITY
JOHANNES GUTENBERG
Johann Gutenberg's invention of
movable-type printing quickened the
spread of knowledge, discoveries, and
literacy in Renaissance Europe. The
printing revolution also contributed
mightily to the Protestant Reformation
that split apart the Catholic Church.
INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION AND MASS
PRODUCTION (18TH-19TH CENTURIES)
The Industrial Revolution was a period of
major mechanization and innovation that
began in Great Britain during the mid-18th
century and early 19th century and later
spread throughout much of the world. The
British Industrial Revolution was
dominated by the exploitation of coal and
iron.
DIGITAL REVOLUTION AND THE RISE OF
COMPUTER-AIDED DESIGN (CAD)
The beginnings of CAD can be traced to the year
1957, when Dr. Patrick J. Hanratty developed
PRONTO, the first commercial numerical-control
programming system. In 1960, Ivan Sutherland
MIT's Lincoln Laboratory created SKETCHPAD,
which demonstrated the basic principles and
feasibility of computer technical drawing.
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