Map 3 Judges, Kings, Divided Kingdom Judges-2 Chronicles The people of Israel lo

Map 3
Judges, Kings, Divided Kingdom
Judges-2 Chronicles
The people of Israel lo

Map 3
Judges, Kings, Divided Kingdom
Judges-2 Chronicles
The people of Israel lose sight of God’s restoring nature.

LIME the Israelites crossing the Jordan sea into Canaan (led by a man named Joshua), and marching around the city of Jericho in a non-violent way, as God asked. (Write Joshua here somewhere.) Include pertinent textual references.
LIME the Israelites settling into various clans or small settlements throughout the land of Canaan.
LIME the primary “judges” discussed in class. Include pertinent textual references.
LIME a woman named Ruth (meaning strength in Hebrew) moving from Moab to Israel with her mother-in-law Naomi (Mara = bitterness in Hebrew), where she picks up grain for her impoverished relative, and stands in contrast to the behavior of the military/judge/chieftain Israelite leaders. Include pertinent textual references.

Part two rendered room Illustrations schedule3 Days account_balance_wallet$25.00

Part two rendered room
Illustrations
schedule3 Days
account_balance_wallet$25.00

Part two rendered room
Illustrations
schedule3 Days
account_balance_wallet$25.00
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Sallyhanson
Scenes are an invaluable SKP skill to learn as an Interior Designer ……and fun too! Overview
Demo Videos
Instructions
Elevations Review
Peer Review
Overview
Scene Properties
*click on blue links to open the Overview in a new tab!
Demo Videos
*click on blue links to watch Demo Videos in a new tab!
PERSPECTIVE SCENES
ISO+FOV
TAGS -Opt A versus Opt B
Hidden Geometry + Alternate Axis
Shadows + Fog
Styles 3 ways
ORTHOGRAPHIC SCENES
Floor Plan +Elevations (via Hidden Geometry AND Section Cut)
Instructions
Review the Rubric to understand the important details that will be graded.
Use your completed Rendered Room file as the starting point for this exercise.
Follow the in class Demo to organize your Rendered Room Interior model using the following Layer AND Scenes Management
Save your file with a meaningful file name;
Attach your SKP file to this assignment.
Submit your file to be graded.
GOOD LUCK!
*Ceiling should be turned ON in every scene, except your Plan View.
**All Layers should be turned on in your home ISO scene.
LAYER MANAGEMENT
Prep = Open up the Layers Dialog Box.
DELETE all existing layers that came in with any furniture components you added to your model, and move those elements to the default tag, ‘Untagged.’Which list looks organized to you?
ADD the 6 layers below (and try to use only these layers!)Ceiling
Furniture
People
Walls
Concept A (your walls AND anything else you are presenting as Concept A; floor, furniture, lighting)
Concept B (your walls AND anything else you are presenting as Concept A; floor, furniture, lighting)
GROUP all lose geometryAll lose geometry (edges and surfaces) belongs on layer 0/ untagged! …..then in a group
ASSIGN all groups to a LayerIs your artwork part of the walls? Nope! Assign to your furniture and accessories.
Does the Floor belong on the furniture layer? Nope. Make it its own group and layer, or assign as part of one of your Concept layers (hardwood vs tile?).
CONFIRM everything was put into a Group AND assigned to a Layer by Toggling on/off LAYER VISIBILITY WHEN I GRADE YOUR FILE, I will be turning off every single layer to confirm every single object in your model is assigned to a layer you can turn on and off…. so get into the habit now of turning all your layers OFF to confirm all groups have been assigned to a layer.
SCENE MANAGEMENT
Prep = Open up the Scenes dialog box AND the VIEW ToolbarADD at least these 15 scenes;PERSPECTIVE SCENESISOCamera Settings -Perspective
Camera Location -Isomoetric overall view of everything in your model
Layer visibility -all layers are turned on (Ceiling layer is ON)
Field of View (hint hint -this is the tool you will master for capturing interior spaces!)Camera Settings -Perspective
Camera Location
Use the ‘X’ marks the spot to POSITION CAMERA in your room, and
LOOK AROUND to pick an *interior* view (do NOT show any glimpse of grass or sky outside of your room!)
Use the ZOOM tool to manually type and change your FIELD OF VIEW to 55 degrees FYI -so we feel like we are standing inside the room, the FOV should be above the SKP default 35 degrees, somewhere between 50-65 (typically) for an interior perspective,
Layer visibility -all layers are turned on (Ceiling layer is ON)
Hidden GeometryCamera Settings -Perspective
Camera Location -Your choice!
Layer visibility – all layers are turned on
Right click, hide 1 PROMINENT PIECE OF FURNITURE, then add your scene >>>> we should see all furniture of ISO, less 1 prominent piece of furniture
Layers, Concept A Camera Settings -Perspective
Camera Location -Your choice!
Layer visibility – Your choice!
Layers, Concept B Camera Settings -Perspective
Camera Location -Your choice!
Layer visibility – Your choice!
Alternate AxisCamera Settings -Perspective
Camera Location -Place a second AXIS in your model
Layer visibility – Your choice!
ShadowsCamera Settings -Perspective
Camera Location -Your choice!
Layer visibility – Your choice!
Shadows ON
Play with the time of day and your camera location to make this interesting!
FogCamera Settings -Perspective
Camera Location -Your choice!
Layer visibility – Your choice!
Fog ON
If you don’t see anything happening, move the 2 toggle closer to each other.
Style 1Camera Settings -Perspective
Camera Location -Your choice!
Layer visibility – Your choice!
Style -pick a unique style
Style 2Camera Settings -Perspective
Camera Location -Your choice!
Layer visibility – Your choice!
Style -pick a unique style
Style 3Camera Settings -Perspective
Camera Location -Your choice!
Layer visibility – Your choice!
Style -pick a unique style
ORTHOGRAPHIC SCENESPlan ViewCamera Settings -Parallel Projection
Camera Location -Orthographic Top View of your model
Layer visibility -CEILING layer is turned off
Elevation 1Camera Settings -Parallel Projection
Camera Location -Orthographic Side View of your model
Layer visibility – all layers are turned on (Ceiling layer is ON)
Only show furniture located on the wall you are elevating (>> HIDE furniture or objects that are not on the wall you are elevating)
Elevation 2Camera Settings -Parallel Projection
Camera Location -Orthographic Side View of your model
Layer visibility – all layers are turned on (Ceiling layer is ON)
Only show furniture located on the wall you are elevating (>> HIDE furniture or objects that are not on the wall you are elevating)
Section CutCamera Settings -Parallel Projection
Camera Location -Place a SECTION CUT object in your model to physically *cut your wall* (locate on the ‘fireplace/soffit wall’, right click on the cut and ‘align view’
Layer visibility turn off Furniture and People
ELEVATIONS REVIEW
Which Elevation is showing the furniture correctly? Wrong.Section Cut is placed too far away from the wall being elevated.CORRECT!Section Cut is placed to show us the wall being elevated.
We cannot see through furniture, people or light fixtures, so the section cut is placed too far away from the WALL you are trying to show.Looks like a fun design, but I cannot see what is on the wall. Can you?We want to see ONLY the items on the wall being elevated.Clean and easy to read!
If you are ever staring at the back of furniture, you know that Elevation is NOT set up correctly.

1B. Visualizing urban-ecological geographic conflict as creative tool 1B.a. Visu

1B. Visualizing urban-ecological geographic conflict as creative tool
1B.a. Visu

1B. Visualizing urban-ecological geographic conflict as creative tool
1B.a. Visualizing existing patterns
Once
you commit to the particular urban-territorial zone, now you have to
‘pull it apart.’ Please analyze it visually, in depth, and expand,
elaborate on the main critical issues you notice. It is important that
you interpret -critically- what you see, asking deeper questions about
the patterns, textures, contrasts and critical relationships among
elements, that you notice. This also means a process of masking,
editing, framing to identify each pattern on its own.
Select
at least 5 patterns (each of these are presented in separate sheets),
i.e., water ways, vegetation, transportation (freeways-roads, etc.),
canyons (dramatic topographic features), buildings at different scales,
parking lots. By isolating each of these layers you will see the drama
of their shape, as individual operative diagrams (more on this during
class)
Based on your critical
observations, please add to these 5 patterns a series of personal
graphic annotations -using digital or manual, Illustrator or any other
graphic program, manual collages or hand sketches. These “graphic notes”
should reinforce some of the observations you have made. These
annotations include adding graphic systems, such as arrows, dashed
lines, solid lines, circles and other geometries or symbols, to indicate
the main critical ‘conditions’ you are prioritizing, etc
Once
you have a visual and conceptual approximation of these existing
patterns (this involves not only understanding what they look like, but
it is about speculating about what these patterns ‘do’ to the territory,
how they ‘perform,’), now it is time to begin combining them to open
critical design research topics found in this area of study, and the
conditions that have produced the urbanecological conflict.
1B.b. Visualizing existing patterns
Then
combine some of these patterns or layers to dramatize the conflicts,
between them, but also to suggest design possibilities. Develop 2
combinations, denoting 2 critical collisions – each combination is a
graphic system conveying a particular idea about existing
urban-ecological conflicts, within the area you selected.
Each
combination, or critical juxtaposition should communicate a main issue
you are interested in investigating: Maybe one of the ideas you are
interested in investigating is how the ‘flow’ of water collides with
urban development, and therefore you visualize this juxtaposition
between natural water spaces and a more geometric, artificial spaces of
urbanization. In essence, I am proposing that you develop this part of
your research visually, noticing a dialectical relationship between two
conditions.

Egypt to Promised Land Exodus-Joshua God working through Moses (a murderer) to R

Egypt to Promised Land
Exodus-Joshua
God working through Moses (a murderer) to R

Egypt to Promised Land
Exodus-Joshua
God working through Moses (a murderer) to Rescue the Enslaved Hebrews (Write “Exodus” somewhere along the following journey lines)
LIME Moses’ journey to Midian, where he fled (after murdering an Egyptian) and locate where he sees the theophany of God’s presence. Include pertinent textual references.
LIME Moses’ journey back to Egypt where he gathers the oppressed Hebrews and guides then out of Egypt, across the Red Sea, and down to the tip of the Sinai Peninsula, where Mt. Sinai is.
LIME the points of major crisis along the way, which were discussed in class. Include pertinent textual references.
At Mt. Sinai, identify and mark the major events which took place. Include pertinent textual references. Include pertinent textual references.
Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy
The Hebrews learn how YHWH (God) is different through the law codes given to them at Mt. Sinai, and then how to embody those laws as a community to “bless the nations” (Genesis 12:2-3). Identify Leviticus with Sinai.
LIME the Hebrews (Remember they are also called Israel, a name given to Abraham’s descendants that means “Wrestles with God”) wandering around in the desert between Mt. Sinai and the Jordan river as they undergo a wilderness season where they try to learn who God is. Write “Numbers” somewhere on this journey line. Include pertinent textual references.
LIME other places where major events took place on this journey from Sinai to the promised land. Include pertinent textual references.
LIME the Hebrews/Israelites stopped on the eastern side of the Jordan River, and depict Moses with a giant speech bubble that says “Deuteronomy” inside, which is Moses’ speech reminder to not forget the Exodus or the purpose behind the laws (inner transformation not outer legalization) before they move into the land of Canaan, near where Abraham once lived. Include pertinent textual references.

Egypt to Promised Land Exodus-Joshua God working through Moses (a murderer) to R

Egypt to Promised Land
Exodus-Joshua
God working through Moses (a murderer) to R

Egypt to Promised Land
Exodus-Joshua
God working through Moses (a murderer) to Rescue the Enslaved Hebrews (Write “Exodus” somewhere along the following journey lines)
LIME Moses’ journey to Midian, where he fled (after murdering an Egyptian) and locate where he sees the theophany of God’s presence. Include pertinent textual references.
LIME Moses’ journey back to Egypt where he gathers the oppressed Hebrews and guides then out of Egypt, across the Red Sea, and down to the tip of the Sinai Peninsula, where Mt. Sinai is.
LIME the points of major crisis along the way, which were discussed in class. Include pertinent textual references.
At Mt. Sinai, identify and mark the major events which took place. Include pertinent textual references. Include pertinent textual references.
Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy
The Hebrews learn how YHWH (God) is different through the law codes given to them at Mt. Sinai, and then how to embody those laws as a community to “bless the nations” (Genesis 12:2-3). Identify Leviticus with Sinai.
LIME the Hebrews (Remember they are also called Israel, a name given to Abraham’s descendants that means “Wrestles with God”) wandering around in the desert between Mt. Sinai and the Jordan river as they undergo a wilderness season where they try to learn who God is. Write “Numbers” somewhere on this journey line. Include pertinent textual references.
LIME other places where major events took place on this journey from Sinai to the promised land. Include pertinent textual references.
LIME the Hebrews/Israelites stopped on the eastern side of the Jordan River, and depict Moses with a giant speech bubble that says “Deuteronomy” inside, which is Moses’ speech reminder to not forget the Exodus or the purpose behind the laws (inner transformation not outer legalization) before they move into the land of Canaan, near where Abraham once lived. Include pertinent textual references.

Theres two part to this assignment PART 1. After listening to the lecture on gra

Theres two part to this assignment
PART 1.
After listening to the lecture on gra

Theres two part to this assignment
PART 1.
After listening to the lecture on graphic design principles, please select up to 3 (1 is enough, but if you need more than 1, you can do up to 3) specialties (such as branding, infographics, wayfinding, etc.) and do a quick search on the internet. Find some work done by other designers. Save the images, place them on an Illustrator document (letter size is fine), and add as many artboards as needed.
PART 2.
Please search the web for good graphic designers. (I chose rodrigo corral).
After you make your choice as suggested above, research the designer of your choice.
Embed 1 or 2 pieces that the designer created that you liked very much.
State why you like the work. Do you see yourself creating something similar? What would it take for you to get to the point where you can easily create this type of work?
Some of these designers are old. If their styles are no longer fresh, how would you change it so it would look contemporary?
RESPOND to two friends. Say something you like about their selection that they did not say. Why does that work look good for you? Or why do you like their choice of designer? Is there another design/artwork that looks similar? (embed the said piece in your response) How so?

Scenario The houseplant industry is booming, with indoor gardening becoming one

Scenario
The houseplant industry is booming, with indoor gardening becoming one

Scenario
The houseplant industry is booming, with indoor gardening becoming one of the most popular hobbies in the United States. Sixty-six percent of households own at least one plant, and 33.1 million households actively participate in indoor houseplant gardening. Millennials account for the largest growth in the industry, with 70% calling themselves “plant parents.”
With the growing popularity of houseplants, more and more retailers, like grocery stores and discount stores, are reaping the benefits by starting to offer a larger variety than they previously have. This trend has negatively impacted small local nurseries, which don’t have the resources to advertise and market as heavily as chain stores.
Canyon Creek Nursery is a plant nursery in Illinois. A family-owned business, they’ve been successful for over 50 years through word-of-mouth and by advertising in the local newspaper during key times of the year. However, with the continued increase in competition from big box stores and online retailers, they’ve started to see their sales shrink.
Knowing the trend is likely to continue, Canyon Creek Nursery needs to communicate their benefits to customers. Although their houseplants are higher priced than the ones sold by big box stores, they offer a larger variety and more rare, sought-after plants. Their plants are top-quality, healthy, and locally grown, and everyone on staff is knowledgeable in horticulture and available on site to answer questions.
Because of the large increase in millennial “plant parents” of both sexes, Canyon Creek Nursery has designated them as their primary target audience.
To continue to stay in business, Canyon Creek Nursery must make their primary target audience understand they’re worth the higher price. They’ve hired your employer, Strategic Design Advertising & Marketing, to help them make this happen.
Your peers at Strategic Design have completed research of the target audience and the problem, which they’ve summarized and handed over to you. Your task as the graphic designer on the project is to take that information and move into the ideation stage – generating, developing, and communicating ideas on how to solve Canyon Creek Nursery’s problem.
The target audience, plant parent Millennials:
◦ Live in apartments or townhomes with little-to-no outdoor space, so they’re bringing nature indoors.
◦ Take pleasure in bringing their living spaces to life with plants.
◦ Spend a lot of time immersed in social media, often in regard to plants.
◦ Believe in the physical and emotional benefits of houseplants.
◦ Are gratified by the feeling of “being needed” by houseplants as they’re key to keeping them alive.
◦ Enjoy the sense of being part of a “plant community”.
◦ Plan to wait until later in life to have children so they’ve turned to plants in the meantime.
◦ Will compulsively purchase a houseplant that catches their eye.
◦ Most often purchase plants at home improvement stores, followed by garden centers, super discount stores, and supermarket florists. Online purchases have been growing as well.

Franks_Greenhouse-5460 by Ken_from_MD (CC BY-SA 2.0)
Instructions
Choose three ideation methods from the “Idea Generation” section in Module 04. Conduct the chosen methods/activities and sketch out 5 thumbnail ideas for each of them. (You’ll have a total of 15 thumbnails). Although thumbnails are quick idea sketches, they must be clearly understandable.
Determine which concept is the strongest from each of your three ideation sessions and turn each one into a comprehensive sketch. These should be professional sketches that you would submit to a client. Sketches needn’t be detailed, but they should be carefully thought out and cleanly designed. Quality is as important as creativity.
After you have finalized your three sketches, write a short memo to your creative director explaining what media you believe will be the most successful in reaching the target audience. At the bottom of the memo list the three ideation methods you used to create your concepts. See the resource below if you need a refresher on how to write a memo.
If you sketched digitally, save the sketches as a PDF. If you sketched on paper, either photograph or scan your images, clean them up (the paper should look white and the sketches clearly dark and contrasting with the paper) and submit as a PDF. It is highly recommended that you use a scanning app like Adobe Scan or CamScanner; low contrast images will affect your grade negatively.
Save your memo as a PDF and submit with your sketches.
Resources
◦ How to write a professional memo
◦ Houseplant statistics in 2022 (incl. Covid & Millennials)
◦ Millennials, house plants, and how market research can help companies target their ideal consumers.
◦ Consumer Houseplant Purchasing Report 2021

((((The files I attached are examples. My idea is about the desk with hidden dra

((((The files I attached are examples. My idea is about the desk with hidden dra

((((The files I attached are examples. My idea is about the desk with hidden drawers.))))
THE PROJECT (including 1) SolidWorks parts,
2)SolidWorks assembly,
3) SolidWorks drawing
4)PowerPoint presentation
5) Word document reportPROJECT CONTENTS
Each project entry should contain the following items in electronic form:
A. Title Page. Information: project title, school name, your name, your section, date completed, and
estimated time to complete. Also include one sentence that describes your project idea.
B. Presentation of your design using Solid Works.
1. Full three dimensional assembly model on one page.
2. 2-D representations with dimensions: Top, Front and Right Views. One page for each part.
3. Layout of the design in Solid Works including dimensions and a scale.
C. A log of working hours (how long each phase of the project took; each part individually plus the
assembly process).
D. Design Summary: A 3 page discussion of the design modification that points out how the design has
been developed (citing specific functions and methods used in SolidWorks for each part and the
assembly process) and explains why. The text should be clearly written and organized as well as free
of typographical or editorial errors.
E. Optional information presented such as cross sections and auxiliary views will be looked upon
favorably when the projects are reviewed.
PROJECT PRESENTATION
You will also give a 3-4 minutes presentation of your project during the last class. This should include a
PowerPoint presentation and any other supporting material or exhibits that may be helpful in illustrating
your design. Your presentation should:
A. Define the problem or device that your design is intended to improve
B. Describe your thought process in reaching the chosen design
C. Present the improvements, utilizing tools that you have learned throughout the semester.
The presentation should provide a concise description of your project. Points will be deducted for
presentations of less than 3 and more than 4 minutes in length.
DESIGN SUMMARY REPORT
You will write a 3 page report on the project which includes:
A. What the invention or innovation is.
B. How it improves over the current state of the art product
C. How you created it using SolidWorks (specific functions and methods)
D. How long each portion took to create
E. If you believe the design is successful or not
F. Future improvements to the final prototype.
The formatting must be as follows: size 12 font (Times New Roman or Calibri only), 1.5 spacing, 1’’
margins, and paragraphs using the “Justify” alignment (Ctrl+J).