Design

Steadfast Supply is back up at Navy Yard

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Last year Steadfast Supply had a 3-month pop-up on the ground floor of the Arris residential building (Forest City). The locally-focused and small-batch shop is now up across the street. 

The team behind the project did a great job with the minimal build out, branding/typographic elements and initial brand selections. Programming yet to be seen/experienced!

Why'd they move?

There's a restaurant going into the original space.  The new space is smaller and creates a less cavernous and cozier environment for items meant for coveting. 

What can I find? 

My favorite local DC brands, and more. Because brands are selling on consignment, you'll probably see a larger variety of brands, items and more up-to-date styles than before.  

Why should I care? 

If you've ever wondered what the future of retail is going to be, this is good test. Can they pay rent that a landlord will be happy with and will these brands make enough sales to keep them coming back? How much foot traffic will this add to an already on-the-map steeet? What will their programming budget look like? In a wary retail environment, very much worth keeping an eye on.

PrecedentTictail Market, a similar concept from Tictail (Tumblr-esque online shop tool for makers/designers) also started as a pop-up and has survived over a year in their Lower East Side location. 

Prediction: We will be seeing more globally-sourced, small-batch, curated concepts as long as small retail spaces are available or large boxes can be broken down to make such concepts possible. Especially as landlords become desperate and big box retail downsizes or closes shop. Focus will be on brands that also make sales online, which means spaces that can also accommodate for some back-of-the house storage might also fare well. Winners will include food/beverage concepts and irresistible programming. Already brands like H&M are testing this model just to stay alive and relevant. 

VISIT 

Steadfast Supply

300 Tingey Street #104 SE, Washington DC

W-Su 12-6 through December

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Thoughts on UX and pseudo-design method during early days at Betabrand

Yesterday I went to a panel discussion on UX featuring Faz BesharatianChloe Negron, and Maxim Leyzerovich, all local UX designers and instructions at General Assembly in DC. The discussion was geared toward those interested in learning more about UX as a profession. GA puts on these types of things to increase interest in their courses and I went because I needed a little UX validation. 

My current job is focused on user experience in a physical place. Like parks, buildings, underground tunnels. Wayfinding, parking, signage...these are the things I am thinking about and working on everyday. It's a lot and it's overwhelming, but it's amazing to be a part of creating a better experience and help create a sense of place. In my current industry UX is present in many different ways, but not always from the open, question based perspective that I am used to. Thus, listening to a panel preach is really nice for me to remind myself that I am not crazy.

I've always had an interest in and practiced the fundamentals of UX and design thinking (all very much buzz words now...I know...as is my current job title), but really didn't know what it was called until a few years ago. Post my teaching stint (which I would argue was constant research/proto/analysis), I was as a product manager/designer/cofounder at Betabrand in San Francisco. It was in that hybrid (read:startup) role that I really honed in on my idea making skills--which essentially  became a pseudo-UX method even though me and my team were hodge podging together various approaches until we found something that worked (had a high probability of selling out). 

It it kinda went like this: 

research popular internet things for our target market

throw around a ton of ideas

prototype an idea we think will resonate according to our reaearch

simultaneously create story of idea for audience

test prototype (which in this case was a physical piece of clothing) with story

get live on site asap

check sales

if promising, make more of idea or better idea

if not, make better idea OR abort product and start over

I brought probably over a hundred products to market with my team using this method. It wasn't always so clean cut, but essentially we were an idea factory based in research (however scrappy) and storytelling and marketability. Our most successful products were probably the Executive Hoodie or Dress Pant Sweatpant.

Did I often follow my gut and make (sometimes big) bets? Yes, but only after we had tested a bunch of things that did and did not work to the point that I could feel what I could rush to sample stage and what I needed more information for. Is hindsight 20/20 and am I probably remembering a method when really it may have been total chaos? Possibly.

But my point is UX is more than just a word or a feeing...it's more or less a wide area of practice (like law) in which you should specialize and figure out your own method, following the fundamentals--and it's really applicable I any scenario that involves human beings. I would argue it's extremely important now to figure look at the whole user experience - which often doesn't stop at a computer screen and lives on multiple screens and devices whether you are making an app, selling a product online, or throwing a dance party. In my case, I was rapid prototyping silly marketing stunts (in the form of physical clothes, website and a newsletter) and eventually got to a method for e-commerce fashion design. Now I'm working on a method for experience design, which while take a while since I am one person and need to educate a new team of collaborators. I'll be focused on practicing patience (because: new industry I have a ton to learn), lots of beta testing, data collection (big data and the as best I can kind) and - you guessed it - story telling.

If you are interested in any of this-email me/DM me @stephanieetxe--I'd love to chat.

xx, 

Stephanie 

ps. Here are my notes verbatim from the panel. If they don't make sense it's because they are notes ;)

 

research

-pain points/problems---and path for solutions:

Research; proto; analyze; repeat

Questions

-why are you doing this?

-do you really need me?

-what's the impact

-how do you measure success here?

Blended experiences:

Revolving door signage study

Architectures of control

Disney world

 

Watch

Objectivize

 

Read

Design of everyday things

 

Good design/bad design exercise

--Blogging things that just don't make sense

 

Worst company in the world does XXX exercise

 

Main tools that I use:

Post its

Paper (app)

Notes (on iPhone)

Plain paper notebooks

Sharpies - can't erase build on what you've done

Coffee

Illustrator

Slack w/clients (*aspirational*)

Twitter

Other human being 

 

Panel:

Sketch

Envision

 

Blog:

Ux mastery

Envision blog

A list apart

 

Make my own UX list of people

 

UX meet ups:

Refresh DC

UXPA

 

Biggest mistakes:

Jumping to conclusions

So confident you are right that you don't see Forrest for trees

Married to first solution

First idea will always be wrong

 

Analogy:

You can be the neck of the head

 

Data burger

 

Book

Creativity inc

 

Read

Google materials

Facebooks's medium

Nprs tumblr (miss Melody Kramer)

Thought bot

 

UX design for UX designers

Zuba (sp?)

 

Mailchimp

 

Profit margins

Yes Pop-Up in Highland Park

Just got an email about a Yes Studio Pop-Up this weekend in the LA area. I'm bummed I won't be on the west coast to check this out! They'll have some handmade goods from a recent trip to Chiapas, Mexico (think unique handbags, chocolate and coffee). 

Stop by if you are around and look out for their monthly Pop-Up events this summer!

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Yes Studio Pop-Up

Sunday, May 31st from 12-4 pm

227 1/2 South Ave 51

Los Angeles 90042

 

Location 2 blocks west of the Ave 52 Exit on the 110 Parkway