Arvin is currently working out of Boston, Massachusetts for Essential Design.
Originally drawn to industrial design by an interest in people, Arvin is a generalist who combines creative tools and technical skills to create simple solutions for systems-level design problems. He is an explorer in pursuit of discoveries that reveal opportunities for innovation.
Andrew Valentine has taken many steps toward becoming a designer, but the most important steps he has taken have been the ones outside his comfort zone. “I constantly challenge myself to step outside my comfort zone,” said Valentine. “It’s the only way I grow both professionally and personally.”
Notre Dame’s Ashley Ceniceros celebrated her birthday by claiming the Midwest District’s Student Merit Award. It was a fitting present for a designer who devised a way to extend the lives of babies born in developing countries well past the day of their own birth.
“Last summer, I spent two months in Nepal designing goods for a fair trade cooperative,” she reported. “I lived with a Nepali family and worked alongside artisans everyday.”
“After looking into the tea drinking experience, I found that current tea infusers have multiple parts and have problems with dripping and stability,” Sukphisit reported.
After being born in Durango, CO, Gabriel Lamb embarked on an odyssey that has taken him to Australia, Brazil, Italy and South Africa. While traveling in Brazil at age 15, he had an “A-Ha” moment that presaged a career in ID.
Rick Hagee’s design career really did start with a napkin sketch.
“I first found myself interested in design when I was about 5 years old,” he recalled. “I would sketch on my mom's napkins, coming up with different inventions, city layouts and even roller coaster designs. She would get frustrated with me because she didn't know if she should save the napkins or throw them out.”
Hagee added, “When I got into my high school years, I began to realize that I loved solving problems as well.”