Interesting thread.
Interesting to hear the talk of form vs function and design Vs manufacture.
my background in automotive engineering has given me some interesting parallels to think about.
design and manufacture was obviously completely split between two completely different teams, and we had a phase, or number of checkpoints, in every project called manufacturing feasibility. At this point engineering and manufacturing teams come together and check it could be built and if not how we should change the design so that it can.
what is also interesting is that there were sort of two phases of design, and these sort of separated the form and function part:
first you have the artistic concept design guys who wear silk scarves, and corduroy trousers, who sketch out cool looking stuff on a piece of paper.
then you have the engineering teams who take care of the function part and temper the beautiful art work concepts into something practical, then later they meet with manufacturing who tell them it can't be assembled efficiently and the design is changed so that it can. By the end the sketch looks nothing like the design but you have something that will take you to the shops, and because the corduroy trousers guys got involved at the start it doesn't end up looking like a cardboard box on wheels designed by an engineer.
you really need the artistic guys because the engineers can't see past problem solving, and we can't turn it off, it's an in built function of our brains, and that compromises the artistic element because a lot of ideas get rejected inside the mind without even reaching the paper. There are people that can do both of course, but they are not the norm.
and now that I've started looking at doing woodworking I am needing to train myself to think differently:
1. Be more creative / artistic
2. Dive in and do it, instead of analysing it and planning it and worrying about all the problems that need solving - just get started
3. Don't dwell on the little details and let it slow you down
4. Focus on the 'what' and not the 'how'... Dovetail joints are fascinating but they are a means to an end - the big picture needs to be figured out first and not lost sight of, and the details later
And many other characteristics that need changing about myself
I'm not sure how relevant all that was...
martin