scholarly journals Analysis of the Application of National Cultural Elements in the Design of Industrial Products

2020 ◽  
Vol 3 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Xianfa Zhang

With the continuous development and progress of China's industry, it has become the only country in the world that has all the industrial categories in the United Nations Industrial Classification. China's industrial products have gradually changed from "Made in China" to "Design in China". The integration of Chinese national cultural elements into industrial product design has also become the future development trend in the field of design. This paper will analyze the application of national culture in industrial product design, and discuss how to better integrate the two with practical cases to promote the continuous development of the industry.

2020 ◽  
Vol 179 ◽  
pp. 02042
Author(s):  
Hai-chao ZHANG ◽  
Li WANG

This article analyzes the characteristics of industrial product design in the 5G era, and describes the application of 5G technology in industrial product design. It is mainly reflected in changing product interaction methods, industrial Internet development, and application scenario changes. Finally, in the context of the 5G era the development trend of industrial product design is expected, and product design will achieve greater development in the direction of intelligence, IoT, and cloudification.


Author(s):  
John Miksic

Ceramics are the most abundant types of artifacts made by human beings in the last 12,000 years. Chinese potters discern two types of products: earthenware (tao), which is porous and does not resonate when struck, and wares with vitreous bodies (ci), which ring like a bell. Western potters and scholars differentiate stoneware, which is semi-porous, from porcelain, which is completely vitrified. The earliest ceramics in the world are thought to have been made in China around 15,000 years ago. By the Shang dynasty, potters in China began to decorate the surfaces of their pottery with ash glaze, in which wood ash mixed with feldspar in clay to impart a shiny surface to the pottery. The first ash-glazed wares were probably made south of the Yangzi in Jiangnan. In the 9th century, China began to export pottery, which quickly became sought after in maritime Asia and Africa. Pottery making for export became a major industry in China, employing hundreds of thousands of people, and stimulating the development of the first mass-production techniques in the world. Much of the ceramic industry was located along China’s south and southeast coasts, conveniently located near ports that connected China with international markets. Chinese merchants had to adapt their wares to suit different consumers. For the last 1,000 years, Chinese ceramics provided an enormous amount of archaeological information on trade and society in the lands bordering the South China Sea and the Indian Ocean, contributing a major source of data to the study of early long-distance commerce, art, technology, urbanization, and many other topics. Statistics are presented from important sites outside China where Chinese ceramics have been found.


2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeffrey Wrathall ◽  
Effie Steriopoulos

Food is not only essential for our sustenance and survival but often defines a culture. It is in fact, a central feature of most cultures and lifestyles around the world. Cultural elements that can be expressed through the food that people eat, the way in which it is prepared, and the knowledge, skills and rituals that surround gastronomic traditions, are useful and effective ways of communicating and sustaining a national culture. As a result, food represents a particularly important element at cultural festivals and events.


2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. p49
Author(s):  
Gao Hang

With the continuous development of the times, technology is flourishing and the world is entering the era of artificial intelligence, industrial robots will replace humans as the backbone of the manufacturing industry. The continuous development and application of industrial robotics is conducive to building a new advantage for China’s manufacturing, promoting the transformation and upgrading of China’s industry, accelerating the construction of China’s manufacturing power, and making an important contribution to China’s economic development. Based on this, the article describes the current situation of industrial robots in China, the challenges faced, and the future development trend.


Author(s):  
Diego Pautasso

The purpose of this article is to analyze the relationship between development and global power of China. And, more specifically, how the Made in China 2025 policy is designed to deepen China’s development by driving strategic sectors of smart manufacturing and other innovations. To do so, it needs to understand how China has taken advantage of systemic changes since the 1970s to unleash a cycle of comprehensive reforms mobilizing industrial, commercial and technological (ICT) policies. That is, without state emulation there is no economic complexity or expansion of the country’s presence in the world. The proposed argument is that the interweaving between the internal and international dimensions compose the key of the rise of the powers - imperative underestimated by the narratives of liberal globalization - whose epicenter remains the national development.


2013 ◽  
Vol 830 ◽  
pp. 68-71
Author(s):  
Xin Xiong Liu ◽  
Hai Ping Zhao ◽  
Lin Gan

The material is the main factor for the formation of the entity in the industrial product design. Modeling, colour, etc in the industrial product design are closely associated with the material. With a large number of modern new materials developed by research, the prospect of the industrial product design is broader and the value of industrial products, further enrich and improve. In product design, the designer should follow the principle of practical, beautiful, economy, environmental protection and reasonable use different material, so that the product can not only meet the functional requirements, but also has spiritual value.


2011 ◽  
Vol 346 ◽  
pp. 372-378
Author(s):  
Ting Liang Guo ◽  
Jun Liu ◽  
Hong Juan Dai ◽  
Hui Xia Zhang

Traditional critical goals for industrial products design includes five factors. They are utility, appearance, ease of maintenance, low costs and communication[1]. In this paper, puts forth a new perspective, in which considers that embodying of human-centered perspective should be also another critical goal to industrial product besides traditional five critical goals. The paper is aimed at giving rise to the industrial designers to pay more attention to the design principles of ‘Human-Centered’ during their household bisic appliances product design because they are usually ignored by the designers. In the paper, mainly analyzed some household basic appliances products, which are used in every day life of people. The way of study is to analyze some problems in the products design by the examples of the products that are being applied in every day life, but there are some defects. What the analyses mainly concerned is how to embody the principle of “human-centered” in industrial product design. The “green design” and “healthy design” should be put the first place when industrial designers to design industrial products.


2012 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Wei Huo

AbstractTibetan gold and silver artworks were recorded in Tang literal documents and enjoyed a great fame throughout the world for their unique and exquisite styles, but their samples have been seldom discovered. Based on a study on the Tibetan gold and silver wares recently unearthed from Tibetan tombs in the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau and known from collections abroad, this paper believes that both historical records and archaeological discoveries proved the high accomplishments of Tibetan gold and silver crafts. Compared to gold and silver products made in the Central Plains of Tang China as well as in Central and Western Asia, the essence of the Tibetan articles can be said to have been roughly paralleling with those products in technological sense, which indicates that by that time Tibet had become an important production center of gold and silver wares in the East Asia. Tibetan gold and silver wares demonstrate clearly interaction and absorption among the cultural elements of Tibet and those of Tang China’s other regions as well as Sogdiana and Persia. Moreover, they reflect that Tibet in its annexing and expanding procedure came into close relationships with nomadic tribes in the steppes of northern and northwestern China.


Author(s):  
Leonardo Maso Nassar ◽  

COVID-19 was a disease emerged in China and quickly became a pandemic. The pandemic has put health professionals under strong pressure. This situation can cause perpetual damage to mental health. Objective: the objective of the study was to conduct a scooping review to investigate the studies already produced on COVID-19's mental impacts on physicians and nurses. Methodology: the mnemonic population, concept and context of the Joanna Briggs Institute was used for a scooping review. Results: two studies carried out in China and three letters to the editors were found addressing mental problems in physicians and nurses. Conclusion: despite being a recent disease, COVID-19 already demonstrates impacts on the mental health of physicians and nurses. Although the articles were made in China, reports from other countries suggest that physicians and nurses around the world are mentally impacted by work during the pandemic, with relates of suicides ideation and suicide cases among nurses in Italy, in England, in USA, in Mexico and in India.


2019 ◽  
pp. 230-247
Author(s):  
Hashim Zameer ◽  
Ying Wang ◽  
Humaira Yasmeen

Marketing a product to global consumers is a challenge due to intense competition and consumer biases toward specific country in global market. This paper has been used to address the specific challenge of country made in label in context of ‘Made in China' because China is largest manufacturer and exporter in the world. A conceptual framework has been drawn using extant literature to determine the perceived positioning of ‘Made in China' label. For conceptualization of this study means-end theory has been used which determine product characteristics at superior level. The proposed conceptual framework provides strong managerial insights and indicates that positioning of ‘Made in China' label is significantly influenced at cognitive, normative and affective level. Authors believe this framework as a valuable guideline for brands those are thinking to approach global consumers. This study is also comprised of the mechanism that can be used by firms to handle the perceived positioning of ‘Made in China'.


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