Longlisted: Information is Beautiful Awards 2023

Re-count, is a sound archive and speculative educational tool that measures human lifetimes. Containing audio clips of memories lasting varying durations juxtaposed against an illuminated timeline, it demonstrates how emotions alter our individual experiences of time.

Re-count harnesses true stories of love and grief gathered from people over interviews; In doing so, it also seeks to be an interface that highlights our shared connection as human beings and encourages greater understanding.

View the full work process below:

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Process




Category:
Product Design
Physical Computing
Experience Design
Data Visualisation
Design Art


Tools:
Arduino
Laser Cutting & Engraving
Adobe Illustrator
Adobe After Effects
Photography




Challenge:
“Explore conflict, instructions, and data to produce a device for measuring time for a machine audience.”


A Clock To Measure Human Time For Machines


Re-count was created in response to a design conundrum : how do you design a clock for a machine?

Humans, unlike machines, experience the same duration of time subjectively; moments that feel important, sometimes feel like they last forever. Elaborating on this initial fact led me to insight for the purpose of such a clock — as a hypothetical tool to teach a machine the importance of emotion to humanity.




Audio Archive


The device interface abstractly depicts 3 human lifetimes from young to old through sound and light triggered by buttons.

Each initiates an audio experience of short sound clips representing significant events in one person’s life such as birth or marriage. LED bulbs on the device face gradually light up to follow the events as they play out.

The centerpiece of each track is an extended personal interview describing the individual’s most unforgettable memory that continues to influence their lives. During the recounting of the event, a larger part of the LED bar lights up in red visually representing its significance.






Product Design


Acknowledging the nostalgic content of its archives, Re-count was designed around vintage radios and digital clocks.

Laser-cut and engraved 6mm birch plywood was used to manufacture the facade. Engravings on the face of the product of a time scale in human years tell users what point of a person’s life they are currently experiencing.




Physical Computing


The Teensy microcontroller, along with the Audioshield component is used to store and transmit audio from a micro SD card in synchronisation with the LED light up. Each audio track and LED display is controlled with the push of a separate button.

Link to the full Arduino code below:

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Re-count


Visual Identity


The logo is an minimised take on the analog clock face, featuring multiple arms, in a nod to the documentation of multiple experiences of time.

Designed to be variable, the position and number of arms can be changed for different collateral output. Typography was executed in N27 by Atipo Foundry, a Grotesk font with futuristic sensibilities to allude to reimagining vintage clocks.



Exhibited at Emergence (London College of Fashion)