Preston, United Kingdom

Surface Pattern and Textiles

Master's
Table of contents

Surface Pattern and Textiles at University of Central Lancashire

Language: EnglishStudies in English
Subject area: engineering and engineering trades
Qualification: MA
Kind of studies: full-time studies, part-time studies
Master of Arts (MA)
University website: www.uclan.ac.uk

Definitions and quotes

Pattern
A pattern is a discernible regularity in the world or in a manmade design. As such, the elements of a pattern repeat in a predictable manner. A geometric pattern is a kind of pattern formed of geometric shapes and typically repeated like a wallpaper design.
Surface
A surface, as the term is most generally used, is the outermost or uppermost layer of a physical object or space. It is the portion or region of the object that can first be perceived by an observer using the senses of sight and touch, and is the portion with which other materials first interact. The surface of an object is more than "a mere geometric solid", but is "filled with, spread over by, or suffused with perceivable qualities such as color and warmth".
Pattern
Pattern is a word that is synonymous with schemas (and their dynamic). They are the customary and often repeated way that a person behaves.
Gerald J. Mozdzierz, et al.,, in “Principles of Counseling and Psychotherapy: Learning the Essential Domains and Nonlinear Thinking of Master Practitioners”, p. 447
Pattern
...regard it in fact as the great advantage of the mathematical technique that it allows us to describe, by means of algebraic equations, the general character of a pattern even where we are ignorant of the numerical values which will determine its particular manifestation.
Friedrich August von Hayek, in The Market and Other Orders, University of Chicago Press, 8 January 2014, p. 366
Pattern
if we seem a small factor in a huge pattern, nevertheless it is of relative importance. We take a tiny colony of soft corals from a rock in a little water world. And that isn't terribly important to the tide pool. Fifty miles away the Japanese shrimp boats are dredging with overlapping scoops, bringing up tons of shrimps, rapidly destroying the species so that it may never come back, and with the species destroying the ecological balance of the whole region. That isn't very important in the world. And thousands of miles away the great bombs are falling and the stars are not moved thereby. None of it is important or all of it is.
John Steinbeck, in The Log from the Sea of Cortez (1951)
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