A dam good week in Holland

Hi friends! I’m currently sitting in the kitchen of my LLC, eating a delicious Wednesday snail and finally enjoying a bit of time to relax. It’s been very busy because on Friday night I got back home from my long study tour.

At DIS, every core course has a long study tour around halfway through the semester. Different programs lead students all over Europe with activities and visits that supplement everything we’ve been learning in class. For the graphic design studio and foundations classes, we got to go to the Netherlands! It was such an amazing week. We didn’t waste a single minute in Amsterdam, Rotterdam, Breda or Tilburg. They packed each day with visits to museums, studios and artist spaces, and also some seriously amazing food.

I loved Amsterdam. Copenhagen is still my favorite, but I think I could’ve easily spent a whole semester in that city. In many ways, it felt pretty similar to Copenhagen — there were canals, quaint buildings and tons of bikes. I think one of the stand-out differences for me, though, was all the diversity in Amsterdam. If you sit and people watch in Copenhagen, you can usually tell right away who’s a Dane and who’s not. In Amsterdam, it was much less obvious. People were much more ethnically diverse, and unlike Copenhagen, they don’t all wear black as they bike down the street.

Another big difference is how marijuana is legal and socially accepted in Amsterdam. I know this is common knowledge, but I felt like a huge idiot when we walked outside in Amsterdam and I loudly said “whoa, is that a skunk?” I personally cannot stand the smell of weed and it was definitely an adjustment to be walking around the streets and smelling it as frequently as you’d smell someone smoking a cigarette in Copenhagen. Luckily, someone clued me in that “coffee shops” in Amsterdam are places where you go do(?) weed (I know nothing about how to talk about drugs) and not places to go get a cup of coffee. Helped me avoid what could’ve been an awkward mix-up!

Because we got to do so much and I don’t want to leave anything out, I’ll give you the day-by-day rundown of my trip to Holland.

Sunday

We started the trip bright and early — sort of. It was actually so early that it was not bright at all. My friend Hana and I headed from our LLC to the airport a little after 5 in the morning. For readers at home, 5 a.m. is still totally party time in central Copenhagen. We trekked to Nørreport with our suitcases as Danes drunkenly roamed the streets. So that was an interesting start. Nothing that a huge cup of coffee and a brief nap on the plane couldn’t fix, though.

Sunday’s activities:

  • FOAM (Fotomusuem Amsterdam)
  • DISorientation Activity: Amsterdam
  • De Culinaire Werkplaats
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Dam, I love this city.
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Sketching is fun when tea and cake is involved
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Lauren and Sandy

I wasn’t sure how I felt about the DISorientation activity at first. We had one of these in Amsterdam and one in Rotterdam, and they were basically just a short break to explore, get lunch and focus on sketching and observing the city. I often have trouble with the sketching thing, because I’m a perfectionist, and sketching on the go isn’t the ideal setting for creating something perfect. But I actually really loved this activity. I was with Lauren and Sandy for this one and we focused on observing if the Nine Streets of Amsterdam were hip or livable (we determined that they are both). We got slightly lost, but ended up having a really nice walk around the city until we found a small cafe to sit down and sketch with some tea and carrot cake.

Dinner on Sunday was truly an experience. We went to this culinary workshop where we were served a five course meal (plus tons of wine) where every course was inspired by a famous Dutch artist. We got to take turns helping plate the courses and it was an awesome and highly interactive dinner. I was wary at first, but food was a lot better and more filling than I expected!

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Plating dish #1
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V fancy
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Me and Mara at dinner
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Learning how to plate dish #2
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Bonding with Jeanette
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Friends on the tram!

Monday

  • Frame Publishers
  • Stedlijk Museum
  • Van Gogh Museum
  • Canal Tour
  • Sampurna

Monday was probably my favorite day of activities. Our first stop was Frame magazine and it was one of my favorite stops on the whole trip. Frame magazine is beautiful and as someone who does editorial design it was cool to see how this magazine gets made in Amsterdam. The magazine only has two designers but they were super cool. It was interesting because a lot of what they were saying was really familiar to me, but they also talked a lot about things I never really thought about, such as paper quality. They use both coated and uncoated paper throughout the magazine (re: some pages are glossy and others aren’t), but they spend a lot of time strategizing what kinds of content should go on which kind of paper. The glossy pages are the ones that they put their huge photos stories on, but stories that are more text-based go best on the uncoated paper. Once they pointed it out, it was really interesting to see how much more detail you could see in photos on the coated pages and how much more readable the text was on the uncoated pages. Or maybe that’s just interesting to me, because I’m a huge nerd about this kind of thing.

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Wall of Frame magazine covers
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Designers from Frame show us what they do
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I would enjoy working here

After Frame, we spent some time at Museumplein. We all got a tour of the Stedlijk and then we had about 3.5 hours of free time. Mara, Kelli, Elsa and I got tickets for the Van Gogh museum (which I loved and highly recommend to anyone planning a visit to Amsterdam) and then we took some fun pictures outside the I Amsterdam sign and walked over to the Tulip markets. It was also gorgeous weather.

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Max and Mara at the Stedlijk Museum
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So Dutch
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I amsterdam sign at Museumplein
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Kelli and Elsa are good at poses
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A is for awkward!
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~reflections~
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Friends!!
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Made a new friend who really couldn’t wait her turn to get her picture at the sign

The rest of the evening was super relaxing. The canal tour was beautiful, and we FEASTED at Sampurna, a really great Indonesian restaurant in the city.

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Tuesday

  • LAVA design studio
  • Eye Film Institute
  • NDSM Werf Area
  • Heineken Experience

LAVA design studio was so unbelievably cool. They do rebranding for international clients and we got to do a workshop where we sketched logo ideas for the project they’re working on currently. The EYE museum was really fun and interactive too, and a nice way change of pace from the other art museums we had been visiting.

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The EYE film museum
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Mara at the EYE
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Group photo!
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Jeanette is officially obsessed with snapchat
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I am officially obsessed with fresh mint tea.

We used our free time on Tuesday night to do the Heineken experience. Let me tell you, it was certainly an experience, complete with a karaoke, a bar and a 4-D movie. I’m not a big beer drinker (I always think it tastes like bad water) but I actually liked this beer. Which was good, because the tour gives you a LOT of it.


Wednesday

On Wednesday, we sadly had to leave Amsterdam. We took a bus ride with stops in Breda and Tilburg before arriving in Rotterdam for dinner. I expected to be a bit disappointed with Rotterdam, because it’s hard to top Amsterdam, but it was actually really cool. It was so different from Amsterdam that it was hard to even compare. Rotterdam is much more industrial and modern than Amsterdam. We later learned that this is because Rotterdam was bombed in WWII and most historical buildings were lost.

Wednesday’s activities:

  • MOTI in Breda
  • KAMU Kafe in Breda
  • Graphic Design Festival Lecture in Breda
  • Textiel Lab and Museum in Tilburg
  • Sugo Pizza dinner in Rotterdam

The museums in Breda and Tilburg were really neat. MOTI is the Museum of Image and they had all kinds of interesting exhibits. My favorite was this one that had photos from wire services such as AP, Reuters and Getty and compared the same moments captured by photojournalists and which ones got more views and shares. From an editorial design standpoint, it was really cool, because designers are often tasked with selecting photos, and it was cool to see side by side how even the slightest change in composition or a half a second between frames can make a huge difference in a photo’s success. I also tried virtual reality at this museum which was cool at the time, but I felt dizzy afterwards and now I kind of hate it.

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The photo exhibit at MOTI
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Alex at MOTI
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Somehow this tasted even better than it looked

The dinner in Rotterdam was unbelievable. It was this little pizza place and they kept bringing out very small rounds of weird but delicious little flatbread pizzas. At first, we were all kind of confused because it didn’t seem like that much food, but they kept bringing out round after round. We were full after round 3 and thought things had to be over after round 4. But no, there were 5 rounds of pizza. I don’t want to think about how much pizza I ate. And because DIS does not skimp on meals, we were also given dessert (Nutella pizza and Tiramisu).

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Welcome to Rotterdam!
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The Swan of Rotterdam

Thursday

  • Nederlands Fotomuseum Rotterdam
  • DISorientation activity
  • V2_Institute for Unstable Media
  • Studio Spass
  • Journal Review session and dinner at Hotel New York
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Witte de Withstraat

Friday

  • Kunstahl Rotterdam
  • Het Nieuwe Instituut
  • Museum Bojimans Van Beuningen
  • Markethal Rotterdam

Friday was a very solid last day of our trip. Our hotel in Rotterdam had the most amazing breakfast cafe. Those Holland oats made my dreams come true!

Het Niewe Intituut was probably my favorite place we went on Friday. They had this awesome exhibit called The Life Fair, which was full of new body products. It is hard to explain, but it was basically like a fake marketplace, with commercial products that would help you achieve your ideal self. It was very interactive and makes you think a lot about the things you value and how technology, politics, ethics and design intersect and affect all of this. Some of the products they had there were self-marriage kits, lie detectors, palm-reading and even a make your own porn star virtual reality (I did not try this, after my last bad virtual reality experience but it got good reviews from my classmates).

Sandy got her palm read and apparently she has a lot of feelings.
Feeling infinite at Boijmans
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Inside Boijmans
Had an amazing crepe at Markethal Rotterdam

Overall, I really had the best week in the Netherlands. I love that DIS gets students out of the classroom and even out of Denmark for their classes. I’m back and feeling even closer with my design friends and feeling more inspired and ready to tackle project #2 in the studio. Thank you to Jeanette and Kate for leading us on a great trip and thank you to anyone who read this crazy long post.

 

 

A dam good week in Holland

Six hours in Malmö

I had lunch in Malmö, Sweden today, and the train ride to get there took approximately 35 minutes. Some things that take longer than the time it takes to travel from Copenhagen to Sweden:

  • Drinking a 16 oz. cup of coffee
  • My commute on the T from Cambridge to The Boston Globe this past summer
  • Watching one episode of Gilmore Girls

At DIS, you don’t have classes on Wednesdays because they are reserved for “field studies.” Most classes have a couple field studies to relevant places in Copenhagen throughout the semester, but they aren’t on any specific schedule, so some Wednesdays end up being free days for exploring. So today, we made the best of our free schedules, and headed to Malmö for lunch.

Trains from Copenhagen to Malmö leave the CPH Airport every 20 minutes, so we just showed up and bought tickets. The train goes over the Øresund Bridge and each way only cost about $13. The ride was super quick, but the view was so beautiful that I wouldn’t have minded staying on the train for even longer.

Malmö is the third largest city in Sweden and it ended up making for the perfect day trip. There are lots of nice gardens, parks, shops and squares to walk around. We started our day off with a canal cruise. It was really neat to see the city from the water, and the tour guide shared some good fun facts (like that Malmö translates to “pile of sand.”) and also some really bad corny jokes. Overall, I was really impressed with the tour, and especially how the guide shared all the facts and anecdotes in both English and Swedish for everyone aboard.

One of my favorite things that I saw on the canal cruise was the Turning Torso, which is a more recent landmark in Malmö. It was designed by a Spanish architect in 2005. It has 54 floors and it is the tallest residential building in Europe.

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The Turning Torso
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Can’t get enough pictures of colorful buildings
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Views from the canal
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The harbor area near Central Station

After the canal tour, we got lunch and walked around for a couple of hours. We didn’t do that much research on places to go, but we ended up finding a really good (and shockingly inexpensive) pizza restaurant. The menu was all in Swedish so we kind of YOLO-ed it and picked one pizza with bacon and another with shrimp and hoped for the best. We were not disappointed!!

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Can’t go wrong with pizza

All in all, I would totally recommend visiting Malmö. It felt really cool to be able to go to another country for the day and make it home in time for dinner. It was a really affordable day trip (train tickets, harbor cruise and lunch totaled in at less than $40) and it’s a small enough city that it’s not overwhelming to try to accomplish in a day. Culturally, it didn’t feel hugely different than Copenhagen, but it was interesting to compare some of the architecture styles in the city. Here are a few more pictures from our explorations:

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Me casually hanging in a Swedish park
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Prints from the Marimekko store
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So many beautiful streets to explore
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Kelli and Mara posing in one of the many cool sculptures around the city
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I’m bananas about this window covering
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Central Station

 

 

Six hours in Malmö