Learn how to observe design in everyday life. A practical, inspiring guide for students preparing for NID, NIFT, UCEED and building strong design portfolios.
“I don’t get ideas… everyone else seems more creative than me.”
A student told me this on her second day in class.
She sat quietly, flipping through her sketchbook—half-finished pages, unsure lines.
“I look at others’ work,” she said, “and I feel like… I just don’t see things the way they do.”
I smiled and asked her a simple question:
“On your way here today, what did you notice?”
She paused.
“The traffic,” she said.
“That’s it?”
Another pause.
Then slowly: “The auto seat was torn… and someone had stitched it with a different color thread.”
And there it was.
Not a lack of creativity. Just a lack of awareness of what she was already seeing.
Because here’s the truth:
👉 Design doesn’t begin with drawing.
👉 It begins with observing.
Why Observation Is the First Skill of Every Designer
Before you prepare for design entrance exams like NATA, NID, NIFT, or UCEED… before you build a portfolio for design colleges…
You need to train one thing:
Your ability to OBSERVE.
Not just look. See.
We all look at the same world.
But designers notice:
● Why a chair is uncomfortable
● Why a website feels confusing
● Why a product is easy—or frustrating—to use
This is what builds a strong design career in India today.
Not just talent.
But awareness.
Step 1: Start Questioning Everyday Objects
Let’s take something simple.
A water bottle.
Most people see: “A bottle.”
A designer asks:
● Why is this shape used?
● Why is the cap designed this way?
● Is it easy to hold?
● Could it be better?
This shift—from seeing to questioning—is where design thinking begins.
👉 Try this today: Pick any object around you and ask “why” five times.
You’ll be surprised how quickly your thinking changes.
Step 2: Observe Problems, Not Just Beauty
Many students think design is about making things look good.
It’s not.
It’s about solving problems.
Look around:
● A school bag that hurts your shoulders
● A classroom chair that makes you restless
● An app that’s difficult to navigate
Each of these is a design problem waiting to be solved.
👉 This is exactly what exams like NID and UCEED test: Not how well you draw—but how well you think.
Step 3: Pay Attention to User Experience (Without Realizing It)
The next time you:
● Order food online
● Use a lift
● Walk into a store
Ask yourself:
● Was this easy or confusing?
● Did something frustrate me?
● What could improve this experience?
That’s UI/UX thinking—one of the fastest-growing fields in the scope of design today.
Step 4: Build a Habit of Noticing Small Details
This is where most transformation happens.
Start small:
● Patterns on floors
● Signboards on streets
● Packaging of everyday products
Why?
Because your portfolio for design colleges is built on:
● Observation
● Interpretation
● Original thinking
Not copied ideas.
Step 5: Document What You See
Observation without recording is lost insight.
You don’t need anything fancy.
Just:
● A notebook
● Quick sketches
● Random notes
● Photos on your phone
The goal is simple:
👉 Capture thoughts before they disappear.
Over time, this becomes your biggest creative resource.
A Real Moment from Our Classroom
I remember giving a simple assignment:
“Observe your surroundings and redesign something you use daily.”
Most students came back with predictable ideas.
Better-looking bottles. Stylish furniture.
But one student walked in with something different.
She had redesigned… a staircase.
Not visually.
Functionally.
She had observed that in her apartment:
● Elderly people struggled with the height of steps
● Children ran too fast and slipped
Her solution included:
● Slightly altered step dimensions
● Grip textures
● Visual indicators
It wasn’t flashy.
But it was thoughtful.
That’s when I knew—she had started seeing like a designer.
What I’ve Observed Over the Years
Students often believe: “I need more ideas.”
But the truth is:
You don’t need more ideas. You need more awareness.
Creativity is not something you switch on.
It is something you build—slowly, consistently.
And once it starts, you cannot switch it off.
For Parents: Why This Skill Matters More Than Marks
If you’re a parent reading this, here’s something important.
The world your child is stepping into values:
● Problem-solving
● Innovation
● Independent thinking
More than ever before.
A strong design career in India today is built on:
● Observation
● Analysis
● Creativity
Not just academic scores.
This is why students preparing for NID, NIFT, and UCEED are trained differently.
They are not just taught.
They are conditioned to think.
So… How Do You Start?
Start small.
Today.
● Notice one object
● Question one experience
● Write one observation
That’s it.
Do this daily—and within weeks, you’ll feel the shift.
A Thought to Leave You With
The world is not short of ideas.
It is full of unnoticed ones.
The difference between an average student and a designer is simple:
One looks. The other sees.
If You Want to Experience This Firsthand
Sometimes, reading about design is not enough.
You need to sit in a space where:
● Ideas are explored
● Questions are encouraged
● Thinking is challenged
At The Design Venue, this is exactly what we create.
If you’re curious—come in, observe, and experience it yourself.
📞 +91 98864 52274
Because sometimes, all it takes… is learning how to see differently.




