Humans of DV: Week 44
Anaisha Das, Abby Kapur, Ekroop Kaur, and Srishreya (Shreya) Arunsaravanakumar
This week on Humans of DV: a passionate product designer, a dedicated dancer who performed in Malaysia, a hardworking golfer, and an expressive teacher who loves fashion. Stay tuned for next week’s installation of this feature and make sure to catch the last installation here if you missed it.
“Whatever I’m thinking about that day just comes out in my design”
Trisha Rajganesh: I started getting interested in design by just building fun products on my own. I remember in seventh grade, I learned about what Tinkercad was, so I started building random things on the website. I remember the first thing I ever built with Tinkercad was an Airpods case, and from there, my passion expanded. I started going on Tinkercad every day in eighth grade, and I figured tha...
“In Malaysia, we got the chance to show people this art form that came from a completely different culture”
Meghana Nuthi: “I do Kuchipudi, which is a form of traditional Indian dance, and it's mostly associated with the southern part of India. I've been doing that for 12 years, since I was five. I started because of my mom. She wanted me to do what she had learned when she was younger. Because of college and everything, she had to stop, so she wanted me to pick it up. So I originally started because sh...
“From golf I learned how to be respectful to others and how to discipline myself”
Aedyn Falcon: “I started when I just turned eight years old. My grandpa got me into it. I started at this organization called The First Tee and it's just for kids to learn about etiquette and how to start playing. I did try a lot of sports. I did ballet and soccer before golf. But I like golf because you can just keep learning. And in the First Tee, it especially taught me a lot of life skills ...
“Style [is the] way you present yourself to the world, [it’s] a form of art”
Madame Moriya: “[It] doesn't mean a certain formula, but I definitely think it's cool to just care about you, not in a materialistic sense or like a vain sense, but the way you present yourself to the world is one form of art. The [fashion] culture [in France] is very strong and you [can tell], because there are books and articles written on like ‘How to Dress Like a French Woman’, ‘French Styl...
The Wildcat Tribune • Copyright 2024 • FLEX WordPress Theme by SNO • Log in