I didn't have time to formulate an example this morning, but I wanted to illustrate the type of math problems faced by professional artists. As my concentration is in textiles and weaving I'll use a pertinent examples from there.RedImperator wrote:It just seems like a silly objection. I'm terrible at math and I routinely do that exact math problem whenever I'm on a long drive and want to know how long until I arrive.Broomstick wrote:>cough< Can I say something? I'm an artist/writer who sucks at math, having spent years in the remedial end of it and totally wiping out on pre-calculus. Despite all that, I can figure out that problem. If an adult can't manage that problem they ARE fucking stupid. Being artist is not a "get out of math free" card in this life.Darth Wong wrote:No. Anyone who can't figure out "36 miles at 75 mph" is too fucking stupid. I won't tolerate the presence of such a person. Are you saying that you need to "enjoy math and science" in order to handle such a ludicrously simple problem? That an artist or writer can't figure out the concept of distance and speed without wracking his brain or running to his textbooks?
You need to weave a piece of fabric 32 inches wide, at 36 threads per inch, and 10 yards long (FYI for the metric folks - 1 yard = 3 feet = 36 inches). Allowing one yard of wastage on either end of the warp (the lengthwise threads) to anchor it to the loom, how many yards of thread will you need in order to make the warp?
Assuming this is an even weave fabric (36 threads per inch for the weft as well as the warp) how many yards will you need to complete the fabric as planned?
(I could go crazy at this point and start calculating the amount required of each color needed for an Ancient MacCrimmon tartan, but I don't feel like doing that much typing. It's five different colors arranged in, if I recall correctly, 16 different sized stripes. I really did have to sit down and calculate the whole damn thing, including allowing for wastage then figuring out out many skeins I had to buy as the skeins come in set sizes and... well, it was complicated. By the way, the cheap-ass bastard never did pay me for it - if anyone wants 10 yards, or even just one, let me know. A square meter of it, for example, would make a very nice shawl. Fucking last time I weave up a féileadh mòr without payment in ADVANCE!)
If you can't answer those questions you won't make a profit and likely you won't succeed at making what you intend to make. So can we drop the meme that artists don't need math? We don't need the math an engineer like Mr. Wong needs, but we DO need math and we need to do it accurately.