Architecture to Chocolate: Drawing from Inspirations

If it’s one thing that I took away from all my drawing, drafting and design classes is that color is a useful tool. 

Color can affect mood.  Red is an intense color which can stimulate your senses causing a faster hearbeat and breathing.  The effects of blue is opposite of red.  Blue is a calming color, causing a relaxing sensation to the viewer.  Color is a cultural phenomenon.  For many, it is the symbolizes love.   Many Asian brides wear red for this reason and in China, it also symbolizes good luck.  In western cultures, white is worn to symbolize purity.   Yellow is a mourning color in Egypt while yellow symbolizes courage in Japan.

In other words, color is  powerful. 

There are two people in the architectural field have been an influence in my career:  The first is my ex-professor from UCDavis where I studied Environmental Design.  The other is a world renowned architect from Mexico.    

Richard Berteaux:  He is a Professor Emeritus at UCDavis and the first to introduce me to the use of color as a main design element.  Below is a photo of a swimming pool and a singular wall of clean color.  The wall is eye catching, and calms the viewer with it’s blue hue.  From this vantage point, the clear blue sky is dotted with green flora.  Those colors are repeated in the wall.  This also happens to be my ex-professor’s backyard.

Berteaux pool

“Color has been exploited as an underlying theme and often a major design element in nearly all our work: Bold or more modest color, but often applied in subtle ways. We have always utilized color to give a desired aesthetic “punch” to a part or whole of a building, to create a “look” or “feel” to an interior space, a building or a complex.” Richard Berteaux

Ricardo Leggoretta:  Ricardo Leggoretta is a world renowned architect from Mexico with structures in North America, Europe, Asia and Africa….just to name a few.   He uses color as a main ingredient in all of his structures.  It is his signature design element.

legorret orange ocean legorreta hotel camino real

 These great architects use bold color similarly to the way my little bars are wrapped; clean and modern, striking and begging for attention.  In an endless sea of chocolate bars on the chocolate shelf, my bars stand out.  The bold simplicity of color catches the consumer’s eye.  If it’s a bar they have never seen before, it is often picked up, observed and studied, and hopefully makes it into the shopping cart.

sidebar bars

Architecture to Chocolate: The Metamorphasis

I wish I could tell you the usual story. The kind of story where I could tell you  I had full family support when I decided to step away from the design world and into the sweet world of chocolate. But I’d be lying if I did. 

My father, especially, was not at all happy with my departure from my previous architectural profession.  The beginning of forming my company was the worst of the comments…. ”Five years of college and you want to throw it away and play with chocolate!”  Or sometimes, I’d hear this, “You gave away three weeks paid vacation, health and retirement benefits to start this! “. The comment was made even more poignant with a disappointed look towards the floor and the negative head shake.

In defense, I can’t blame my Dad.  He knew nothing about ‘fancy chocolates’.  Say the word ‘chocolate’, and he’d think See’s Candies or Hershey’s.  It wasn’t until my mom and dad came to last year’s San Francisco Chocolate Salon did they begin to understand my new profession.  They stood there, waiting to talk to me, waiting for the customers to leave.  They were standing there for many many minutes.   The shift in their perspective was forming.  “Wow, so expensive! People pay five dollars for a candy bar!  That’s fancy chocolate!”. 

And that’s about the best compliment from my Dad yet.

Transferring skill sets.  What my Dad had failed to see is how I have applied my past experiences and skills into my new profession.  I see art everywhere.  There is art in making the chocolates. I am continually streamlining our handmade approach so that nothing is wasted.  The rhythm of  piping chocolate into the molds; the dance between my assistant and I when we produce the bars.     It’s nearly flawless.  There is art in the taste of the chocolates.  How does the taste of my chocolates stand out from the rest?  My answer: the color/flavor wheel.  I relate flavors like I relate colors on the color wheel.  Flavors can be complimentary (opposing flavors/colors) or flavors can be analogous (similar colors/flavors).

The Genmai bar is an example of complimentary flavors.  The creamy and smooth milk chocolate is complimented by the nutty, crunchy, and roasted flavor of the brown rice.   The initial taste of the milky chocolate and the nutty crunch of the rice is a great contrast.  The Dragon’s Breath bar is an example of analogous flavors.  The smokey tea, the roasted sesame seeds, and the spicy red chili all are flavors belonging on the same side of the flavor wheel.   These are all warm flavors.

color wheel  004 - with 1 tsp grey
Above is an image of a color wheel.  Colors opposite each other are called complimentary.  Red is opposite to blue and therefore are complimentary.  Analogous colors are colors close to each other, such as orange is to yellow.

The design of my chocolate bar packaging is the most obvious sign of my past background.  As you will read from my next posting,  large bold, vivid colors from my main architectural inspirations are translated into my tiny chocolate bar packaging.

red color 

It’s been about a year and  a half since I began Jade Chocolates and I’ve accomplished so much in this short amount of time.  My company has acquired numerous awards, we’re continually adding products into our line, and we’re slowly branching outside of the California market.   

Nowadays, I get not a single peep from my father.  His previous comments have stopped altogether and I he’s warming up to the idea that chocolate can be just as lucrative a career as  my past cushy office  job.    One day, he’ll see what I’ve known all along, that all of my hard work will have it’s own rewards.

Watch for my next posting: Chocolate and Architecture: Drawing from Inspirations.

Free Tickets to Appel and Frank’s Chic Summer Soiree

Summer '09 Invite appel and frank

Come see what’s hot in fashion at this summer’s Chic Summer Soiree on August 13th, 2009 with over 65 designers offering clothing, accessories, handbags, etc.  Jade Chocolates and Clarine’s Florentines will be there selling as well.  And the best thing, click on Appel and Frank’s website, type in code DESIGNERSF and get free admission!