35 Degrees in Product Design in United Kingdom for 2024
- Lincoln, United Kingdom
Full time
3 years
On-Campus
English
With links to the design industry, collaboration with agencies, placement opportunities, and support to launch business start-ups, this course aims to develop the product designers of the future. Lincoln's Product Design degree concentrates on the generation, delivery, and communication of ideas that challenge conventional thinking and open up new markets.
- Wrexham, United Kingdom
Full time
3 years
On-Campus
English
Our Product Design degree focuses on the high-quality practical skills needed to be a professional Product Designer. You will gain experience in digital technologies and techniques that will enable you to turn your imaginative ideas into design boards through prototypes and practical making skills.
- Manchester, United Kingdom
Full time
On-Campus
English
Product designers at Manchester Met explore why, examine how, and ask ‘what if?’ We are investigative and critically responsive to human and global needs, developing innovative design-led solutions that connect the consumer experience of products, systems and services. As a product design student, you will be creative with purpose, gaining critical understanding of the emergent issues affecting design across society and culture, learning how to be a designer of products that enhance functionality, interactions and relationships with people and the places we inhabit.
- London, United Kingdom
Full time
3 years
On-Campus
English
BA Product and Furniture Design puts making at the centre of design production. This ensures you develop your practical skills. You will combine these with a critical and investigative approach to objects.
- Dundee, United Kingdom
Full time
12 months
On-Campus
English
Product Design course is an ideal launch pad if you want to enter the exciting world of creative technology. You'll examine the ways digital technologies are changing the way we live our lives, exploring big data and looking at the relationship between products, the internet and the cloud.
- Manchester, United Kingdom
Full time
On-Campus
English
Right from the start, our product design engineering degree is all about developing your creativity and problem-solving skills. Even the introduction is a team-based design-and-build challenge – reflecting the kind of project-based, hands-on approach to learning you’ll experience throughout your time with us.
- Dundee, United Kingdom
Full time
4 years
On-Campus
English
Product Designers need to be able to research, and imagine new ideas and bring them to life through sketching, prototyping, and visualization. You will learn about the whole design process - research methods, sketching, prototyping, materials, manufacturing, sustainability, 3D modeling, electronics, and how to program them.
- London, United Kingdom
Full time
On-Campus
English
BA Product and Industrial Design at Central Saint Martins believes that design is a process-driven activity. On this course, you will identity appropriate problems and design outcomes which meet the wants and needs of people. This course will provide you with an open and supportive environment as you become a designer. We will equip you with the skills to make interventions in the world which are informed, creative, and meaningful.
- Kingston upon Thames, United Kingdom
Full time, Part time
1 year
On-Campus
English
You may specialise in either product or furniture design. A hands-on approach incorporates research techniques, collaboration and group working, developing finished objects intended for craft, industrial production or conceptual prototype.
- London, United Kingdom
Full time, Part time
1 year
On-Campus
English
This course examines the latest developments in digital product development and manufacturing. You will gain hands-on experience with the latest Computer Aided Design and Computer Aided Manufacturing applications, including 3D modelling techniques, 3D laser scanning, model reconstruction, 3D printing and Computer Numerical Control Machining.
- London, United Kingdom
Full time
1 year
On-Campus
English
Design Products explores new terrain for designing products aiming to evolve new design disciplines and practices. We question ‘what is a product?’ and the assumption of adding products to uncover critical questioning to inform cutting-edge creative practices for designing better futures.
- Belfast, United Kingdom
Full time
3 years
On-Campus
English
The main objective of this engineering degree is to produce graduates with a broad and balanced set of skills and attributes required for the design and manufacture of innovative, optimised and sustainable technical products for the 21st century. This course develops the technical, personal, interpersonal and professional skills necessary to do that. It is a variant of the Mechanical Engineering degree, which focuses on design process methodology, materials, manufacturing and analysis.
- Kingston upon Thames, United Kingdom
Full time
3 years
On-Campus
English
If you're considering a career in professional design, this course provides the skills, knowledge and practical experience you'll need. Design work covers domestic and commercial furniture, housewares and ceramics, and industrial and technology products. Using our workshops, you'll have a platform for experimentation and discovery. You'll study key themes, such as sustainability, manufacturing and the roles that designers play in the industry.
- London, United Kingdom
4 weeks
Distance Learning
English
Experience design is a set of design practices focussed on creating positive emotions, impressions and memories which create an impact on the target audiences. It can be applied to services, products, user journeys, spaces, and events, and is considered the next frontier for differentiation in increasingly competitive markets. In this Experience Design course you will learn how to use design, spatial and behavioural strategies to design and project the experience you want your brand, product or service to deliver.
- London, United Kingdom
Full time
2 years
On-Campus
English
MA Industrial Design adapts to these changes in business models and consumption patterns. On the course, you will question how and why particular goods and services are produced. We recognise the need for drawing on current thinking and practice in other discipline areas, including social psychology, behavioural science, cultural theory and innovation studies. The course does not impose a particular manifesto or rule-book for design. Instead, it is concerned with the development of industrial design as a discipline and profession.