Talk Dreams, Write an Email
Share a goal aloud — and write a formal email to chase one
AI Generation Prompt
Watercolour painting — an ultra-wide cinematic banner (16:5). A laptop open to a half-written email beside a notebook full of sketched dreams and plans, a cup of tea, warm focused light. Glowing against a dark ground. Loose luminous watercolour washes, soft wet-on-wet colour bleeds, granulation and visible paper grain, glowing against the dark ground. No text, no labels.
First, a few words to say aloud. Then discuss your dreams with a partner. Finally, learn the formal email — the way you'll actually reach out to chase opportunities in the real world.
You are passionate about pursuing a course in design. You come across a summer workshop run by a reputed design institute. Write a FORMAL email to the Director of the institute, enquiring about the workshop details and expressing your interest in joining. Use formal language; avoid abbreviations.
- ▸Write a clear, specific SUBJECT line — it's the first thing the reader sees.
- ▸Use formal language and AVOID abbreviations ('I am', not 'I'm'; 'cannot', not 'can't').
- ▸List your actual questions clearly — specific questions get specific answers.
- ▸Include your contact details so they can reply — and thank them for their time.
Q1.What is the most important part of a formal email's header?
AI Generation Prompt
Watercolour painting — an ultra-wide cinematic banner (16:5). A laptop open to a half-written email beside a notebook full of sketched dreams and plans, a cup of tea, warm focused light. Glowing against a dark ground. Loose luminous watercolour washes, soft wet-on-wet colour bleeds, granulation and visible paper grain, glowing against the dark ground. No text, no labels.
First, a few words to say aloud. Then discuss your dreams with a partner. Finally, learn the formal email — the way you'll actually reach out to chase opportunities in the real world.
You are passionate about pursuing a course in design. You come across a summer workshop run by a reputed design institute. Write a FORMAL email to the Director of the institute, enquiring about the workshop details and expressing your interest in joining. Use formal language; avoid abbreviations.
- ▸Write a clear, specific SUBJECT line — it's the first thing the reader sees.
- ▸Use formal language and AVOID abbreviations ('I am', not 'I'm'; 'cannot', not 'can't').
- ▸List your actual questions clearly — specific questions get specific answers.
- ▸Include your contact details so they can reply — and thank them for their time.
Q1.What is the most important part of a formal email's header?