Michael James Moran Furniture

by Kelsey Keith

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The title “woodworker” might be a misnomer for the talented Michael Moran, working out of Charleston, South Carolina.

Not only does he scout felled trees—with the help of area historical foundations and the City Parks Department—he mills the wood upstate, custom designs each piece, then constructs the finished product without the use of hardware, stains or harmful finishes. Moran crafts even the largest sideboard or dining table by himself, greatly minimizing people who touch the wood on its journey from ground to home. It’s the antithesis of factory-produced merchandise, thoroughly modern and organic in design.

Most of Moran’s work in the past four years has been devoted to commissions (kitchen installation pictured above right), though one can find about twenty ready-made pieces in his shop in the historic Upper King Street district of Charleston. Black walnut has been extremely popular, as well as rough-hewn slabs of Peruvian walnut and cherry, as seen in the coffee table with hand-turned legs at top left.

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Up next, he’s readying two enormous chunks of tulip poplar from the estate at Monticello and a 2,000 year-old live oak tree trunk from a plantation outside of Charleston.

Moran truly masters the art of woodworking so make sure to check out his engaging website, built and branded by Fuzzco, a creative local graphic design firm.

Michael James Moran

1611 Meeting Street (studio)

534 King Street (storefront)

Charleston, SC 29405 map

tel. + 1 843 793 9765

Advertising And The New Sadism

Pain is something that everyone can relate to – which is why ad agecnies are currently so fascinated by it, argues Gordon Comstock

Time was, advertisers dealt in anticipation. Gratification was the juicy worm on the hook on the line which led to the checkout. But as advertising enters its dotage the bait is beginning to look less appetising. The problem is not whether the product delivers on the pleasure it promises, but the suspicion that pleasure itself is disappointing.

“As a rule we find pleasure much less pleasurable, pain much more painful than expected,” wrote Schopenhauer. Never have we had so many opportunities to prove this cheery supposition. Millennial consumers want something that they can believe in. In short they want pain. Pain delivers. I’m A Celebrity… has the only thing the British viewing public like more than celebrities and it isn’t Ant and Dec, although, like Ant and Dec, it is torture.

Where TV goes, advertising will scamper after like an offal-scrounging whippet. We’re not surprised to see human suffering on our screens, but in the past it was only allowed in charity advertising. The Ethiopian child with the flies on his face was Beelzebub’s own key-image. The attitude is ‘You’d rather not look at this? So would we!’ BBH’s Break The Cycle for Barnardo’s (above) is the modern progeny of such thinking. The agency has form for this work – John Hegarty’s breakthrough ad was a charity shocker (smoking toddler, later rehashed as mainlining baby). Break The Cycle is earnestly unpleasant – it provides heightened sensation, but not sensa­tionalism, implying that if you’re shocked, it’s because the truth is shocking. This logic works nicely, so long as you maintain that people don’t want to see cruelty. Presumably you also believe that cinema-goers watched $655 million worth of Saw movies for the jokes.

The truth hurts. Hence the delinquent offspring of Jackass and YouTube and viral marketing. This is omfg-is-that-for-real culture and like a great deal of casual sadism, usually football-related. Mother’s Buy-A-Player virals (one above) which show Oldham Athletic’s fans submitting to depilatory waxing, so much do they want their new player, or Adidas’s viral from 180Amsterdam (below) demon­strating the incredible power of Ballack’s right foot translated into a direct hit to a linesman’s testicles. It’s a kind of male, initiation sadism, based on the old idea that if it hurts, you must mean it. The experience of pain is one form of communication we can all understand. This is not to say that most people are prurient sadists merely that, as author David Foster Wallace put it, “people tend to be extremely similar in their vulgar and prurient and dumb interests and wildly different in their refined and aesthetic and noble interests”.

Unsurprisingly then, the latest instance of the new sadism comes from those purveyors of all things fluffy and friendly, Fallon. Daniel Craig stands impassive whilst shards of glass and masonry ricochet off his charmingly ruffled head. In the world of 007, torture is the preserve of insecure regimes, and advertising, particularly tv advertising, is deeply insecure at the moment. So as budgets tighten, I will be personally beating Craig’s ball sac with knotted rope through a hastily adapted chair. 

This article appears in the February issue of CR. Gordon Comstock is an advertising copywriter based in London. His Not Voodoo blog is at notvoodoo.blogspot.com

The Look Of Love

Amid all the doom and gloom in the magazine world (apart from at CR of course) many seem to be clinging onto the impending launch of Condé Nast’s bi-annual style title, Love, as the sole light in the darkness. And we have an exclusive first visual of the magazine’s logo

Love, which launches on February 19 will be put together by the same creative team behind Pop, who have defected to the new title en masse. While still feverishly finishing the layouts for the first issue, creative directors Lee Swillingham and Stuart Spalding (of design studio Suburbia) gave us first sight of Love’s logo which, says Swillingham, embodies the differences between the new magazine and the one to which it is sure to be compared.

“Love will be like the older sister of Pop,” Swillingham says. “It’s an evolution of the concept of a high fashion and style maga­zine. It’ll be a bit more grown-up, with better budgets and more possibilities creatively.” Condé Nast’s involvement, he thinks, will give them more clout, allowing them to attract photographers that they had not been able to work with at Pop, while also showcasing new talent.

For the logo “we didn’t want anything that looked like Pop, which is a little bit plastic and very much a product of its time. We wanted to ignore any notion of being hip or trendy and do something classic.”

The logo uses Cimiez, originally designed by Gert Wiescher and based on a 19th century French engravers’ typeface. The reason? To hark back to the early days of maga­zine publishing as well as Condé Nast’s heritage. “We re-drew it and tweaked it to make it more suitable for a ‘headline’ setting,” Swillingham says. Other versions will be used in later issues, including a flat graphic variant.

Seeing spring

Today is Groundhog Day, the confusing day of the year when Americans try to figure out if Punxsutawney Phil saw his shadow, and what seeing it or not seeing it means. (Answer: If he sees his shadow there will be six more weeks of winter weather — if he doesn’t, there will be an early spring.)

Regardless of Phil’s predictions, today is a good day because it is the halfway point between the shortest day of the year and the spring equinox. This means that it doesn’t really matter what Phil saw, we’re now closer to the end of this winter than the start of it.

Before most people realize that spring is on the horizon, now is a great time to get ahead of the curve and start making appointments for all of your spring cleaning activities. These appointments are usually best to be made for late May or early June:

  • Contact the company that services your furnace and set up an appointment to have your furnace professionally inspected.
  • Contact the chimney sweep and make an appointment to have your chimney cleaned, your flue inspected, and your vents tested.
  • Make an appointment to have your lawn mower serviced and your blades sharpened.
  • Schedule to run a test with your home security system provider.
  • Inspect your wood floors for damages or scratches and contact someone to wax or refinish your floors if necessary.
  • If you use a lawn service, call now to make sure you’re on the summer schedule.

Obviously, you don’t have to take on all of these tasks if you don’t want to. But, if you’re someone who sticks to a tight spring cleaning regimen, now is the time to set your appointments.

Happy Groundhog Day!

Image from the (very tongue-in-cheek) official Groundhog Day website.

Get Me Out Of Here

Jeremy Leslie thinks that Disappear Here, James Brown and Peaches Geldof’s new venture into youth publishing has a great name. Unfortunately that isn’t enough to detract from its empty editorial and confused design…

As a fully paid up member of the magazine obsessives club it takes a lot for me to dismiss a new magazine. So I surprised myself when I did just that about a new title announced at the end of last year.

Disappear Here arrives courtesy of Peaches Geldof (C-list celebrity daughter of Sir Bob) and James Brown (the man who bought us Loaded magazine back in 1994). I mentioned its launch in a brief post on my magCulture blog late last year. While admiring the name of their magazine (more of which later), I slipped easily into the assumption that any magazine from those two would be disappoint­ing. How could 19-year-old Peaches and the quietly fading Brown create anything genuinely innovative? I added that their description of the project (“a magazine about music and fashion and every­thing you love”) made it sound hackneyed.

The one thing I did like was that title. Naming a new magazine is always one of the toughest creative tasks, and while not the most easily presented or descriptive name for a magazine, Disappear Here is a great title. It sets a distinctive conceptual tone for the project and demonstrates that the people behind it understand what a magazine can be – a world apart, a place to escape to. The best magazines offer their readers a unique world to submerge themselves in, be it the sheer escapism of Vogue, the intel­lec­tual stimulus of The New Yorker, the conceptual experiment of inde­pend­ents like Kasino A4, or indeed the full-on hedonism of Brown’s Loaded. Disappear Here tells you little beyond that, and is a clumsy phrase for the designer to build a logo from. But a clever name nonetheless, a good start.

In response to my post, Brown, not unreasonably, suggested I should check out their pilot issue before passing further comment. Meanwhile, to my amusement, a quote from my post (“what a great name for a magazine”) appeared on the magazine’s website.

It was left to art director Stuart Tolley to mail me a copy of the pilot issue. A quick flick later and two things were clear. Firstly, my initial cynicism was correctly placed. Disappear Here is a mess of a magazine, featuring the worst sort of self-regarding insular content completely lacking the vital glue of an editorial concept to hold it together. It lurches from Geldof inter­viewing Vivienne Westwood to reportage from a Norway rock festival via a column from Tony Benn and endless pictures of teenagers snogging. The lead feature of the pilot issue is that most tired magazine cliché – 50 Things We Love, number 42 of which is “Silky knickers in lurid colours”, because, “We’ve got lots of them. Literally millions of pairs of knickers. Where do they all come from? Sweat­shops full of children of course, but you know what we mean, right?” Believe me, this is not a world many will want to escape to.

Secondly, and in response to the confusion of the content, Tolley has had great fun playing with this editorial mess. Too much fun. One of the basic premises of editorial design is that content and presentation should reflect one another and he has risen to this task without fear. Every page looks different, borrowing from early i-D, RayGun and a thousand other indie mags. This is editorial and design chaos with none of the refresh­ing novelty of its sources.

Geldof and Brown seem to be under the impression they’ve created a super-cool youth fanzine, when the actual result is a half-baked melange of ideas that could have been knocked out down the pub. There probably is a decent magazine somewhere within their thinking, a magazine that might reunite a young audience with print, but with this pilot edition they’ve singularly failed to prove it. 

This article appears in the February issue of CR. Jeremy Leslie is executive creative director of John Brown, co-curator of the Colophon independent magazine festival and author of the magCulture.com blog

Chamucos Tequila

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Although considered by many to be the drink of rowdy university students, tequila remains my alcoholic beverage of choice. So I was especially excited to try as many tequilas as possible during a recent visit to the state of Jaslisco in Mexico.

One of my favorite discoveries was a reposado tequila called Chamucos. Chamucos is made with 100% blue agave and is aged in white oak barrels for 6-7 months. It is a smooth and mellow tequila, which has mild flavors of earth, spice and smoke. Like many tequilas, it is best on the rocks with a squeeze of fresh lime.

Chamucos is produced slightly differently for local presentation and for export. The local variety comes in a simple bottle, is 38% alcohol and aged for 6 months. The export is hand blown and the tequila is 40% alcohol, aged for 7 months. Although the make-up is a bit different I enjoyed both equally.

Chamucos may be available at your local liquor store. If not, it can be ordered online from multiple sites for around $50 per bottle.

Beelden Bouwers = Image Builders

Ellenseegers {‘Kluifcabinet designed by Ellen Seegers}

When I saw images of this great cabinet over at NinainVorm. I just had to know a little bit more about the creator(s) … apparently Ellen Seegers from BeeldenBouwers designed the cabinet as a customized project for a family home in the Netherlands … together with Arno Tummers, Ellen started BeeldenBouwers in 1999 and together, but also solo, they create and design beautiful and unique objects for the home …

Sleegers   And how about this superfun cabinet called Monster? … I LOVE it ! Ellen designed this unique piece together with Jolanda Slegers
already in 2005 and I wish something similar would be available here
in KL, but I guess I have to move back to the Netherlands and ask Ellen to create a customize piece for us …

Beeldhouwers



A new project Ellen and Arno have been working on is the Woollight collection … lamps made of used wool blankets … the wool material has been subjected to
a treatment which is transparent and remain in shape … the result is
unique, very creative and special! … available by sending BeeldenBouwers an email {via NinainVorm}


The Greener Gadgets 2009 TOP 50 Semi-Finalists are up!

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The response to this year’s Greener Gadgets Design Competition was phenomenal. Entries came in from all over the world, and we were thrilled at the display of creativity and (deep) green design thinking. We’ve just published a gallery of the Top 50 Semi-Finalists, and now it’s up to you to help determine which 10 go to the live judging at the Greener Gadgets Conference in New York City on February 27th.

Visit the Top 50 Gallery now, check out the entries, vote for your favorites, and leave comments. The judges will review the response over the next couple weeks and decide on the Top 10. The Grand Prize for this year’s competition is US$3,000, with Second and Third Prizes of US$1,000 each.

Thanks to everyone who registered and entered, and congratulations to the Top 50. NOW GO AND VOTE!!!

Above: Bulb 2.0 by Felix Stark (Germany); Solaris by Iulius Lucaci (United States); BugPlug by Kamil Jerzykowski (Poland).

>>VOTE FOR YOUR FAVORITE GREENER GADGET NOW!!<<

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Kid Onion

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I just added this to my list of must haves. The character was created by Easy Hey, and will available from  February 5th at ARTOYZ.

[via sharesomecandy]

“Ergonomics for Interaction Designers” series from Designing for Humans

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Rob Tannen and Bressler Group unveiled their concept for the FieldCREW tablet — a data gathering system for design researchers — via Tannen’s excellent Designing for Humans blog last October. The project was notable for evoking memories of the Tricorder and the Speak & Spell, but also for provoking some thoughtful discussion about the physical manifestations of all this mostly-digital User Interface theory that gets bandied about.

Tannen has just taken another step, with an excellent and lengthy set of articles on Ergonomics for Interaction Designers. Published as a three-part series, the first post starts by pointing out the increasingly physical nature of the IxD field, especially as gestural and haptic interfaces are coaxing users to interact with their information in ways other than typing, pointing and clicking. The Driving Factors section alone makes the read worthwhile — here are the first two items:

1. The rapid proliferation of touch screen and other gestural interfaces which combine “direct” physical control with digital interface design. If you want to design for a finger, you have to know how a finger works.

2. The growth of ubiquitous computing leading to an increased range of scale and form factor in devices that contain interfaces, from traditional computers and laptops, to kiosks, tablets, phones, interactive video walls, electronic ink and consumer appliances (to name a few). As a result, people are interacting with interfaces in range of positions and contexts that go beyond simply standing or sitting in front of a screen. So beyond fingertips, knowing how people can reasonably user their bodies to hold, view, reach and interact is valuable.

Anyone tasked with designing any sort of touchscreen or physical motion-based UI would do well to give it a look. (Note to fans of the FieldCREW tablet — the version 2.0 concept was just unveiled last week).

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