Design Within Reachs CEO Offers Statement About Sale/Business Rumors

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Earlier this month, we reported that Design Within Reach, still in the middle of some ups and downs in the market, was contemplating selling itself off to an anonymous bidder and had begun speaking with the investment banking firm Thomas Weisel Partners to discuss its options. After all of this was announced, DWR was apparently inundated with questions and speculations, resulting in the company’s CEO, Ray Brunner, to release this statement on their blog, addressing where the company is at right now. While Brunner doesn’t reveal too much more than “we’ll have to wait and see” for most of the big questions circling around the company, he remains optimistic and highlights some of the specifics of what the company has been doing lately, from opening new outlets to streamlining the business to make things more cost effective. In the end, not a ton of new information, but certainly a well-played move to release a fairly open statement directly from the top of the company.

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Eames inspired Prosthetic Leg

Prosthetics generally lack humanity, style and grace. Often, they look much like landing gear and make the wearer uncomfortable, self aware, and somet..

New York Fashion Week Runway: Barbie Gets Dolled Up For Her 50th Birthday!

She may be officially over the hill, but she can still work a runway! For Valentine’s Day, Barbie collectors young and old crowded the Bryant Park tents to catch a glimpse of the pink-curtained catwalk and pay tribute to the plaything-turned-fashion-icon and her enviable wardrobe. As part of Mattel’s year-long 50th Anniversary celebration for the world’s most adored doll, 50 of the world’s most renowned designers, including the likes of Diane von Furstenberg, Catherine Malandrino, Rachel Roy, Alexander Wang, and Calvin Klein, produced an array of imaginative ensembles for the runway’s life-size dolls, all inspired by Barbie’s iconic style of the past, present, and even future. From the classic black-and-white polka-dot bikini to hot pink crop dresses a la Malibu Barbie, all the pieces were uniquely inventive while staying true to the mini blond bombshell. And of course, the outfits weren’t complete without Barbie’s cat-eye sunglasses and a shiny pair of pink Christian Louboutin peep-toes that served as a wearable homage to the real doll’s plastic ones that you could never actually get to stay on her unnaturally pointed feet. And you thought her clothes couldn’t get any more covetable!

Colors: baby pink (of course!), magenta, fuchsia, kelly green, silver, black
Silhouettes: bubble skirts, strapless baby-doll dresses, sleek mini-dresses, cropped jackets
Celebs: Heidi Klum, Jonathan Adler, Diane von Furstenberg, Peter Som, Kellie Pickler

Photo Credit: Getty Images for Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week

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Reed Space by upsetters architects

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Reed Space is a shop interior in Tokyo, designed by Japanese firm upsetters architects and featuring shelves made of chairs. (more…)

Fracture by Itay Ohaly

Fracture is a part of life and nature. Fractures have different forms that derive from the material structure and the type and strength of energy that..

Autodesk Manufacturing 2010 Announcements: Alias for your Mac, and Plenty More Besides

Autodesk’s “Manufacturing 2010 Products Webinar” just concluded a few minutes ago; the one hour webcast serves as the official party line on what software changes are slated for release to the Industrial Design community (among others). In Autodesk’s case, this mostly means Alias and its close kin Sketchbook Pro and Showcase, but a few notable things are going on with Inventor as well. Here’s the stuff Core readers are probably curious to know:

1.  Alias for the Mac – Yes. It’s true, and it’s official. According to product line manager Thomas Heermann, they’ve been building a Mac version for about a year and a half “when [Apple] started shipping really good hardware”, and expect to ship it along with the new Windows version in early April. It’s a native build, and will have all the function of the Windows version, though we’re withholding judgement on whether this constitutes a slam dunk until we actually get a look at the thing in action — there are far too many examples of crappy cross-platform translations out there for us to get excited, though we’d be shocked if things weren’t level after two or three more releases (see Adobe, for example, in the other direction). It’ll be interesting to watch the horse race that breaks out in a few months as Alias and Rhino jockey for dominance in the newly opened Mac surfacing market: Alias has more high-end clout, and is the first there with a fully-reatured release, but McNeel’s been beta testing it forever, and stands to have a more integrated “Mac-like” product up when they finally make it official.

2.  Realistic Pricing – Realizing, perhaps, that a large and growing fraction of their user base work as freelancers or in small shops with shallow pockets, Autodesk is dropping the price of the most basic version to $4000, which seems to be the magic number upon which many high-end CAD packages are converging (except you, Rhino). The product line, by the way, has re-embraced the Alias name, so that DesignStudio, AutoStudio, etc are now Alias Design, Alias Surface, and Alias Automotive. Note that if you’re a car designer, you’re probably working for a big company for whom the US$65,000 on Alias Automotive is not as big a concern as the tanking market and the striking assembly line workers.

3.  Alias + Inventor Collaboration – Autodesk is really pushing the pairing of these two packages, painting a very sunny picture of the ID folks passing their highly sexy suface models over to engineering, who detail and fillet the things in Inventor, all in a seamless and frictionless manner. The tacit acknowledgement that filleting in Alias is and always will be a chore is probably a good thing, and Autodesk promises that the exchange has “great round trip capability”: changes can be made to the surface model, then pushed into the related Inventor model where the details update without having to start over again. Sounds a little too good to be true, but the video we shot at AU in December gives us reason to be less skeptical.

4.  Inventor as Hub Application – Alias isn’t the only product whose interoperability with Inventor got touted. Architecturally-oriented packages Revit and AutoCAD feature improved interchange too — they’re even going to start bundling AutoCAD LT together with Inventor LT — in a way that places Inventor very much at the center of the broader workflow.

5.  Deep Focus on Plastic Part Design – Nearly ten minutes of the webcast concerned integrated tools for Inventor to aid in mold design, gate location, etc., and a newly simplifyied line of  moldflow analysis tools called…wait for it….Moldflow. The aim is to allow users with little expertise in plastics to generate tool designs themselves, a prospect that makes Develop3D‘s Al Dean a bit nervous, and us as well.

6.  Much Cheaper Rendering Software – Perhaps in response to the roar of approval for Bunkspeed’s latest products, the Showcase rendering package has gotten some nice new features (integrated raytracing, custom HDRI environments, tools for comparing design variants) and a nice price cut, from US$5000 to US$1000.

Update: Autodesk has made the entire webcast available for public viewing, so if you want to hear it from the horse’s mouth in Nightly News fashion, check the link. Bonus points for guessing which two questions at the end were mine.

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Dee Beale

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I found these great images of Dee Beale‘s beautiful gocco prints in my inbox this morning … Dee is a designer printmaker based in the UK … available in her etsy shop … 

New blanket-with-sleeves to compete with previous three.

The other day we happened to come across the Shivers blanket (A) designed by Thelermont Hupton and it stirred something inside us. The shivers we felt was actually deja vu, since we had seen this idea before. And that is not only once, but three times before. The first one we found was the Bookblanket (C) designed by Inger Larsson, and that was back in November of 2005. The second and third example; the Slanket (B) and the Freedom Blanket (D) was discovered in January of 2006, and of course the Shivers is the most recent discovery. The people behind the Freedom Blanket claims to have invented the original sleeved blanket, but we have no way to confirm this at the moment. However, all are available for purchase, the Slanket and the Freedom Blanket even available in several colors. The Shivers is GBP 171:28 (approx. USD 243:-), the Slanket is USD 69:95 on Amazon-, the Freedom Blanket is USD 30:- and the Bookblanket, finally, is SEK 1,195:- (about USD 136:-).brbr

Art Fights Fire

I received an email from Natalie from Arthur’s Circus in Australia. She is participating in a fundraiser for the Victorian Bushfire Appeal. “It works like this: you buy a ticket and your name and email will be put in a raffle drawn on the 25th of February and you could be the lucky owner of a new artwork from one of the very fancy Artists. Such as : Angelina Houtkamp, Apak, Audrey Kawasaki, Beci Orpin, Ghostpatrol, Gina Garan, Jenny Hart, Lab Partners, Neryl Walker, Shag and many many more. So there’s lots of chances to win an art prize from one of the above. All we ask is that if you are unable to pick up, you need to foot the bill for postage and you will be emailed if you win a prize. International folk you can enter too.” Click here.

Isaac Mizrahis Fashion Week Fuel: Champagne Truffles, Chocolate Bark

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(Photo: Isaac Mizrahi)

li-lac almond bark.jpgLast week, Isaac Mizrahi presented the fall 2009 collection he designed for Liz Claiborne (fetch a March issue of something and check out the brand’s newly Mizrahified identity in the spirited spring ad campaign) at his Manhattan studio. Tomorrow afternoon, the designer shows his own collection for fall—inspired by Africa, lumberjacks, and flappers—in one of our all-time favorite Fashion Week venues: the New York Public Library’s Astor Hall. How’s he preparing? Lots of work, of course, fueled by some of his favorite sweets. In a scene that is ripe for illustration by Maira Kalman, Mizrahi has been snacking on Charbonnel et Walker’s Pink Marc de Champagne Truffles (that’s his personal stash pictured above). But Mizrahi’s all-time favorite snack is chocolate almond bark from Li-Lac Chocolates, an 86-year-old New York City establishment with a name that sounds lifted from a Nabokov novel. Notes Mizrahi of the chocolate-coated almonds, “This stuff seriously comes to the rescue in any stressful situation and makes frequent Fashion Week appearances.”

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