Marc Kristals Well-Crafted Take on the Human Touch in Architecture and Interiors

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Foiled again! Thomas Heatherwick’s design for the Aberystwyth Arts Centre at the University of Wales—eight timber-frame sheds clad in crinkled steel.

recrafted.jpgIn a time of tight budgets, teeming store shelves, and easily knocked off (or Photoshopped) perfection, craft is cool. Fendi followed up its Craft Punk project with DIY baguettes, while Gucci has dispatched its artisans to wow waffling customers with in-store demos. Droog recently commissioned design luminaries including Stefan Sagmeister and Studio Makkink & Bey to creatively reinterpret surplus goods from bankrupt companies, and today the Museum of Arts and Design debuts its second exhibition dedicated to remixing the ordinary, this time with entirely natural materials (and artists such as Jennifer Angus and Nick Cave). Next month, crafty SANAA duo Kazuyo Sejima and Ryue Nishizawa will collect their Pritzker medallions and $100,000 check. Writer Marc Kristal explores the invigorated interest in making and the made in Re:Crafted, a lush volume just published by Monacelli.

“Everyone shares a sense of what traditional craft represents, both in terms of objects—a George Nakashima coffee table is a great example—and architecturally, as in the work of Greene and Greene in America or William Morris in England,” Kristal told us. “What interests me about it, and serves as the subject of the book, is that there are many ways to skin the craft cat, as it were, that we don’t associate with tradition.” Kristal’s approach to the fickle feline led him to select 25 diverse projects that have been completed in the past ten years and will keep design fans glued to Re:Crafted. Don’t bother trying to skim.

“I tried to pick projects that approached the idea of craft from multiple standpoints,” explained Kristal. “The first one (above), for example, by Thomas Heatherwick, is a collection of artists’ studios in Wales that are clad in crinkled, wafer-thin steel that Heatherwick detailed by running it through a crinkling machine—called ‘the mangle’—that he invented for the purpose,” he said. “At the other end of the spectrum is a multi-million-dollar opera house in Oslo, by the firm Snohetta, that derives its quality of craft from the two teams of artists that were engaged to deal with the stone and metal surface.” For every feat of intricate African woodworking (Kirk Lazarus and Stephen Falcke‘s Molori Safari Lodge) and Giotto-flavored ceiling (Rick Jordan‘s Renaissance recreation in a New York apartment) there is a mobile canopy of thermoplastic-composite rods (Moorhead & Moorhead’s mobile chaplet in Fargo, North Dakota) and a “hot-rodded” shack covered in overscaled glass panes (the work—and home—of Tom Kundig in Seattle).

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New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Connected by Kasey McMahon

Coup de projecteur sur cette réalisation singulière baptisté “Connected”. Sa créatrice Kasey McMahon a décidé de créer son autoportrait à partir de câbles informatiques (catégorie 5). Plus de visuels de son travail original, dans la suite de l’article.



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Previously on Fubiz

Making an airplane, edited down to 2:30

pHere’s footage of workers assembling a Boeing 737 airliner, inside and out, time-lapsed down into two minutes, thirty seconds. It’s interesting–and a little terrifying–to see workers tightening some mechanical parts using actual Ihand tools/I; I don’t like the thought of flying around in something that has parts that may have been over- or under-tightened because the coffee was off that day./p

pIn any case, ID modelmakers will find the latter part of the video familiar–it seems to take just as long to mask the thing off and paint it as it took to put it together in the first place. /p

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Sit and Read x Unis Chairs

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One of Manhattan’s brightest contemporary clothing designers Unis recently partnered with Brooklyn’s Sit and Read Furniture for a line of home furnishings sharing the nuanced, timeless appeal of the label’s menswear.

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Sit and Read’s Kyle Garner reupholsters the one-of-a-kind vintage chairs with textiles from Unis’ Spring 2010 collection, lending a familiar yet fresh update. A 19th-century walnut armchair, reincarnated in blue-and-white plaid suiting used for a trench coat, looks perfectly classic modern. Playing on the enduring color-block trend in fashion, an Eero Saarinen chair gets done up in navy and gray corduroy, while Kyle revamped a pair of Eames fiberglass shell chairs in felted green wool. “Both furniture and clothes are art forms that are meant to be used,” he said. “The interesting combination is that we’re both using these very utilitarian forms of art.”

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Garner began Sit and Read a few years ago with a trove of furniture and props he acquired as a set designer, using a blog to catalog and advertise his wares. It caught the eye of the folks at Unis, who approached Sit and Read to consign some furniture and help redesign its flagship store. Keeping the label’s color palette in mind, Garner noticed spare fabrics in the studio, and the collaboration was born. “Everything that [Unis] makes pants and jackets out of is all completely suitable for upholstery,” he said.

Sit and Read also partook in the second annual Pop-Up Flea last November, with like-minded labels such as Ohio Knitting Mills and The Hill-side.

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The line sells at the Unis flagship store or go to the Sit and Read blog to make showroom appointments. Prices for chairs range from $450 to $1,500.

Store photography by James Ryang


Dexter – Recycled Suit Tote

Questa borsa prodotta da Poketo è una vera chicca ed è composta al 100% da materiale riciclato…la trovate in vendita sul loro store!
[Via]

Dexter - Recycled Suit Tote

Dexter - Recycled Suit Tote

Dexter - Recycled Suit Tote

Off the Wall: Yale MFA Graphic Design Thesis Show 2010

pimg alt=”yale-mfa.jpg” src=”http://s3files.core77.com/blog/images/yale-mfa.jpg” width=”468″ height=”659″ class=”mt-image-none” style=”” //p

pIf you’re in the NYC area, don’t miss a href=”http://www.yaleoffthewall.com/”emOff The Wall/em,/a Yale’s MFA Graphic Design Thesis Show 2010mdash;you won’t regret the “trek” out to New Haven./p

blockquoteOff the Wall is an exhibition of the print, motion, site-specific and interactive work of this year’s fifteen MFA candidates in the Graphic Design program at the Yale University School of Art.

pFaced with the challenge of presenting their work in a way that celebrates both the individuality of each designer and the spirit of the class as a whole, the students decided to take their work off the walls. In a gesture that reduces the exhibition to its most essential form, all works will be placed on the floor. As the title implies, Off the Wall is unorthodox and intuitive. Instead of grouping the work by maker or medium, it will be arranged loosely, letting visitors make their own links and connections between objects. By presenting their work on the floor, on the same surface that viewers stand, the designers ask the viewers to engage with objects they encounter. Each piece becomes accessible, allowing visitors an opportunity to pick up, read, view and directly experience all works on display./p

pDuring Yale’s intense, two-year program, students build a coherent, investigative, and experimental body of work, culminating in a thesis. Though each student’s thesis project expresses a singular methodology, they share common features: the application of a visual method to studio work and the writing and design of a catalogue raisonné. Alongside designers’ print, video, and interactive work, Off the Wall will feature the fifteen thesis books, which contextualize the designers’ work in relation to their emerging practices.br /
/blockquote/p

pbOff the Wall: Yale MFA Graphic Design Thesis Show 2010/bbr /
May 15-22, 2010br /
Closing reception: Saturday, 7-10 pm, May 22, 2010
br /
Yale University, New Haven CT/pa href=”http://www.core77.com/blog/events/off_the_wall_yale_mfa_graphic_design_thesis_show_2010__16463.asp”(more…)/a
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Don’t shrink my music, just make it invisible

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pQuestion: How small does something have to be before you can lose it? And I’m not talking about leaving your cell phone on the train–I’m talking like II know it is somewhere in this house, I can’t find it and it is driving me nuts./I/p

pOne thing I’ve never lost is an LP. At 12 inches square it’s just too big; if it was missing from my room it was stolen. Smaller CDs and cassettes, never lost them either, if I couldn’t find one I’d often recover it by rooting around in the couch or under a car seat./p

pBut SanDisk’s slotRadio cards, forget about it. They’re now selling A HREF=”http://sandisk.com/about-sandisk/press-room/press-releases/2010/2010-04-27-sandisk-unveils-slotradio-motown-card-%E2%80%93–a-perfect-mother%E2%80%99s-day-gift-” 500 Motown classics on something the size of a postage stamp/A. If I had one I’d immediately transfer the files to my laptop, since the chances of my dog eating that in one bite, or me sending that through the washing machine, are slim. But you can’t; the slotRadio cards are proprietary and have to go in a SanDisk MP3 player like the one above. I can’t understand why you’d take something that’s easily transferable and preservable by digital means and turn that into something easily lost. I suppose the motive is profit./p

pIt also occurs to me that if you could take the Hot Tub Time Machine back to 1987 or 1967, grab an album cover designer and bring them back to our time, they’d be horrified. Here’s the square foot they had to play around with back then:/p

pimg alt=”0sdslotrad022.jpg” src=”http://s3files.core77.com/blog/images/0sdslotrad022.jpg” width=”468″ height=”468″ class=”mt-image-none” style=”” //p

pAnd here’s the comparative size of the slotRadio Motown Card:/p

div style=”align: right;”img src=”http://s3files.core77.com/blog/images/2010/04/0sdslotrad03.jpg” width=”468″ height=”130″ alt=”0sdslotrad03.jpg”//div

pMusic media shrank and eventually disappeared into bits, and to me it seems a step backwards to bring it back into tiny physical media.br /
/pa href=”http://www.core77.com/blog/object_culture/dont_shrink_my_music_just_make_it_invisible_16462.asp”(more…)/a
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National Laboratory of Genomics by TEN Arquitectos

Mexican studio TEN Arquitectos have recently completed a laboratory for studying genomics in Irapuato, Mexico. (more…)

Ian Lynam’s utopic Tokyo cell phone theme

div style=”align: right;”img src=”http://s3files.core77.com/blog/images/2010/04/vlu-theme1.jpg” width=”468″ height=”312″ alt=”vlu-theme1.jpg”//div

div style=”align: right;”img src=”http://s3files.core77.com/blog/images/2010/04/vlu-theme2.jpg” width=”468″ height=”260″ alt=”vlu-theme2.jpg”//div

div style=”align: right;”img src=”http://s3files.core77.com/blog/images/2010/04/vlue-theme6.jpg” width=”468″ height=”215″ alt=”vlue-theme6.jpg”//div

pJapanese phones will always be cooler than ours in the US. Who wants an iPhone when you can’t even download a keitai theme to it? In case you aren’t completely down the Japanese cell phone culture, this is a holistic theme that is applied to every screen of your phone, from menus to sending notifications. /p

pAnyway, Ian Lynam has just released a href=”http://viewerslikeu.squarespace.com/main/2010/4/24/new-japanese-cell-theme.html”a new Keitei theme/a for Tokyo record label WKTokyoLab, based on a music video he did for them a few years ago. The theme, called “Utopia,” depicts a pixelated, psychedelic, candy-colored, utopic (or dystopic) Tokyo. The cityscape changes from day to night and marshmallows explode upon sending. /p

pIf you’re lucky enough to have a Japanese cell phone, navigate to WKTlab’s mobile device store to a href=”http://wklab-mobile.jp/”download/a. /pa href=”http://www.core77.com/blog/object_culture/ian_lynams_utopic_tokyo_cell_phone_theme__16461.asp”(more…)/a
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iRetrofone Base

Fatto interamente a mano in resina, questa base per iPhone ha la forma del classico telefono analogico. La cornetta si connette al vostro iPhone e funziona come un normale telefono! Lo trovate in vendita su freelandstudios.