Daily Obsesh – Sculptural Pleats Glove

imageGloves are sexy. Not only are they sexy but they’re feminine and stylish and a practical accessory as well! Every gal needs a pair to call her own! It’s the little additions that really bring a whole outfit together and these Sculptural Pleats Gloves by Need Supply are simply divine!


Keep your fingers warm and your fashion in tip top shape with the extra architectural pleats along the cuff of the glove. The cut makes these gloves dainty yet edgy all at the same time, and the wool blend means that you’ll be warm and cozy in this stylish pair.



Where to BuyNeed Supply



Price – $42.00



Who Found ItLtopiol was the first to add the ‘Sculptural Pleats Gloves‘ to the Hive.

Stitching Postcards

Tailor your own location-based correspondence
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Sending a card snail-mail to a special someone may seem like a charming enough move, but stitching a personal message or tying a bow on a significant city will undoubtedly seal the deal. The Stitching Postcards by designers Leihener, Seng, Valder for Köln-based distributor Details allow for creatively romantic gestures such as this and more with a collection of geography-inspired cards that come packed with a needle and thread.

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The cards cover six different countries, some cities and one world map, each a simple topographical silhouette and marked with an array of notable cities. By simply sticking the needle and thread through the card, you can easily relay where you’ve been or hope to go, as a souvenir to yourself or someone special.

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Select cards sell from UncommonGoods for $10 for a set of two or from Details when their online shop returns at the end of January 2011.


Tonite! Real Live Rocket Science at the Curiosity Club

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Nathan Bergey: Mechanical Integrator
Building open source, open hardware rockets in Portland, Oregon.

Nathan Bergey is a volunteer rocket scientist for Portland State Aerospace Society (PSAS). PSAS is a student/community run aerospace engineering group that is building ultra-low-cost, open source rockets that feature the most sophisticated avionics systems of any similar group in the world. Recently they launched a successful test of their roll control system making them one step closer to full active guidance — the holy grail of rocket design.

Nathan will talk about how he got to be rocket scientist and why it’s so cool (hint: it’s rocket science). He will show off some of the amazing rockets that PSAS has flown and talk about the challenges and unexpected problems that come up when trying to get something into space.

Nathan grew up in North Carolina and studied Astronomy and Physics at Appalachian State University. He moved to Portland in 2006 and has worked as a consultant until recently when he took time off to work on rockets and other side projects full time. He is a coder, scientist, space enthusiast, and problem solver.

Come on down tonight:

January 11th 6:00 PM

Hand-Eye Supply
23 NW 4th Ave
Portland, Oregon

and we’ll be posting it here live too!

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Collider Series

Un excellent projet du photographe Abigail Reynolds basé à Londres, avec le concept “Collider Series”. Des créations entièrement découpés et pliés à partir de photos du monde entier, où chaque surface et chaque collages apporte un point de vue et un rendu en 3 dimensions.



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Wienerwald restaurant by Ippolito Fleitz Group

Wienerwald restaurant by Ippolito Fleitz Group

Stuttgart practice Ippolito Fleitz Group have completed the interiors for a fast-food chicken restaurant in Munich, Germany.

Wienerwald restaurant by Ippolito Fleitz Group

Called Wienerwald, the restaurant has tree motifs and forest graphics covering some of the walls and windows of the bright green space.

Wienerwald restaurant by Ippolito Fleitz Group

The use of brown and green througout the interior space is meant to reference nature and the forest.

Wienerwald restaurant by Ippolito Fleitz Group

The very first Wienerwald restaurant was opened in 1955 and the Ippolito Fleitz Group have been commissioned to rebrand all the restaurants.

Wienerwald restaurant by Ippolito Fleitz Group

Photographs are by Zooey Braun.

More restaurants/bars on Dezeen »
More interiors on Dezeen »

Here’s some information from the architects:


Friedrich Jahn opened the very first Wienerwald restaurant in Munich in 1955. The synonymous fast-food chain expanded over the following decades until it was operating branches in 18 countries. Following the collapse of the group, the company was under varying ownership until the grandchildren of the founding family bought back the rights to the brand in 2007. Their goal is now to build on the long tradition of the company, exploiting both the strength of the brand and the uniqueness of their gastronomic concept. Our studio was commissioned to develop new corporate architecture for the chain, which has already been rolled out in two Wienerwald branches in Munich.

Wienerwald has not only relaunched its visual presence, but also its culinary offering. Chicken, with its naturally low-fat, healthy meat, remains the main staple of the menu. However a second focus on fresh chopped salads has been introduced to move the food chain into the sector of fresh and healthy foods.

Wienerwald restaurant by Ippolito Fleitz Group

The new interior design underscores the realignment of the brand, while translating the chain’s traditional strengths of high quality, comfort and German cuisine into a contemporary design idiom. Materials and colours reflect the principles of freshness and naturalness, which find their expression in materials such as wood, leather and textiles, as well as in the dominant green tones that complement the fresh white. Gold is used as an accent colour, conjuring up associations of quality and the crisp, gold-coloured skin of the main product, the Wienerwald grilled chicken.

The space has been organised to ensure good visitor guidance, crucial in a self-service restaurant, as well as respecting the need for a differentiated selection of seating. Upon entering the restaurant, the guest is guided towards a frontally positioned counter, which presents itself as a clearly structured, monolithic unit. Menu boards suspended above the counter visualise the range of food on offer. The food itself is also visible: An indirectly lit niche in the rear wall of the service area presents a selection of salads adjacent to grilled chickens turning on a spit. The wall is covered in anthracite mosaic stones, into which frameless, stainless steel units have been precisely inserted, thereby underscoring the high standard of the products. A neon green arrow in the centre of the rear wall indicates a hatch to the kitchen where fried chicken dishes are prepared.

Wienerwald restaurant by Ippolito Fleitz Group

Order and payment terminals occupy the far ends of the white, solid surface counter. The chopping station is in the middle. After ordering, this is where salads are chopped, chicken is portioned and toppings are added from containers set into the counter under the guests’ watchful eyes. In the wall adjacent to the payment terminal, a display refrigerator stocks drinks and desserts. The restaurant remains odourless thanks to a ventilation and extraction system integrated into the counter area.

In front of the service counter is a service station made of white solid surface, offering sauces, condiments and cutlery. It stands on golden chicken legs and looks expectantly towards the entrance. Green instructions and Wienerwald chickens set into the rustic wood floor show the customer how to navigate the ordering process.

Wienerwald restaurant by Ippolito Fleitz Group

The dining area offers a range of seating options catering toward different requirements. White solid surface high bar tables are available for guests with little time on their hands. These are supported by a single leg with a tapering cylinder at its foot, recalling the traditional turned table leg. Alternative seating is available in an elongated seating group upholstered in brown, artificial leather, a reflection of the traditional Wienerwald seating niches.

Guests are really spirited away into the ‘Wienerwald’ (English: Vienna Woods) here. Overlapping, rough-sawn oak panels on the rear wall quote the forest theme. Round mirrors printed with the outlines of tree and forest motifs are set into this wall. Different-sized pendant luminaires at varying heights hang over the tables. These are sheathed in a roughly woven fabric in three shades of green and ensure a pleasant atmosphere.

Wienerwald restaurant by Ippolito Fleitz Group

Forest images in different shades of green on wallpaper occupy one side wall, as well as transparencies on the windows. The view into the restaurant from the outside thus becomes a multi-faceted experience in which the individual elements on the mirror and glass surfaces reflect and overlap one another, making the brand world a truly holistic experience.

A display of dining plates on the wall is dedicated to the Wienerwald company and its long tradition, reminiscing on the history of the brand in 14 motifs. They pay tribute to Friedrich Jahn, the brand’s founding father, and show a photograph of the first Wienerwald restaurant. The new restaurant design repositions Wienerwald as a contemporary fast-food chain. Traditional elements of the brand have been incorporated and translated into modern spatial elements with an exciting twist.


See also:

.

AG Cafe by
Kidosaki Architects Studio
Beijing Noodle No. 9 by
design spirits co., ltd
Blu Apple by
Budi Pradono architects

Moody

Moody invites the user to express feelings and let go. With the traces left behind, the product will resemble the moods of its user in various shapes ..

Christmas Tree Sledge by Tom Hatfield

Christmas Tree Sledge by Tom Hatfield

Still not sure what to do with your left-over Christmas tree? Royal College of Art student Tom Hatfield has turned a few of them into a sledge.

Christmas Tree Sledge by Tom Hatfield

Made from discarded trees Hatfield found around London, the sledge was made using a traditional woodworking technique know as bodging, where wood is worked ‘green’, without drying or seasoning first.

Christmas Tree Sledge by Tom Hatfield

See also: Christmas Tree Furniture by Fabien Cappello (July 2009)

Christmas Tree Sledge by Tom Hatfield

See more bodging on Dezeen here.

Here’s a little text from Hatfield:


Christmas Tree sledge

This Sledge is made from Christmas trees found in on the streets of London. With roughly 1.7 million trees bought for this recent Christmas period, these two-week trees are just discarded every year.  With snow in London becoming a more frequent occurrence, it seemed an appropriate item to use for the season.

Christmas Tree Sledge by Tom Hatfield

Using the primitive skills of a bodger, it opens up an inventive feeling of seeing the resources that are around us. People are not as resourceful as they once where. This sledge can give an excitement to a process that can give confidence that appeals to our creative side.


See also:

.

Bodging Milano at
Designersblock
Inserper-able by
Rolf Sachs
Christmas Tree Furniture
by Fabien Cappello

Using Kinect, MIT Media Lab pulls off gesture-based web browsing, with more on the horizon

Whoa-ho! Depth JS, an open-source project run by a quartet of MIT Media Lab guys, has successfully connected Microsoft’s Kinect motion-sensing technology with Javascript. What does this mean to you and I? It means actual gesture-based web browsing (and eventually, more):

DepthJS from Fluid Interfaces on Vimeo.

Nuts, no?

As the aforementioned quartet (Aaron Zinman, Doug Fritz, Greg Elliott, and Roy Shilkrot) explain, this is just an early first step and there’s plenty more to come:

Navigating the web is only one application of the framework we built – that is, we envision all sorts of applications that run in the browser, from games to specific utilities for specific sites. The great part is that now web developers who specialize in Javascript can work with the Kinect without having to learn any special languages or code. We believe this will allow a new set of interactions beyond what we first developed.

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Video showing Moleskine debossing process

Ever wonder how they deboss artwork onto the cover of those custom Moleskine notebooks? (Don’t feel bad if you haven’t ever wondered that, it just means you’re a Philistine.) The answer is, a combination of CNC and good ol’ human hands:

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Okay, we’ve got ID’ers on postage stamps. Next…assembly lines?

I’m kinda divided on this one. Following the US Postal Service’s announcement of their forthcoming classic industrial design stamp series, Assembly Magazine’s Austin Weber is proposing a series dedicated to the assembly line.

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The assembly line? Sure, they look cool in photographs and greatly contributed to American industrial prowess, military might, and at least one episode of I Love Lucy, but weren’t human-powered assembly lines kind of inhuman and an unsavory means to an end?

In any case, Weber wrote an essay on assembly lines in a 2003 issue of Assembly commemorating their 90th anniversary, and he’s pushing for the stamps for 2013, which would mark the assembly line centennial. If you agree with his proposal, you can get on board here.

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