Beautiful Architecture from the Pacific Northwest by Robert Harvey Oshatz

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I wasn’t sure if I was looking at actual architecture or Star Wars production design renderings. Architect Robert Harvey Oshatz’s beautiful, organic, blending-in-with-nature structures are positively Naboo-like, though they mostly antedate the latter three Lucas flicks. And these aren’t renderings, they’re actually structures built from the ’80s through the ’00s, mostly in the Pacific Northwest.

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Refreshingly, the Oregon-based architect eschews architectural theory, choosing instead to go with a more pure form of artistry integrated into what he calls a traditional design approach. In his own words,

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Architecture is a synthesis of logic and emotion. When carried to its logical conclusion, a traditional design approach produces very imaginative structures. It is only a question of how much of an artist we architects choose to be.

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He gives a more in-depth explanation of his approach here; his completed dwellings, with tons of pictures, can be viewed here; and you can see some of his conceptual stuff here.

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BMW Activate the Future Documentary Series

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A few weeks ago BMW launched Activate the Future, a series of documentary interviews that explore what our future could be. It borders a bit on the overly optimistic, but of course, I love that. “Wherever You Want To Go” is the first release in the series, in four parts. They include some of the most influential scientists, academics, pioneers, and entrepreneurs of our time, this four-part documentary paints a unique picture of technology, culture, cities, our past, present and how it all relates to the future of mobility. including astronaut Buzz Aldrin, Chris Anderson of Wired Mag, Robin Chase, founder of Zip Car, Marissa Mayer of Google, Syd Mead (I don’t need to explain who that is), George Whitesides of Virgin Galatic, Mike Musto of Ridelust, and many more. I love that they got Mike in there because he plays the skeptical and hilarious yet wants it to be real Han Solo role in the group. Just to balance it out.

Check it out here:
Part 1: The New City
Part 2: The Future Isn’t What it Used to Be
Part 3: Reinventing Mobility
Part 4: How we will learn to stop worrying and love the future. (forthcoming)

Thanks to designer, core77 moderator, and BMW owner Richard Kuchinsky for the link.

There is a healthy discussion going on about it in the forums as well HERE.

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Killer paper backdrop illusion for your web cam

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If you were on a video conference call with Michel Gondry, we’re pretty sure he’d join in with one of these. Architect Ryuji Nakamura created the Midget & Giant paper house as part of a workshop at DESIGNEAST 01 late last year.

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Stuff that You Stick on Your iPhone Steadily Getting Bigger

If you designed the perfect little rectangle, would you bristle if companies started designing little form-interrupting gewgaws to slap onto it? I guess that’s the price you pay for ubiquity. And you can’t deny that some of these widgets add good functionality, like the Glif.

And while it looks a bit absurd, PhotoJojo’s latest $35 iPhone add-on is a telephoto lens. It gives you 8x zoom, features a manual focus on the lens body, and comes with a stabilizing tripod.

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Prior to the telephoto lens, PhotoJojo kicked off the camera-add-on thing with their FishEye, Macro and Wide Angle cameraphone lenses:

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More recently, Square made the credit-card slider add-on, turning you into a self-contained retail operation:

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The GoBiz i-Microphone runs $25 and will reportedly boost recordings by 12 decibels. Plugs right into the headphone jack and uses RF shielding to block interference and feedback:

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NYFW – Michael Kors F/W 2011

imageKors is always an anticipated show, but with this being the designer’s 30th anniversary in the business, the crowd this season was even more frenzied. Many wondered whether Kors would resurrect his greatest hits.


Well, he did and he didn’t. This is a designer who constantly refines what he does season after season, so we saw things we’ve seen before – crystal-encrusted gown or great fur balmacaan – but they were slightly tweaked through color, tailoring and so on.


The blasting disco soundtrack signaled more of the 1970s-inspired clothes we’ve been seeing all week, but no one is better than Kors at doing body-con without sharing too much info. (Well, except for one completely sheer chiffon dress on Kass, but if we had a body like that, we’d take the catwalk naked.) Slim-cut trousers looked comfortable, the silk blouses were tailored with deep V-necks for supersexy looks, and Kors clearly believes in jumpsuits.



Read more about the Michael Kors F/W collection by clicking over to our friends at Stylelist!

Harlem is Nowhere

Novelist Sharifa Rhodes-Pitts on Harlem, gentrification and the power of unconscious style

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Sharifa Rhodes-Pitts’ debut novel “Harlem is Nowhere” finds the young author discovering herself in a foreign place that seems all too familiar. Pitts moved to Harlem after completing a Fulbright Scholarship in England, and lived in the upper Manhattan neighborhood for seven years. In that time she saw a neighborhood separated from the city within which it exists become bombarded by the outside and witnessed a community under siege. Taking her title from a Ralph Ellison essay, Pitts recounts her interactions with local historical and literary figures both real and imagined, creating a rich portrait of one of the most interesting and important cultural landmarks New York City has to offer. Cool Hunting sat down with the author to discuss her work and the neighborhood that inspired her novel.

As the first book in a trilogy, how does this lay a foundation for the series?

The book is imagined as the first part in a trilogy on African Americans in utopia, and the three parts are Harlem, Haiti and the Black Belt of the South. It’s interesting that you should ask whether it’s the foundation of that series, because you could argue that one of the other places that has a longer historical reach, which is the beginning of that idea is Haiti. Haiti was the first black republic, which is why it enters the list as the place it was first imagined where enslaved Africans could throw off their chains and create and imagine the republic. The whole history of Haiti flows from this original act, for which the people of Haiti were punished by the entire world.

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Yet, in the book you talk about not going to Harlem to seek out history.

It’s hard to say yes or no. All of that history, all of those myths that I talk about were so much a part of my mind from having read all those books that I read about Harlem and the poets, the photographers—studying all of those pictures. Of course all of those stories and history were part of why I ended up there, but once I arrived there I was conscious not to be caught in some daze of nostalgia or uncritical celebration of, “Oh ,the Harlem Renaissance wasn’t it fabulous!” If I wasn’t in this rhapsody of celebration it was because I was conscious of balancing out the myth and the reality.

Is the culture of Harlem still rich in the way that you expected it?

I think it’s rich in ways I didn’t expect it. In simple everyday ways, just the way that people greet each other and look out for each other and a certain way of being a neighbor. I imagine in some neighborhood that’s the norm, but in Harlem it’s exemplified, that feeling of community in an urban setting. I think there’s a reason they call it the village of Harlem. For me there was an attempt to become a part of the place, not just to live there and sleep there, and in my attempt to become a part of the place I began to care about its future and what is going to happened to it.

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What are your thoughts on the legacy of gentrification in the area?

It’s interesting, because what’s happening in Harlem is happening in a lot of other neighborhoods in New York. I remember reading—and it made me furious—a high-powered broker in the New York Times said, “they think they’re special up there why should they be different than any other neighborhood that will have retail shops and boxy condominiums?” To her obviously that’s a great thing. Why is it so different? Why is it so special? Not to discount what’s happening in other places, or to say it is not destructive in other places, because Harlem is alike other neighborhoods in New York in that way. Harlem is going through a rash of re-zonings under Mayor Bloomberg, more so than any other time period in its history, which is changing the landscape, and will change the face of the city for generations to come, period. Even if the current economic situation means you can’t see development in some places, the laws have been changed so that when the money comes back into Harlem and in other places, the band will play on.

What informs your part diary, part essay, part magical realism style?

Style is unconscious in many ways it is informed by everything I’ve ever read. I’ve certainly read a lot of Borges. One that comes to mind is W.G. Sebald, a German writer who died in 2001. He had that sense of is it fiction, is it non-fiction? Is it a diary, is it history? And of all of those things being able to co-exist on the page. When I first read his work when I was just out of college it was a huge relief and a door opening into all of those possibilities, to work across genres and to follow one’s own nose. I always say if it’s a first person narrative, it’s my eyes and my brain shifting through what I see and what I read and what I’ve heard about. What happened and what’s about to happen, and those things come through my eyes. But its not a first-person narrative in the way a memoir is. It’s more impressionistic where my personal experiences show up when they can throw light on a bigger question. In terms of storytelling, that’s the way my style is inspired.

“Harlem is Nowhere” sells online from Amazon and Barnes and Noble.


Chicago Designers Accord Town Hall Meeting: March 10th, 2011

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Join us on March 10th for the Chicago Designers Accord Town Hall Meeting called Design for Social Change.

This student-led event will take place in the Ballroom at The School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Designers from all over Chicago will meet to discuss how design can become a motivator for social participation.

7pm Light snacks, including tea and coffee will be provided.

7.30pm Presentations from various speakers including Sharon Burdett from Strand Design, Antonio Garcia from GravityTank, and more!

8.30pm Networking and Discussion

Chicago Designers Accord Town Hall

Thursday, March 10th 2011, 7pm

The School of the Art Institute of Chicago

The Ballroom

112 South Michigan Ave

Chicago, IL 60603

RSVP, space is limited: http://townhallmeeting.eventbrite.com/

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New Yorker Selects Dozen Winners of Eustace Tilley Design Contest


The magazine’s signature dandy as reimagined by, from left, Julie Hecht, Michael Clayton, Gary Amaro, and Dave Hoerlein

With his moncole at the ready and a butterfly his constant companion, Eustace Tilley has been The New Yorker‘s dapper mascot since founding art director Rea Irvin sketched him into being in 1925. The magazine recently invited readers to put their own twist on the discerning dandy in its fourth Eustace Tilley design contest. And this year’s competition came with a bookish bonus: the grand-prize winner’s design printed on a Strand Bookstore tote bag (an icon for an icon!) and a $1,000 Strand shopping spree. After sifting through roughly 600 entries, New Yorker art editor Françoise Mouly has selected a dozen winners, now featured in a slideshow on the magazine’s web site. The victorious Eustaces range from Seattle-based Dave Hoerlein‘s cartographic version (“A Dandy Map of New York”) to a Facebook-ready Tilley created by Nick McDowell of Mamaroneck, New York. Savannah-dwelling William Joca‘s “Cubist Tilley” was inspired by the work of Picasso (with a sprinkling of Ben-Day dots for good measure), while Pixo Hammer of Toronto channeled Joan Miro. As for the big winner, keep guessing (Grecian Eustace? Symbolic Eustace? Eustace through the years?). The champion and the tote bag will be revealed this spring.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

The Future is Shiny: Design Glut Jewelry Line Launch

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The lovely ladies of Design Glut have finally launched their much-anticipated jewelry line, The Future is Shiny. Employing the whimsical and fun design aesthetic that they’re known for, the first round of accessories are a collection of necklaces highlighting the beauty of a range of everyday objects — payphone booth, 3D glasses, scissors and my personal favorite, a reversible open/close sign. The two designers raised money for prototyping through Kickstarter, offering everything from an “awkward thank-you” card, a webinar about running a creative business for supporters, to a custom necklace designed for donors. Check out their pitch video and more images of the necklaces after the jump…another success story for designers on Kickstarter!

The necklaces are available through the Design Glut Design Store.

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Daily Obsesh – Leather Spine Dress

imageThe more structured the better! Looking sexy doesn’t have to be about six inch stilettos (which are totally hot, BTW) or a super short skirt! Take this Leather Spine Dress by Factory, for example. The design along the sides and down the front of the dress accentuate the curves of a girl, and will make any gal feel sleek and sexy!


With this dress you can explore your creative side. Pair this number with some turquoise or feathered earrings, or maybe add some funky knee high socks! What about pulling out those sexy stilettos for added flare? Need to dress it down? Try leather flats and a cross-body bag!



Where to BuyNastyGal



Price – $56.00



Who Found ItLtopiol was the first to add the ‘Leather Spine Dress‘ to the Hive.