Designer Nikolaï Carels of The Netherlands has designed a wok for Dutch brand Royal VKB with a cupped edge at the front to prevent food spilling out of the pan.
Called Boomerang Wok, the design makes it easier to turn ingredients when stir-frying.
Boomerang Wok Stir-frying enables you put a delicious, varied and healthy meal on the table in no time at all. Unfortunately, when stir-frying some of the ingredients do tend to end up next to the pan.
However, with the Boomerang Wok this is a thing of the past! Thanks to the unique patented cupped edge of the Boomerang Wok, the ingredients can be turned with a simple movement of the spatula. The ingredients always end up back in the pan.
The Boomerang Wok not only makes stir-frying a bit easier, but larger pieces of food, such as a fillet of fish or meat can be turned in no time at all using the unique patented cupped edge.
The Boomerang Wok means it is no longer necessary to lift up the pan; the skills of a Chinese chef are incorporated in this pan. Stir-frying has never been as much fun and as easy, and the cooker stays clean!
The Boomerang Wok is suitable for all heat sources, has maximum heat conduction and is dishwasher safe. The Boomerang Wok is available in the colour of warm grey and is supplied in a matching protective cover to ensure that the pan remains beautiful for even longer.
Milwaukee is a premium tool brand for professional contractors. We are seeking an individual who can help identify, ideate, and conceptualize creative solutions for our users. This individual will work as part of a specialized concept team whose responsibilities include the following.
+ Regular jobsite visits throughout North America to interact with and observe contractors at work + Identify and understand the issues and concerns experienced by Milwaukee’s core users then translate those into insightful solutions which have a positive impact on the daily experience of a tradesperson. + Conceptualize solutions through sketches, mockups, and rapid prototypes. + Serve as an advocate to convey user desires and exciting concept solutions to the larger company. + Identify and explore emerging trends within the industry, technology, and design.
Still from Typembrya, a film by Oded Ezer inspired by Herb Lubalin’s Mother & Child logo
Highlights from Design Indaba’s third and final day of conference include talks by Israeli type designer Oded Ezer, American data-visualiser extrordinaire Ben Fry, Robert Wong of Google Labs, and an unexpected choice of final speaker…
Oded Ezer, whose Hebrew Rutz typeface featured in our recently published Type Annual, demonstrated that type need not be boring by showcasing a host of projects, mostly self-initiated, that all served to highlight how his love of typographic forms leads him to introduce elements of typography to almost everything he sees and does.
For example, when giving a talk in London, he wore a typographic mohican on his head in reference to some colourful local characters he’d spotted in the capital’s Camden district. In another project called TypeShaman he invented a “typographic religion” complete with its own mythology and type figurines of a supposedly ancient being with the body of a human and the head of a letterform.
Fusing animals and natural living creatures with type seems to be an ongoing theme in Ezer’s work. HIs Biotypography projects include creating tiny sculptural creatures that are half ant, half letterforms and his Typosperma project involved imbuing (graphic) sperm cells with typographic qualities…
The third Biotypography project, and the final piece he showed to the audience, was a film he made in homage to Herb Lubalin’s Mother & Child logo (above), which sees an ampersand represent a foetus in the womb. Here’s the film, entitled Typembrya:
Ben Fry, co-developer along with Casey Reas of UCLA of open source programming tool, Processing wowed the audience by showing various projects of his that look to visualise highly complex data in a way that makes it easier to deal with. Highlights included a project called Isometricblocks which combined several different methods of displaying complex human genome data. It’s enormously difficult to describe due to the complexity of the data and of the nature of the interactive display he built – but if you visit Fry’s site at benfry.com/isometricblocks you can have a play with the display (still shown, above) to get a feel for how it functions.
In another project, Fry mapped all the changes in the text across the 14 editions of Darwin’s On The Origin Of Species – to highlight visually the evolution of Darwin’s own ideas and thought processes during his lifetime. Again, to find out more and see the project as it is intended to be seen, visit benfry.com/traces
As well as showing some of his own work, Fry explained that the point of developing Processing was for people to get involved and use it to make beautiful visuals, whether those visuals represent complex data or not. He showed a film that demonstrated how Jessica Rosenkrantz and Jesse Louis-Rosenberg of Nervous System explore a design approach that directly relates process to form, creating jewellery and home products using software built using processing:
But of all the work he showed, perhaps the following film, created using Processing by Robert Hodgin, was the one that made the audience go “ooooh” the most:
If Fry wowed the audience with technical wizardry, Robert Wong of Google Creative Labs impressed with an infectious energy and enthusiasm for his work, looking to create what he called “posititve interactions” with his team of engineers and creatives. He began by describing his theory which puts the notion of surprise as one of the most key ingredients in creating a joyous experience – more specifically, a surprise created as a result of a process involving empathy and creativity.
He then listed various other ideas to bring greatness into the workplace. “Do good things that matter should always be the brief,” he suggested. “Increase marketshare by 5% is hardly a reason to get out of bed in the morning,” he added.With that in mind, Wong briefly outlined Google’s recent project to scan art in some of the most prestigious art galleries of the world (read our post about it here) in order to make art accessible using Google Maps technology. “It’s time consuming and there’s no money in it, but art is important and we feel it’s a great project,” he said, before going on to describe Google as “nine parts awesome science and one part baby talk.” He then showcased the first Google Labs project – a set of shortcut stickers to stick on your keyboard. They were popular but flawed: the ink on the stickers wore off leaving no trace of the information (including what letter the key should be). Oops!
Google Labs’ second idea was project 10 to the 100 where Google asked the world for great ideas to help as many people as possible, promising to try and make the best ideas (the ones that aimed to help the most people) a reality. Here’s the film that launched the project:
Whilst Wong briefly outlined the work Google did on Arcade Fire in collaboration with Chris Milk, and explained a little about the recently developed Google Docs project that allows multiple users to make changes to one file at the same time, it was probably an ad for Google, created by a young creative in Google Labs that resonated the most with Design Indaba’s audience and endeared Wong and the company he represents to them:
Of course the Design Indaba experience isn’t all about what happens on the stage at the conference. People meet and mingle and are inspired by new ideas and new ways of thinking – in a spectacular setting between the sea and Table Mountain. My hat is doffed in the direction of organiser Ravi Naidoo and his team for the organisation of the event and, also, crucially, for its inspired curation which lined up a “mystery” speaker to close the conference. That guest speaker turned out to be legendary South African musician and recording artist Hugh Masekela. After an interview on stage during which Masekela spoke of his extraordinary carreer – from his days hanging out in New York with the likes of Dizzy Gillespie, Miles Davis, Louis Armstrong and Ella FItzgerald, to his later return to South Africa to find his own musical voice – he then played a short but wonderful set with his band, encouraging all and sundry to get up and dance and sing along with him. It was a beautiful and joyous close to an inspriational three day conference I won’t forget in a hurry.
Après l’installation pour les 10 ans de Wikipedia, voici cette campagne publicitaire imaginée par l’agence Jandl à Bratislava. Une mise en scène de plusieurs types d’utilisateurs avec leur envie de partager leur savoir. Des clichés de Miro Minarovych sur l’accroche “Don’t keep it to yourself”
Fresh off a triumphant couture collection inspired by René Gruau and only days before Paris Fashion Week begins, John Galliano has had his world turned upside down by allegations that he made anti-Semitic and racist remarks and assaulted a couple in a Paris cafe. After the Thursday night altercation, the designer was briefly arrested and then escorted home by police, who did not press charges. However, LVMH-owned Christian Dior wasted no time in suspending its longtime creative director. “The House of Dior declares with the greatest firmness its policy of zero tolerance with regard to any antisemitic or racist statement or attitude,” said Dior president and CEO Sidney Toledano in a statement.
The couple involved in the incident filed charges against Galliano, who proceeded to sue them for defamation. Meanwhile, the controversy didn’t deter Galliano devotee Nicole Kidman or Sharon Stone, a face of Dior Beauty (and someone whose own culturally insensitive remarks got her in trouble with the brand a few years back), from wearing Dior gowns on last night’s Oscar red carpet. Neither actress would comment on the situation. Whether Galliano’s fall ready-to-wear collections for Dior or his own label will hit the runway this week remains anyone’s guess, but the plot thickens. Today a second complaint was filed with the Paris police. According to WWD, a woman claims she was verbally attacked by the designer earlier this month at the same Marais cafe, which is near Galliano’s home.
Allen Jones was one of 29 artists commissioned to produce posters for the 1972 Munich Olympic Games. The original preparatory painting for his poster is to go on sale next month
In the run-up to the 1972 Games, the Organising Committee decided to commission a series of Artist Posters to “represent the intertwining of sports and art worldwide”. Sales of the posters, which were produced in various editions, made over 2 million Deutschmarks for the Committee. Jones’ original preparatory painting for his contribution (below) is to go on sale at Bonhams on March 16 as part of its Vision 21 auction. Estimate: £7,000 to £9,000.
Here’s how the final poster looked
Other artists invited to contribute included Josef Albers
The Vision 21 sale has some interesting stuff including this Eduardo Paolozzi elephant-shaped plastic box made in 1972 for Nairn Floors as a promotional item (estimate £600-£800)
this Eine print
some of Bert Stern’s iconic Marilyn shots, a few Warhols, Shepard Fairey’s (in)famous Obama posters and a host of Banksy prints. See the catalogue here
Transport: Barclays Cycle Hire by Transport for London
Above: Branca by Industrial Facility
The overall winner will be announced at a ceremony at the museum on 15 March.
Above: Open Air Library, Magdeburg by Karo Architekten
Nearly 100 shortlisted designs across the fields of architecture, product, furniture, graphics, fashion, interactive and transport design will be on show at the museum until 7 August 2011. See the full shortlist in our earlier story.
Above: Uniqlo +J Autumn/Winter ’10 by Jil Sander for Uniqlo
Above: Barclays Cycle Hire by Transport for London
The following information is from the Design Museum:
Category winners announced for the 2011 Brit Insurance Design Awards
Chair of Jury, Stephen Bayley and the jury panel select the seven category winners who will now contend to be named the Brit Insurance Design of the Year 2011.
London, 28 February 2011: The category winners for the 2011 Brit Insurance Design Awards were announced today. Celebrating international design from the last 12 months, the seven categories winners of the fourth annual Brit Insurance Design Awards features winners from Sweden, Germany, Japan, Italy, USA and two from the UK. These seven winners will now contend to become the overall Brit Insurance Design of the Year 2011 which will be announced at the Design Museum on 15 March.
The winners include London’s TFL’s Barclays Cycle Hire scheme which wins the Transport category, a popular and familiar feature across the capital since its introduction in the summer of 2010. Retail outlet Uniqlo’s hugely successful Jil Sander collaboration +J Autumn / Winter 2010 collection wins the Fashion category and Ikea’s intriguing take on baking with their Swedish recipe book presented in stunning visual style wins the Graphics category.
Innovative and accessible design was a recurring theme for the 2011 nominations, beautifully demonstrated with the Plumen low energy light bulb taking the Product award. The Flipboard app, for the Interactive category impressed judges as the world’s first social magazine, fundamentally changing how people discover, view and share content across social networks. The elegant Branca chair designed by UK design practice Industrial Facility wins the Furniture category and the community focused Open Air Library in Germany takes the Architecture award.
Stephen Bayley chair of the 2011 jury commented ‘Anything that is made betrays the beliefs, preoccupations and fears of the people who made it. Never more than this year: there’s a strong sense of austerity, responsibility and realism here. I wouldn’t call it retrenchment, more consolidation. 2011 will be remembered for thoughtfulness rather than exuberance, but that’s no bad thing. The best definition of design is, after all, intelligence made visible.’
The seven Brit Insurance Design Awards category winners are:
Brit Insurance Architecture Award 2011 Open Air Library, Magdeburg. By Karo Architekten. Germany
Brit Insurance Fashion Award 2011 Uniqlo +J Autumn/Winter ’10. By Jil Sander for Uniqlo. Japan
Brit Insurance Furniture Award 2011 Branca. By Industrial Facility, Sam Hecht, Kim Colin and Ippei Matsumoto. Italy
Brit Insurance Graphics Award 2011 Homemade is Best. By Forsman & Bodenfors for Ikea. Sweden
Brit Insurance Interactive Award 2011 Flipboard. By Mike McCue and Evan Doll. USA
Brit Insurance Product Award 2011 Plumen 001. By Hulger and Samuel Wilkinson. UK
Brit Insurance Transport Award 2011 Barclays Cycle Hire. By Transport for London. UK
The seven winning designs will now compete for the coveted overall Brit Insurance Design of the Year 2011 which will be announced at the Awards Lunch at the Design museum on March 15, where the winner will be presented with this year’s awards trophy, exclusively designed by Ross Lovegrove.
The black pump is an essential piece every woman, self-proclaimed fashionista or not, should have in her wardrobe. This classic is the go to shoe for added, under-stated glam for any, and every outfit. From it’s equally classic counter-part, the little black dress, to the perfect pair of jeans and a crisp white blouse, the black leather pump is a must-have.
If you’re looking for a fresh new pair, look no further than the Midori Pump by Modern Vintage. This black leather pump is designed with an almond shaped toe and hidden platform. The scene-stealer, though, is the studded heel. At a towering four inches, the sturdy, yet slender stiletto boasts tiny gold studs that add just a hint of gilded, though still under-stated, glam!
Une séance de maquillage / make-up en hommage à la typo et à quatres designers en particulier, avec ce shooting et cette collection d’affiches. Une production de Raúl García Del Pomar et Ismael González du studio Atipo. Plus d’images et l’explication en vidéo dans la suite.
This is site is run by Sascha Endlicher, M.A., during ungodly late night hours. Wanna know more about him? Connect via Social Media by jumping to about.me/sascha.endlicher.