Behind the Scenes – Kate Moss for Vogue Eyewear

imageKate Moss is one of my big style icons and I love this behind the scenes action of her photoshoot with photographer, Mario Testino, for an upcoming Vogue Eyewear campaign that was shot last September.


No wonder she’s been spotted these last few months with these oh so stylish sunglasses! WWD reports that the ads will be revealed on the Vogue Eyewear site next week. I love the black frame glasses she’s wearing in addition to all the stylish sunglasses!



See the Behind the Scenes video and more photoshoot pics by clicking over to our friends at Coquette!

Vintage Ocean Liner Posters Never Get Old!


The Shipping News: Posters and ads designed by Giuseppe Riccobaldi (left) and Adolph Treidler (right) are among the ocean liner and transportation memorabilia that will go on the block today at Swann in New York.

Covet a Christofle silver marmalade holder (complete with attached spoon) that once sailed aboard Île de France? Want a graphic reminder of a mode of transportation in which “The Gentle Art of Civilized Living Reache[d] the Highest Degree of Perfection”? Of course you do! Today Swann Galleries holds a sale of ocean liner and transportation memorabilia. The New York auction house has assembled books, scrapbooks, brochures, photo albums, as well as silver, china, and crystal from famed ocean liners, but the sale is particularly strong in posters and other exuberant, charmingly nationalistic marketing materials. Our first-class choice? A circa-1938 lithograph of A.M. Cassandre‘s famed image of Normandie. The poster, a version of which is in the collection of the Museum of Modern Art, is estimated to sell for between $15,000 and $20,000. As for the steerage-priced lots, we’ll take Giuseppe Riccobaldi‘s whimsical advertising card for Neptunia ($350-$500) or a silver toast rack that once held the gently browned bread of White Star Line passengers ($250-$350).

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Kinema Pendant

The Kinema pendant luminaire is unique in its ability to give the user control of the light’s character to match the mood or the environment. Ea..

Sealed Chair by François Dumas

Sealed Chair by Francois Dumas

Cologne 2011: designer François Dumas of the Netherlands presented this collection of chairs made from bent plastic rods as part of [D3] Design Talents at imm cologne in Germany.

Sealed Chair by Francois Dumas

Called Sealed Chair, the design is made by heating plastic rods to make them flexible then setting in wooden moulds – much like the production of bent wood furniture.

Sealed Chair by Francois Dumas

Whilst the rods cool, the connection points are melted and the moulds joined together, pressing the melted areas against one another to form a seal and the joints of the chairs.

Sealed Chair by Francois Dumas

Three rods are required to make an armchair while only two are needed to make a chair.

Sealed Chair by Francois Dumas

Dumas has also created a more durable version of the seat using a stronger thermoplastic and screws.

Sealed Chair by Francois Dumas

imm cologne took place 18-23 January. See all our coverage of the event here »

Sealed Chair by Francois Dumas

More chairs on Dezeen »

Sealed Chair by Francois Dumas

See all our furniture stories »

Sealed Chair by Francois Dumas

Here’s some information from the designer:


Sealed Chair François Dumas 2010.

Sealed Chair results from the research and development of an accessible and affordable serial production process. The chair’s structure consists of three extruded plastic rods made flexible by heating in an oven.

Sealed Chair by Francois Dumas

After having been formed in wooden templates, the parts are connected using a welding technique that emphasises the melting of the plastic: a seal. Those seals are made by imbricating the templates together as a puzzle. Depending of puzzling two or tree templates, the outcome of this mould is either a chair or an armchair.

Sealed Chair by Francois Dumas

The construction of the chair results from drawing with these bending and welding techniques. Each part works in synergy with the others, stabilizing the ensemble.


See also:

.

Well Transparent Chair by
Ron Arad
Sparkling Chair by
Marcel Wanders for Magis
All our coverage of
Cologne 2011

Witold Rybczynski Attempts to Decipher Architect-Speak

We’re still recovering a bit from the record-setting blizzard we got here over the last couple of days, which certainly didn’t help us get over this flu going around, so this writer is going to start gently this morning. Slate‘s resident architecture critic, Witold Rybczynski, has decided to weigh in on the way architects speak to one another, using lots of highfalutin, five dollar words, in an essay he’s entitled, “A Discourse on Emerging Tectonic Visualization and the Effects of Materiality on Praxis” or as the subheading says, “…an essay on the ridiculous way architects talk.” It’s a fun piece, quickly running through the history of American architecture speak, ranging from the days when “fenestration” meant “window,” to the modernist period when less-was-more, to our current state, which Rybczynski believes is just as jargon-heavy as ever, thanks to universities teaching architecture “as a theoretical discipline.” He provides a very funny, short translation guide for the words currently in large circulation, which should come in handy the next time you run into somewhere wearing a black turtle neck and eyeglasses that are much cooler than yours.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Gap Appoints New Brand President, Moves to Centralize Creative Resources in NYC

Possibly pilfered automobile photographs notwithstanding, Gap Inc. is changing up its flagship brand. Eager to forget the logo update brouhaha of last fall, the San Francisco-based company is bidding farewell to Gap North America President Marka Hansen, who will step down on Friday. Gap looked within to replace Hansen, a 24-year veteran of the company, and the new president is…Art Peck, the snappily named leader responsible for big profits at the company’s Outlet business. Meanwhile, a new creative hub in New York City will focus on kickstarting Gap brand product and marketing. “I expect more from our Gap business in North America,” said chairman and CEO Glenn Murphy in a statement announcing the brand shakeup. “New York will now serve as the global epicenter for creativity for Gap brand, which is exactly what we need to compete effectively here at home and internationally.” Creative resources—including design, marketing, fashion public relations, and production—will be centralized in the new hub, which will be led by Pam Wallack, the current president of Gap Adult North America. As for freshening up those Gap ads, stay tuned. The company has just tapped Seth Farbman, worldwide managing director of Ogilvy & Mather, to become global chief marketing officer.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Gong Xi Fa Cai : Year of the Rabbit

Rabbits

Gong Xi Fa Cai … and a Happy New Year to you too! And this means another year of the Rabbit just started… living in Asia makes my life richer due to the fact that I'm starting to get used to celebrating completely different Holidays then the ones I was brought up with… like today I'm going to my best friends house because she invited us over for a Chinese New Year lunch and we all feel a bit as if it were Christmas again 🙂  … to celebrate CNY here on Bloesem I found some nice Bunnies : neon bunny pillow; Hanna Ljungström glas bunny sculpturerabbit drawing book;  rabbit wooden puzzle; and Konijn Jans

 

Cool Hunting Rough Cut: LoSiento

Watch our video on how a burgeoning design studio takes typography to the fourth dimension

by
Gregory Stefano

While in Barcelona recently (thanks to
Red
) we visited Borja Martínez, the founder of LoSiento, a studio that specializes in 3D typography, packaging and product design. Young and imaginative, the small firm is constantly pushing the limits of what can be accomplished with paper as a medium. One of Borja’s founding philosophies is encouraging self-initiated projects at the studio, an approach of constant experimentation that has given birth to LoSiento’s amazing 4D typography. We had the chance to talk to Borja and check out his studio in this video.


Just when we thought we were making sustainability progress, along comes a chair made from 110 sheets of plywood

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I’m not sure how you justify using 110 pieces of plywood to make a single-seat piece of furniture, but I guess design is subjective. Emma Selzer of Australia’s Plus Architecture has designed the Egg Chair, a pod-like chair and integrated table that pivots on its center, for a local business center.

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The Egg Chair’s laser-cut sheets are glued and screwed, meaning this thing ain’t coming apart at recycling time; then again I think sustainability is not exactly the point here.

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(more…)


Wagner Skis

Supreme custom fits for the extreme skier
wagnerskis1.jpg

In a former gas station, now powered entirely by wind and sun, Pete Wagner and his team create custom skis one pair at a time. Located just outside Telluride, CO, Wagner has been quietly carving out a name for themselves among enthusiasts and professionals alike with their Skier DNA application, a survey ensuring a complete custom fit geared for your ski style and body shape.

To guarantee even greater accuracy, Wagner recently recruited the technology experts at Advanced Racing Computers, a Park City, UT-based firm that created the vLink—a performance measurement tool for ski racers. When attached to a pair of Wagner skis, the vLinks serve as tiny computers recording 6,500 frames per second along X, Y and Z axes, analyzing every aspect of a skier’s form. Storing up to 99 runs of in-depth data, that information is then transmitted wirelessly or downloaded later for Wagner to assess. Combined with the Skier DNA survey, this meticulous evaluation allows Wagner to craft an utterly personal pair of skis adjusted down to details like tail shapes and flex pattern.

wagner-vlink2.jpg

Backed by a wide selection of colors, veneers, artist-designed top graphics or the ability to design your own, Wagner is both a brand dedicated to customization and also stands on its own as an expert ski-maker. Currently the Wagner skis kitted with vLinks sell from the Surefoot store in Deer Valley, Colorado. Prices vary.

via EXP