Erin Fetherston Shutters High-End Fashion Label, Readies Lower-Priced Line

As she wraps up her stint as a guest designer and creative consultant for Juicy Couture, Erin Fetherston is also stepping back from her namesake ready-to-wear label. The high-end collection, which has provided a shot of whimsy to the New York runways since 2006, has been shuttered—or at least placed on indefinite hold. Fans of the designer’s signature fairytale-inflected femininity will be able to get their Fetherston fix from “Erin,” a new lower-priced line that will debut during New York Fashion Week (two looks from the new line are pictured). “The line, which will be more casual but still equally as rich in Erin’s signature perspective, will hit stores this fall,” according to a post on the designer’s blog. WWD offers more details on the new label, which “skews more toward everyday wear, with ample ladyfied sportswear. T-shirts are embellished with beadwork and chiffon accents, a winter parka is done in icy metallic lame and skinny black pants come with a swath of silk trailing in the back, like a cape.” Fetherston cites the economy as a key factor her in decision to swap ready-to-wear for a lower-priced line. “When the climate isn’t good, that really takes the fun out of buying a $5,000 dress,” she told WWD. “I don’t want to be so removed anymore. That’s not where we are.”

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Book Review: Living with Complexity, by Donald Norman

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A photograph of Al Gore’s messy office opens Donald Norman’s new book Living with Complexity. At first this reviewer looked at the office and the piles of paper in judgment and then began to realize that the very man campaigning against messing up the environment had a rather messy desk. Donald Norman might differ. Living with Complexity takes the theses offered in his earlier books The Design of Everyday Things and Emotional Design and extrapolates them from the world of goods into the world of service providers.

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In Norman’s view, Gore’s desk is the cluttered extension of an organized mind. Indeed, Norman interviewed many seemingly organized owners of messy workspaces and heard them repeatedly request, “Please don’t clean my desk.” The apparent disorder of the office was being carefully tracked in their minds. Norman explains that all of our desire for “simplicity” is a false hope because life is complex. Complexity, however, does not need to be confusing. Those designers who can manage to produce devices (and systems) that corral the complexity of the world into intuitively grouped and well-designed systems will garner success in our digital world.

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Fuck Photoshop pencil

La matita per puristi, geniale però 😉 fatevela qui prima che vada in sold out!

Fuck Photoshop pencil

Google Art Project and MTA.ME

Two new interactive works from the Internet’s creative powerhouse
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If the big business of art makes you shed a little tear for civilization, the Google Art Project might be for you. Eschewing the practices of increasingly high admission fees (and the dumbed-down blockbuster shows that come with it), the Internet behemoth introduces a platform that transcends both the boundaries of geography and cash flow. While of course this digitized version can’t do what a well-curated show in a beautiful gallery does, the site’s capability to reach a wide audience and as an educational tool (not to mention the potential for inventive hacks) are hallmarks of Google’s approach to the modern online world.

Using their Street View technology, you can browse the museums—17 in all, including the Uffizi, MoMA, Versailles, the Van Gogh Museum and the Tate—as a whole (though some works are blurred due to copyrights). And because it’s all captured in high-res, you can zoom in on individual works and scan the entire canvas to see details such as cracks or paint strokes. Each museum is even offering one of their most valued works as a gigapixel image for a bogglingly detailed close-up views, and the setup even allows you to create and save your own virtual collection of art.

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Thanks to the cooperation of the museums (Google approached each and let them decide their scope of participation), the resource also comes packed with videos from museum experts, extensive information on artists and easily-navigable floor plans. For the elderly, anyone else who can’t make the trip to see the world’s masterpieces, OCD planners, or art history students, the Project makes for an invaluably in-depth reference tool. To see how it works in full, have a look at the video tutorial.

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The news of Google Art Project comes on the heels of the buzz yesterday about another artful online experiment from Google designer Alexander Chen, who turned New York’s subway map into a strummable set of strings. MTA.ME uses HTML5 to make the real-time subway schedule into an interactive musical instrument, stripping the map to a beautifully-spare set of colored lines with a background that fades from white to black as the 24-hour loop falls from day to night.


Wanted: Graphic Designer with Good Taste

(Ralph Morse).jpgHungry for a challenge or just quality in-office leftovers? Have we got a gig for you. Food & Wine is looking for a gastronomically astute graphic designer to join its New York City HQ on a freelance basis. Ingredients: four cups of print design, three cups of online design, and two heaping tablespoons of creative input on branding efforts (did someone say Top Chef?), sprinkled liberally with mastery of the Adobe design suite, strong multitasking skills, and a keen interest in food, wine, and design, all seasoned with working knowledge of Flash and html. Sound appetizing? Act now, because we suspect that this job opening will last as long as leftover chocolate-drizzled pecan shortbread in the Food & Wine test kitchen.

Learn more about and apply for this freelance graphic designer, Food & Wine job or view all of the current mediabistro.com design/art/photo jobs.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Bikes of San Francisco

Poster disegnato da Tor Weeks per SF Artcrank.
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Bikes of San Francisco

Hannah K. Lee

Lei è Hannah K. Lee.

Hannah K. Lee

Amnesty Chop Pencils

Saatchi & Saatchi ha lanciato una campagna, sostituendo le bacchette con matite in vari ristoranti cinesi. L’obiettivo era convincere la popolazione cinese a scrivere di diritti umani.
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Amnesty Chop Pencils

Hövding by Anna Haupt and Terese Alstin

Hovding by Anna Haupt and Terese Alstin

This bicylce helmet designed by Anna Haupt and Terese Alstin erupts from its hiding place inside a scarf when triggered by abnormal movements.

Hovding by Anna Haupt and Terese Alstin

Called Hövding, the product is worn as a scarf and an airbag folded into the collar inflates to cover the whole head before impact.

Hovding by Anna Haupt and Terese Alstin

The scarf is a removable shell that covers the airbag inside and can be changed for different designs.

Hovding by Anna Haupt and Terese Alstin

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Hovding by Anna Haupt and Terese Alstin

Here’s some information about the product:


HÖVDING – AN INVISIBLE HELMET FOR BICYCLISTS

After several years of research and development, a new Swedish invention has been launched. Hövding – a bicycle helmet unlike any other currently on the market. A bicycle helmet that is not even placed on your head. The founders and inventors Anna Haupt and Terese Alstin showed the world novelty at the Technical Fair in Stockholm on the 19th of October.

– We wanted to make a head protection for bicyclists based on the demands that was presented through our surveys. Among other things the protection should keep the sense of freedom that goes with bicycling and not ruin your hair. It feels amazing that our research and development has led up to this day when we can finally show Hövding to everyone, says Terese Alstin who is one of the inventors.

Hövding is a collar for bicyclists, worn around the neck. The collar contains a folded up airbag that you’ll only see if you happen to have an accident. The airbag is shaped like a hood, surrounding and protecting the bicyclist’s head. The trigger mechanism is controlled by sensors which pick up the abnormal movements of a bicyclist in an accident.

– The actual collar is the visible part of the invention. It’s covered by a removable shell that you can change to match your outfit, and we’ll be launching new designs all the time. Hövding is a practical accessory that’s easy to carry around, it’s got a great looking yet subtle design, and will save your life, says Anna Hupt.

For six years Anna Haupt and Terese Alstin have developed Hövding which is based on advanced technology and research. Both are educated Industrial designers and it was during their master thesis that they came up with the idea that laid the foundations for developing Hövding. Today they are twelve people working full time with Hövding.

Despite alarming accident statistics, most cyclists on the road aren’t wearing helmets. Every year about 40 people die and about 30,000 are injured in bicycling accidents, and that’s just in Sweden. One in three bicyclists who are injured suffer head injuries.

Despiten these alarming accident statistics, the vast majority of cyclists on the road aren’t wearing helmets. This is partly because helmets are bulky and impractical to carry around when you’re not on your bicycle, but it’s also because people think bicycle helmets look hideous and make them look silly. For most people, bicycling isn’t a sport. They’re just using their bicycles to get from A to B, bicycling to work, into town or to go out in the evening. Despite this, almost all the traditional bicycle helmets on the global market have a sporty design.

– In our opinion the range of bicycle helmets available is extremely narrow, they all look the same and the lack of variety results in very few people wearing them. Hövding is the solution to the problem, it’s subtle and blends in with what else you are wearing. And it doesn’t ruin your hair, says Terese Alstin.

You can pre-order Hövding now on the company website, www.hovding.com, at a special advance price. Hövding will be available in stores in spring 2011.


See also:

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Smoker Bell by
Florian Brillet Architecture
Safe Cuddling by
Helge Fischer
Urban Camouflage by
Aya Tsukioka

VOLTA AW11 preview

Prima preview ufficiale per la collezione Volta AW11. All’interno del post, trovate tutte le altre.

VOLTA AW11 preview

VOLTA AW11 preview

VOLTA AW11 preview

VOLTA AW11 preview

VOLTA AW11 preview

VOLTA AW11 preview