CamelBak is Seeking a Product Designer in Petaluma, CA
Posted in: Uncategorized Product Designer
CamelBak Products
Petaluma, CA
As a Product Designer on the CamelBak design team, your role will be to envision and create world class hydration equipment in the CamelBak tradition. You will be expected to deliver continued innovation in both soft goods and hard goods, and rely on your skill and experience to translate product briefs into exceptional product solutions with high consumer value within tight margins and aggressive schedules. In this tightly woven interdisciplinary environment, success hinges on the ability to be self-functioning, while at the same time open and collaborative with your team members.
The best design jobs and portfolios hang out at Coroflot.
Still Life Comes Alive
Posted in: Brian Li, FOFA, Kyosuke Nishida, relief, Still Life Comes AliveLes artistes Kyosuke Nishida et Brian Li ont construit pour la fin de leurs études à l’université Concordia cette composition massive en papier faisant apparaître l’expression “Still Life Comes Alive”. L’idée de cette sculpture est donc passé de l’ordinateur afin d’être finalisé sur papier.
Previously on Fubiz
This split-level terraced house has been completed by 05 AM Arquitectura on a narrow plot in Girona, Spain.
The stepped floors and bright yellow shelving of House in Casavells define the individual spaces whilst allowing long views and natural light through the whole house.
The house can be accessed both from the ground floor street level or from the lower ground garden level, where there is also a car port.
Photographs are by José Hevia
For more residential projects on Dezeen »
Here is some more information from the architects:
The terraced house is located in a narrow and long plot situated on the edge of small village.
The house has a contrast in both open sides, in the north, the old village with narrow streets of stone. And in the south, we have the garden, the pool, the sun and the landscape.
Access is possible through the two facades at different levels, but is usually done with the car through the south facade.
The house is defined to answer to the contrast between the features of two sides.
The house has a depressed zone in the middle to have a better relation with the garden and the landscape, and the roof is fragmented to let the natural light pass. With the different levels of the ground and the ceiling we clearly identify the individual character and volume of each space with a different use, into an open space always luminous and linked to the landscape.
In the lower ground floor, open to south and in contact with the garden, we must resolve the usual access to housing with the car, so we propose to have a space with more attributes than a garage with dark background. It is a transitional space between inside and outside of the house, a threshold where they can develop alternative uses.
With the aim to allow a good relation into different spaces, we place middle space on an intermediate level between the level of the basement and the main floor. It’s the place of leisure and study, as a common space between the various activities of the house where we place the library, a desk, and bleachers, with the purpose of being a playground for children, a meeting space or a home cinema.
The main floor is a unique space, with a large opening at its southern end. From this level we can see the multifunctional space of the entry and the garden through the studio located at an intermediate level. This space depressed in the middle of the main floor also allows having views to the landscape.
In this floor we have the main uses, the kitchen, the living room and the terrace. And in the north side also we have the entry from the street of the village.
In the first floor where we have the bedrooms, the slab breaks it into three, leaving two open gaps between them that allow the passage of the overhead light to the ground floor. These three slabs are placed at different heights to qualify and define spatially the different uses that are located in the lower floor.
It is a house that provides solutions to the conditions and take full advantage of the benefits of the place where is located, creating a pleasant indoor space with many possibilities of use, and ways to connect and qualify the spaces.
Project information:
Architects: Joan Arnau and Carme Muñoz. 05 AM arquitectura
Location: Casavells, Baix Empordà, (Girona), Spain
Surface: 303m²
See also:
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Roof on the Hill by ALPHAville | House by Studio Architecture Gestalten | Kiri’s House by Atelier Riri |
Nike+ and YesYesNo
Posted in: UncategorizedGPS-enabled experiments visualize daily jog data in 3-D
Potential Prefontaines aside, most who run would be hard-pressed to find any grace or beauty in our daily jogs. And yet that’s exactly what Nike+’s latest collaboration with interactive design firm YesYesNo accomplishes. Over two stunningly beautiful days on Nike’s campus in Beaverton, Oregon, YesYesNo collected data from several runs (mine included), plotting them in a three-dimensional scale. The graphs incorporated speed, distance and acceleration, but also color and texture.
YesYesNo’s projects range in size from the very large (i.e. the size of a building) to the very small. For example, the EyeWriter Initiative—in conjunction with the Graffiti Research Lab—tracks the movements of an eyeball in order to splash huge swathes of color and shape across buildings yards away. In this case, the whole of Nike’s campus was to be our canvas.
“Imagine you were going to go on a run with a giant paintbrush strapped to your back,” YesYesNo co-founder Zachary Lieberman tried to explain as we prepared to start our run. Strapping on GPS-enabled sportwatches, we went on brisk jogs around the campus.
Once back (and showered), Lieberman and cofounder Theo Watson plugged in the data from our watches into computers. Once the data loaded, we were able to manipulate the color, texture and size of the images and rotate them on a 3-D axis. After saving the final result, we could do anything with the graphic created—print it on posterboard, or even laser-etch it on the top of a shoebox.
While the project is a long way away from commercial application (when we asked Nike+ about it, they said that that conversation hadn’t even started yet), “The idea is that you take these tools back to your own cities and start collecting data wherever you are,” said Lieberman, the self-described “nerd artist.” If getting healthier isn’t enough of an incentive to stick to your daily jogs, perhaps creating artwork out of your efforts will be.
Camp Firebelly
Posted in: UncategorizedHere’s a really great idea for recent design grads looking for adventure! A design camp hosted by Chicago’s Firebelly Design.
Camp Firebelly offers the next crop of socially-minded designers the chance to use their talent and creativity to make a difference, experiencing what professional life is like Firebelly-style. For 10 days, 10 campers live and work with us to craft a strategic design solution for a non-profit client, from initial research to final implementation.
Nick Adam writes, “Camp is a time where Firebelly stops all client work and closes the studio for 2 weeks. We bring 10 young designers into the studio and connect them with several nonprofits that are in great need of proper design. We house, feed, direct, and teach the designers to solve all the problems, and develop tangible artifacts within ten days. This is Firebelly’s 4th year of camp, we are very excited for our next group of campers.”
View images from last year’s camp on Flickr. Applications are due April 29, click here to download.
ContemPLAY Pavilion – McGill University
Posted in: UncategorizedPayday Splurge (Raffia)!
Posted in: UncategorizedNothing says breezy Spring (or Summer) day like woven raffia! Raffia can go from poolside luxe to casual cutie easily and the usually neutral color makes it extremely versatile! Match it with bright pop colors for a youthful style or add it to white and gold for a glamourous chic vibe! Or keep it all in the nude color family for a classically streamlined look! We have five stylish raffia finds that will fit any budget, so TGIF! Get your shop on!
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Workspace of the Week: Mint condition modern
Posted in: UncategorizedThis week’s Workspace of the Week is John Megadeth’s home office:
Organized is not synonymous with new, and this week’s workspace is a perfect example of how older furniture can continue to work perfectly in the present. Using a desk from the middle of last century, John Megadeth has achieved a wonderful, stylistic look for his home office (and not a cable in sight!).
From the photo’s description:
The makeover began last summer with the purchase of the mighty tanker desk. With this piece, I began to really get into mid-century industrial furniture. With the addition of an awesome desk lamp (which we searched high and low for), and a great desk chair with matching side chair, the office is coming together well.
Unlike many of the people whose work spaces I see, I am not a computer programer. I’m a Technical Writer for a major-US airline here in North Texas, but I (unfortunately) don’t need to work from home. Our computer is mainly for everyday use.
Thank you, John, for such sharing your workspace with us.
Want to have your own workspace featured in Workspace of the Week? Submit a picture to the Unclutterer flickr pool. Check it out because we have a nice little community brewing there. Also, don’t forget that workspaces aren’t just desks. If you’re a cook, it’s a kitchen; if you’re a carpenter, it’s your workbench.
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