Kawamura Ganjavian’s "Ostrich," for the New "Working-Resting" Paradigm
Posted in: UncategorizedIt was no surprise to us that Janine Benyus’s introduction to biomimicry was one of the most popular videos in our Sustainability in 7 series last month: the notion of “solving design challenges by asking nature’s advice” has an immediate appeal.
While Benyus uses a peacock feather as an example, architecture and design studio Kawamura Ganjavian has found inspiration in another, equally unique (Ganj?-)avian: the ostrich.
OSTRICH offers a micro environment in which to take a warm and comfortable power nap at ease. It is neither a pillow nor a cushion, nor a bed, nor a garment, but a bit of each at the same time. Its soothing cave-like interior shelters and isolates our head and hands (mind, senses and body) for a few minutes, without needing to leave our desk.
Make Your Home A Soothing Spring Get-Away!
Posted in: UncategorizedNeed a getaway pretty much every day? Then it’s time to make your home pull double-duty as a spa and a sanctuary! Inspired by the classic combination of blue and white, modern color palettes and patterns are picking up where Delph blue China left off. Fresher shades and patterns like Trina Turk’s Trellis print recall beaches and far-flung tropical travels. You can buy it by the yard and use it indoors, outdoors, a lot, or a little. For the mellower kind, a trendy chevron print in small doses isn’t too ‘tribal’ or busy, especially if you go with a softer shade of blue. After all, blue is a universally soothing color, especially when paired with pale colors like grey, whites, and beige. Pottery Barn’s beach glass bath accessories will add a lot of luxurious home-spa style to any plain white countertop while still maintaining the calm you need. Blue and white is a versatile pick-me-up anywhere, so for spaces – or parties – where you want more energy, definitely don’t ignore the graphic appeal of West Elm’s plates.
|
Design Features Video of the ’38 Hispano-Suiza, and the "Bugatti in the Lake" (Mullin Automotive Museum & Jay Leno’s Garage, Part 3)
Posted in: UncategorizedIn this rare video look at the 1938 Hispano-Suiza Dubonnet, Peter Mullin and Jay Leno go over the design features of the car, from the unusual suicide door to the custom-fitted luggage compartment, and discuss the airplane-inspired styling done by coachbuilder Jacques Saoutchik. It’s nice to see two serious auto geeks voice appreciation for everything from the latches and gas cap to the honeycomb-sculpted exhaust tips. And while we showed you some measly stills in yesterday’s entry, you absolutely have to see the car in moving-camera video to appreciate the beauty of its lines.
Peter Marlow’s Point Of Interest
Posted in: UncategorizedApproach to runway 27 left, Heathrow Airport, England, 2001
A new exhibition of images from Magnum photographer Peter Marlow reveals the enigmatic in the everyday…
Point of Interest opened at the Wapping Project Bankside today, and comprises of 37 photographs that Marlow has chosen from several thousand images he has taken over the last 20 years. Marlow is best known for his photojournalism, and this body of work has been made alongside his major journalistic projects. Taken out of their original context, with the narrative thread that would normally bind them together lost, the images here reflect odd and uncertain moments that might usually be missed. All are empty of people, and yet human influence is evident in most of the shots, with the viewer left to imagine what might have occurred to create the unlikely and intriguing scenes.
Campbell Park, Milton Keynes, England, 2000
Former coastguard lookout, Dungeness, Kent, England, 2007
Saxton, Yorkshire, England, 2004
Empty office in Clerkenwell, England, 2002
Market day in Caylus, Tarn et Garonne, France, 2008
The Experimental Station, Dungeness, England, 2006
National Cold War Museum, Cosford, England, 2007. All images courtesy of the photography and Wapping Project Bankside.
The show will continue at Wapping Project Bankside until July 2. More info is at thewappingprojectbankside.com.
NY Design Week 2011: Colleen&Eric
Posted in: NY Design WeekAt Wanted Design last weekend, Brooklyn-based design duo Colleen&Eric debuted a few of their new pieces. Both industrial design graduates of Pratt Institute, Colleen and Eric work out of their studio in Bushwick, and showcased their work at ICFF for the first time last year. The “Hold on Tight” bookshelf was a hit, which used an aluminum cube and wingnut as a sliding bookend, as were the “Shirt Savers,” little design-y appliques to rescue your shirt from indelible stains.
FREITAG F49 Fringe Backpack
Posted in: F49In uscita per luglio un nuovo modello della linea di backpack Freitag. Questa è la F49, stesso procedimento di produzione svizzero, scomparto per laptop fino a 17 pollici, apertura zip a doppia cerniera 270°.
Garden Goes Balcony design competition
Posted in: promotionsDezeen promotion: garden trade show Spoga+Gafa invites young designers to enter their Garden Goes Balcony design competition for the chance to win a share of €12,500 and exhibit as part of Garden Unique, which takes place at Koelnmesse in Cologne from 4 to 6 September.
The brief invites designers to create solutions for one of three example balconies and upload them via the competition website.
A prize fund of €12,500 will be divided between 15 winners and three special jury prizes, with a top prize of €2,500.
The selected designs will be exhibited as part of Garden Unique at Spoga+Gafa and manufacturers visiting the fair will be able to purchase ideas at a fee of €3,500.
Read the full brief and submit your entry on the competition website »
Here are some more details from competition organisers Koelnmesse:
garden unique presenting design competition and “Furniture Fashion Shows”
“garden goes balcony”: Designers develop concepts for outdoor residential areas in Cologne’s Rheinauhafen
Exclusive, design-orientated, high quality: with its “garden unique” from 4th to 6th September, Koelnmesse is presenting a new platform for the international premium garden furniture brands at spoga+gafa.
In addition to the international top manufacturers, young, up-and-coming designers with creative ideas are also a key part of the concept.
Under the motto “garden goes balcony” an international creativity campaign is currently underway on the jovoto.com platform, on which over 20,000 graphic and product designers along with architects are registered. The aim is to develop a design concept for the urban balcony. Be it cozy, stylish or functional: at the heart of the concept is furniture which creates the perfect balcony.
The balconies in the exclusive “Im Zollhafen” residential area in Cologne’s modern Rheinauhafen serve as the model here. A top-ranking jury, whose members include the architects Bernd Römer and Tobias Lutz along with Tal Waldman, will select the winners. Among others they will have the opportunity to have their design implemented as a 3-D model and presented during spoga+gafa in the “garden unique” segment. Other ideas selected by the jury and the community will be shown in the “Design Cubes” at garden unique in a special exhibition.
garden unique also includes a catwalk, on which the top products will be presented within the framework of “Furniture Fashion Shows”. On the catwalk a group of creative fashion design students from the Düsseldorf Private Fashion Academy (Private Modeschule Düsseldorf) will ensure a unique interaction between outdoor lifestyle furniture and fashion.
With an own restaurant and catering concept and special meeting facilities in the “Conference Garden”, the aim is to promote personal dialogue and communication within the hall. In addition to the up-market specialist furniture trade, furnishers, architects and buyers from the commercial sector along with building owners will inform themselves and obtain inspiration on the luxury outdoor innovations in a unique setting.
A core element of the “garden unique” hall concept is the “Framewalls”. These frameworks lend the garden unique-exhibitors an exclusive image for their individual presentations and open up a very special perspective for the visitors.
Bridge compact shredder
Posted in: compact shredder, one-tenthRock Paper Photo
Posted in: thebeatlesFamed Beatles photographer Tom Murray on the debut of the ultimate online gallery of pop culture images
Last week online photography gallery Rock Paper Photo launched, ambitiously making thousands of the most sought-after images in pop culture history available to the general public. Shot by top photographers, all images are carefully selected, available in limited editions and hand-signed by the lensmen themselves. Connoisseurs can snap up Richard E Aaron’s archival pigment print of Jerry Garcia peering over his glasses for thousands or, if you’re just an endearing fan, a few hundred will get you a Richard Beland print of the Beastie Boys.
To learn more about the new site and its featured photographers we were lucky enough to chat with Tom Murray, the award-winning photographer who shot the series of Beatles photographs now known as “The Mad Day: Summer of ’68,” which are widely considered some of the most important color photographs of the group ever taken. We caught up with Murray here in NYC just minutes after he signed the first editions to be sold on RPP and hours before hopping on a flight back to England.
How did you find yourself involved in Rock Paper Photo?
For a long while we have only been showing through art galleries, and the really great galleries are booked up for two or three years in advance, so when RPP told us what was happening and asked would we like to be involved I said sure. Now, any fan can shop online and they can see some great rock-and-roll photography by quite famous photographers, including my Beatles work.
Aside from the accessibility, what about Rock Paper Photo really piqued your interest?
First of all is, it is very well designed. They also explain what the different types of prints are—the platinum prints, the chromogenic color prints, which I produce, and also giclée (Archival Pigment) prints. And a lot of people don’t know the difference between them. I think they’ve been very clever with the pricing. If you’re a Beatles fan you can a giclée image at a good price. If you’re a photographic collector and also a Beatles fan then you’ll go for the chromogenic print. I love black and white and they’ve got some wonderful platinum prints there, which are great.
How do you feel about the quality of images sold on the site?
I think they showcase it all very well—such high standards. I’ve spent three days just going through different proofs, till we got it perfectly right. I am very fussy. When people now see the prints they will realize why I am so fussy. The whole website is very high quality, limited-editions, fabulous prints, fabulous giclées. I’ve had many offers before to release my work in different ways, and I’ve not liked it. Some of the digital quality that people are settling for now is not very good. But [RPP] really does bring my work alive and they seem to understand what i want as a photographer.
Was getting the Beatles photos available to the public your biggest driving factor in working with Rock Paper Photo?
Well, yes. To be quite honest I’ve had Beatles fans nagging that they frankly couldn’t afford the limited-edition chromogenics, and for a fan they’re quite expensive. I don’t produce tiny little prints, I grew up the old-fashion way with chemicals and papers. So when Rock Paper Photo said they were going to do a giclée edition. I said fine, that will be great for fans.
Tell us a bit about the progression of your lengthy career.
I’m very lucky, I’ve been a photographer since I was 15. I’ve just been snapping my way around the world and it is just very fortunate for me that I’ve frequently been in the right place at the right time and skilled enough to produce some work. I started in newspapers in the ’60s, I worked there for years, then I went to Africa and worked there for years. And I came back and became the staff photographer for the Sunday Times Magazine. Then opened my own studio and started getting American clients and moved to New York, then to Los Angeles. Then I went back to England about 10 years ago. and we started seriously thinking about putting these images out for people to purchase in around the year 2000.
Now back in England, what takes up most of your time nowadays?
I’m actually semi-retired so now I’m going through fifty years of my photography. And its amazing, I’m coming across work that I’ve forgot I’ve did, found pictures of Norman Mailer, Richard Burt. I found a whole set of pictures of Eli Wallach, and some more of John Huston the film director. And some of that starts to become historically valuable now, so that may end up also on this website.
So you intend on showcasing more long-lost images on the site as well?
Anything that they’re interested in, I’m going to showcase. So much of the stuff is in slide form, transparencies, negatives, and the rest of it I’m actually just scanning it so that my agent in NY can see it. Once it’s scanned, I got to go back into it and caption everything and put little story in so people know the reason I got to photograph it. It’s the old stories that are interesting to people.
Why is it important to have all of this available online?
A lot of photographic collectors will be buying the rock-and-roll prints, whereas rock and roll fans will be buying the giclée edition. Because they’re fans of the singers, they’re not necessarily collectors of photography. That’s the way it works. And a lot of galleries won’t sell both together. With the way things are going, more and more people buy stuff online. I know I do and I’m 68 years old. My mother is 92 and she occasionally buys things online, so it is the way of the future.
All images by Tom Murray