Jean-Baptiste Fastrez

How a young French designer’s radical approach yields soulful results

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Toying with high and low, mixing handmade craftsmanship with mechanized production, contrasting natural materials against plastics—the work of emerging industrial designer Jean-Baptiste Fastrez is a study in opposites, shedding new light onto everyday objects by highlighting dissonance. But unlike many exploring the same concepts only to deconstruct design, this rabble-rouser sets up the tension as a means to give “soul” to an object. His latest project takes on the hair dryer, incorporating the “great craft tradition” of handle-making to reinvent the common appliance as a modern tomahawk. “My aim,” the young Frenchman explains, “is to give to this type of product some more interest, sense and sculptural presence,” an approach that lends the object status befitting today’s well-coiffed warriors.

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This avant-garde approach, honed as an assistant to the experimentally-minded design team of the Bouroullec brothers for the past three years, is a through line in Fastrez’s independent work as he applies radical ideas to mainstream design. Like the tomahawk hair dryer, his electric kettle series attempts to make “serial production and handmade production coexist within one same object.” By creating a standardized, technical base that meets safety restrictions, the kettle itself can be customized through a rapid prototyping machine or by enlisting the help of independent craftsmen. This industrial-meets-independent design system allows users to play with how they will use an object, again giving it the kind of highly sought after personal value that appeals to the consumer looking for a self-aware way to express their individuality through design.

“I would like for the consumer to choose his electrical appliance as he could fall in love with a piece in a secondhand market,” Fastrez emphasizes. At play along with this notion of individualism is a sustainability element—if the object breaks, the consumer isn’t forced to buy an entirely new appliance.

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Questioning the efficiency of mass production, Fastrez’ approach largely works to upend the way standardization processes lead to “soulless objects” and thereby facilitate our throwaway society. In addition to creating adaptable design, introducing a new purpose can also increase the emotional value of an item. The Fog table, created in collaboration with designer Marc Sarrazin, repurposes metallic mesh (usually used to make soundproof electronic drums) into a tabletop, which only functions when the table legs have been extended to stretch the fabric tight enough to support objects.

Keep an eye out for Fastrez’ upcoming projects, which includes designs with Sèvres ceramics and Circa glass, as well as a solo exhibition at the Design Parade at the Villa Noailles, Hyères. The industrious designer says of his forthcoming plans, “a year of very exiting work.”


Burton x Adidas Originals 2011

Non so voi ma io sento già il clima invernale, purtroppo il tempo (perlomeno qui a Milano) è pessimo da settimane. Così mi cade l’occhio su queste sneakers foderate che saranno lanciate presumibilmente in ottobre e faranno parte della capsule collection 2011 in collabo tra Adidas Originals e Burton.
{Via}

Burton x Adidas Originals 2011

Do Disturb

Door sign per solitari. By Atypyc.

Do Disturb

BookBook for iPhone

Custodia camuffata da vecchio libro per contenere iPhone, carte di credito e qualche soldo in carta. In vendita da twelve south.

Daily Obsesh – Lurex Cartwheel Hat

imageThere are several things a big floppy hat can do for you this summer.


It can protect your face from the sun, keep your hair color from fading (again, those darn UV rays), and it can hide a bad hair day. Not too shabby for such a simple accessory, right?


But, what’s even better is that you too can be the proud owner of this lovely, classic piece of head wear for less than six bucks! Yup, you definitely read that correctly. That means for the same amount of the sandwich you’re gonna buy for lunch, you’ll also be ready to take on a hot, sunny afternoon at the beach or pool in style. Hat tip to that!



Where to BuyZara.com



Price – $7.99



Who Found ItSusanY was the first to add the ‘Lurex Cartwheel Hat‘ to the Hive.

Doodle.ly

The Twitter of drawing
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Tired of text-based social media updates? Change tactics and let your right brain take control with Doodle.ly, a new website and soon-to-be iPad and iPhone app that allows the user to create and share web drawings, encouraging you to unleash your inner artist (or child). Made for those creative individuals who would rather communicate and express themselves via a sketch than a 140-character update, Doodle.ly is super easy to use—just visit the site, create your masterpiece, and share via Twitter or Facebook.

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Although the pen and color choices are currently limited, new options will be available upon the 5,000th doodle. So get Doodle.lying!


50th Anniversary of IBM’s Groundbreaking Selectric Typewriter

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This Sunday will be the 50th Anniversary of the launch date of IBM’s Selectric typewriter, a game-changing design that represented mid-century American manufacturing prowess brought to market with a one-two engineering-&-industrial-design punch. A team of engineers led by Horace “Bud” Beattie worked the guts while industrial designer Eliot Noyes is given sole credit for the overall form, his Olivetti influence notwithstanding.

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The engineering team’s brilliant innovation was to get rid of the type bars. Prior to the Selectric, each typewriter’s key worked a dedicated bar that slammed its imprint in the center of the typing area. A split-second was needed between keystrokes so that a type bar returning to its resting position had time to clear the next outgoing bar. If a typist was too fast, the bars would contact each other and jam.

Beattie and his team replaced the bars with a spherical head imprinted all around with letters, a sort of “golf ball” that precluded any timing overlaps:

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Special feature: London 2012 Olympics

Ok Go – All Is Not Lost

Le groupe OK Go a travaillé avec la réalisatrice Trish Sie, la compagnie de danse moderne Pilobolus et les équipes de Google pour créer leur nouveau clip et la dernière expérimentation interactive en HTML5. Une danse kaleïdoscopique et chorégraphiée sur le titre “All Is Not Lost”.



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Magic Stool by David Fox

The Magic stool is inspired by the shape of a mushroom, the curved seat representing the cap, the steelwork channeled delicately like the underside of..