Core77 Design Awards: Transportation Jury Announcement LIVE, NOW!

Congratulations to this year’s Transportation winners!

Student Winner: Ethan Frier & Jonathan Ota – Project Aura (Ed. Note: We wrote up “Project Aura” a few months ago, not knowing that Ethan and Jonathan had submitted it to the awards. Congratulations, guys!)

Professional Winner: Motonium Design, Inc. – Mission R Electric Superbike

Check out the rest of the notable projects at Core77DesignAwards.com

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Come tirare torte in faccia

Chiare istruzioni dopo il tentativo fallito da parte di un protestante di tirare una torta in faccia a Rupert Murdoch.
{Via}

Come tirare torte in faccia

The New Classic Frozen Treats

Six delectable twists on ice cream staples

While healthy frozen treats might relieve the guilt, nothing quite beats the heat like a chilly old-school dessert. The updated versions of such tasty classics—from fro-yo sandwiches to hand-held banana splits—all promise to add some serious flavor to see you through the rest of summer.

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So Delicious Coconut Minis Sandwich

These cute little sandwiches are perfect for a quick summer snack. They’re made of agave-sweetened coconut milk and have 100% of your daily value of calcium per serving. We tried the banana split flavor, but they also come in coconut and vanilla.

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Julie’s Ice Cream Bars

Possessing all the appeal of the traditional ice cream bar but none of the additives, Julie’s ice cream bars are made from entirely organic ingredients, making for a rich, creamy blend of classic chocolate and vanilla. The bars also come in several variations on the tried-and-true theme—fudge, vanilla with almond, coffee, and blackberry.

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Grey Goose Popsicles

Made at home by Evan, these frozen fruity bars contain an extra kick, lemon-flavored vodka. He mixed Le Citron Grey Goose with raspberry juice and homemade lemonade (although pre-made will do in a pinch), resulting in the perfect blend of cocktail and popsicle. The treats are so delicious you’ll waste no time devouring them, which is all the better since they melt fast. (Pick up your own
stainless-steel molds
from Brook Farm General Store.)

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Ciao Bella Gelato Squares

If you crave a more decadent snack, try one of Ciao Bella’s Chocolate S’mores Gelato Squares. The rich blend of all-natural Belgian chocolate gelato with swirls of milk chocolate and marshmallow will satisfy any chocolate lover while still keeping you cool. The creamy snacks come in sandwich form to keep hands from getting sticky while snacking, and are also available in Key Lime.

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Additionally, for a yummy healthy alternative to the Gelato Squares, try Jala’s Frozen Yogurt Sandwiches, an office favorite. The creamy yogurt comes in two flavors, chocolate and vanilla, nestled between two soft chocolate cookies. These low-guilt sandwiches not only satisfy your sweet tooth, but they also have health benefits because they contain active probiotics.

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Diana’s Bananas

These Banana Babies are so delicious they disappeared from our office freezer at an astonishing rate. Dipped in real dark chocolate—nothing artificial or substituted—Diana’s frozen bananas make an excellent midday treat.


Rabobank Headquarters by Sander Architecten

Rabobank Headquarters by Sander Architecten

Amsterdam studio Sander Architecten designed cardboard meeting rooms inside a bank in the Netherlands.

Rabobank Headquarters by Sander Architecten

Giant cylinders of cardboard and paper enclose meeting rooms inside the headquarters for financial services advisor Rabobank.

Rabobank Headquarters by Sander Architecten

The multi-ply cardboard is layered to create textured patterns on the surface of one cylinder.

Rabobank Headquarters by Sander Architecten

Translucent Japanese paper covers a second cylinder, as well as the springy lanterns that surround circular skylights.

Rabobank Headquarters by Sander Architecten

Timber screens and furniture fill the surrounding open-plan areas.

Rabobank Headquarters by Sander Architecten

This is the second project this month to feature paper or card, following a cardboard labyrinth at the Serpentine Gallery – see all our stories about cardboard here and all our stories about paper here.

Rabobank Headquarters by Sander Architecten

See also a bank with faces in the walls and another resembling the Amazonian forest – click here to see all our stories about banks.

Rabobank Headquarters by Sander Architecten

Photography is by Alexander van Berge.

Here’s more information provided by Sander Architecten:


Sander Architecten stretches the boundaries of the modern office.

Amsterdam firm Sander Architecten completed the Square of Rabobank Nederland headquarters. Rabobank selected Sander Architecten out of a group of twenty to create and supervise the execution of the entire interior design (56.000 m²), including the twenty-five-storey building.

Rabobank Headquarters by Sander Architecten

As the office interior is being redefined by the introduction of new methods of working, interior architecture is facing new challenges. In today’s work environment, the emphasis is on cooperation in teams and group dynamics; people go to the office for the social aspect more than anything else.  To realize this ambition, we view the building as a modern city. After all, the city is where individual freedom and spontaneous interaction are all-important.

Rabobank Headquarters by Sander Architecten

The effectiveness of this concept is visible on the Square, located at the plinth of the new office building. Employees and visitors work, eat, read, and meet one another in a diverse landscape.

Rabobank Headquarters by Sander Architecten

The ‘buildings,’ separate spaces with different functions, join up with the uncluttered grid of skylights and slim columns. The new style of working is based on freedom, trust and taking responsibility. In the client’s view, its employees are all entrepreneurs, responsible for their own performance in an environment free of fixed rules, fixed times and fixed locations.  The work spaces are tailored to specific activities: multi-person meetings, face-to-face meetings or a place to write a report with maximum concentration. Each activity has its own space.

Rabobank Headquarters by Sander Architecten

Click above for larger image

In nature routes are formed naturally; people intuitively find their way. Architect Ellen Sander was seeking that naturalness, that ‘flow’. The busiest routes automatically formed around the cores with the lifts and staircases, beyond which more peaceful zones naturally emerged. Moreover, the psychological concept of ‘flow’, the moment when need, desire and ability come together, connects the employee’s sense of happiness with an optimum result for the employer. The guiding principle for the interior design therefore became ‘form follows flow’. To enable flows vertical partitions were avoided so that the horizon would always be visible. ‘The office is my world and the world is my office.’

Rabobank Headquarters by Sander Architecten

The design was generated by cooperation with a number of other designers. The Square on the plinth could not turn into a monotone, homogenous space. Diversity is required in order to stimulate people, and despite the enormous scale of the building, people are not left wandering around lost in sterile areas.

Rabobank Headquarters by Sander Architecten

Click above for larger image

The meeting pavilions designed by Sander Architecten are made from washi paper and paperboard. In combination with the Chinese lantern from washi paper suspended from the skylight, a distinctively tactile experience is created. The paperboard pavilion, which features attractive patterns created by the different uses of the material, is particularly inviting to touch.

Rabobank Headquarters by Sander Architecten

Sharing art with the city

The wall annex glass display case is the centrepiece of the Square, and features On the departure and the arrival, a work by Chinese artist Ni Haifeng. The vertical museum contains porcelain objects including scissors, a bottle of Glassex and an iron, each painted in delftware style. The work is featured in the interior, too, with stills and a film about ‘the making of’ on view in the area behind the case.

Rabobank Headquarters by Sander Architecten

Click above for larger image

Client: Rabobank Nederland
Interior Architect and supervisor: Sander Architecten (Amsterdam)
Gross floor area: 56.000 m2
Completion: December 2011


See also:

.

Nothing office by Joost
van Bleiswijk
Cardboard office by
Paul Coudamy
Magma Art Bookshop by
Blustin Heath Design

Daily Obsesh – MinkPink Behind Enemy Lines top

imageThere’s a serious heat wave happening throughout much of the country, so it’s the perfect time to bare a little skin!


The MinkPink Behind Enemy Lines top is our favorite pick for a bit of bare midriff. This cute button down military inspired blouse is offered in a bright summer white which will highlight that bronz-y glow you’ve got from weekends at the beach.


In loose, fluid rayon, the tie waist top features brass buttons, a chest pocket and button tabs at the sleeve.


Pair it with your favorite high-waisted skinnies, or flares … even cut-off denim shorts! Add some sky-high wedges or a pair of espadrilles (for a more casual look) and you are ready to face some seriously hot weather in style!



Where to BuyNasty Gal



Price – $54.60



Who – Melimeli was the first to add the Mink Pink Behind Enemy Lines top to the Hive.

Liberty Rocks

A Boy Dreams by Graham Coxon

For its Autumn/Winter collection for 2011, Liberty Art Fabrics has worked with a group of collaborators from the worlds of art and music to create a new series of music-inspired print designs. The results are rather lovely…

Liberty has chosen to work with a group of musicians with links to the art world, including Graham Coxon and Florence Welch, and artists with links to music, such as John Squire and Storm Thorgerson.

Dancing Ladies, chosen by Florence Welch


Grace, chosen by Florence Welch

A wide range of designs have resulted. Some of the collaborators, including Florence Welch who selected the two fabrics shown above, visited the Liberty archive to choose patterns that could be revisited. Welch picked the Dancing Ladies design, which was popular in the 1920s, and Grace, a 19th century vintage hand-drawn lace pattern.

Ornithology by Edwyn Collins

Vonetta by John Squire

Many of the others created entirely new designs for the project. Edwyn Collins’ features a selection of the delicate bird sketches he drew as part of his rehabilitation after suffering a cerebral haemorrhage in 2005 (Collins drew a bird every day for six months), while John Squire has produced a lino-cut, geometric print for the series.

Thorgerson (in two different colours) by Storm Thorgerson

For one of his designs, Storm Thorgerson incorporated the iconic prism graphic from his sleeve design for Pink Floyd’s Dark Side of the Moon. Thorgerson’s second contribution, a graphic of birds, is based on his design for Australian band Powderfinger’s album Golden Rule.

Tomary by Mark Mawston

by Emilia de Poret

Alongside the collaborators’ contributions, the Liberty design team has also created a selection of prints inspired by different musical eras and music lyrics. These include paisley prints as well as 60s style geometric patterns. There is also a range of fabrics featuring digital images, a first for Liberty Art Fabrics. The full set of designs can be viewed online at http://crmag.co.uk/owe5Tu. Prices are from £19.95 per metre.

 

CR in Print

Thanks for reading the CR Blog but, if you’re not also getting the printed magazine, we think you are missing out. This month’s bumper July issue contains 60 pages of great images in our Illustration Annual plus features on Chris Milk, Friends With You and the Coca-Cola archive.

If you would like to buy this issue and are based in the UK, you can search for your nearest stockist here. Based outside the UK? Simply call +44(0)207 292 3703 to find your nearest stockist. Better yet, subscribe to CR for a year here and save yourself almost 30% on the printed magazine and get Monograph.

Renegade LA: Caposhi

Caposhi crochets jewellery from soft yarnsThe granny square table covering at the Caposhi booth instantly caught my eye. (Likely because I have the dottie angel book on my mind!) Though there was definitely a trend for dangly feathery earings throughout the fair, seeing them made with yarn and beads was a different take.

“While I specialize in creating unique fiber jewelry, I can often be found knee-deep in a variety of yarny projects – from granny square pillows and scarves to clutches and hand bags. Inspired by all things vintage, I
also strive to provide a quirky balance between old and new in all that I do.

As a trained photographer and graphic designer to boot, it shouldn’t come as a surprise that I dabble in these as well. I hope to always offer goods that employ both of these skills, whether I’m selling screened bags or even art prints!”

Core77’s Ultimate Gift Guide: 3rd Ward’s Gurus Pick the Goods

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We are so excited to feature the cast of experts and educators from Brooklyn’s 3rd Ward for this week’s newest edition to our Tool-focused summer gift guide!

With 30,000 square feet of working space, 3rd Ward is a true incubator for innovation. Besides a wood and metal workshop, jewelry studio, photography studio and co-working space, 3rd Ward offers a range of classes to help make your ideas real. From welding to arduino classes, upholstery 101 to skatedeck making, 3rd Ward has classes for all levels of DIYers and curious creatives.

3rd Ward instructors picked out their favorite tools for this week’s Ultimate Gift Guide selections. Pick up glow-in-the-dark ABS for your Makerbot and check out the most “thoughtful” upholstery hammer—if you’re in the neighborhood, stop by for a class or two! See their full selection here!

Check out our full gift guide here

OR browse by curator:

» MAKE good with Becky Stern
» Choice Cuts from hipstomp
» Cycling gear and other goodies from Geekhouse Bikes
» Tools from Hand-Eye Supply
» Gifts for the maker in your life from Core77

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Happy Tree Friend

The Happy Tree Friend is based on the angle-poise task-light from 1933/34. I may have succeeded to give this object new aesthetic, emotional and intel..

Creative Britain in Reverse? by Seymourpowell


Dezeen Wire:
as the UK government reviews design technology’s status as a compulsory school subject, industrial designers Seymourpowell have released a movie featuring Paul Smith, James Dyson and others talking about the importance of design education.

Watch this movie on Dezeen Screen »

Seymourpowell released the movie in collaboration with the James Dyson Foundation and the Design & Technology Association.

Here’s some more information from Seymourpowell:


Seymourpowell, in partnership with the Design & Technology Association and the James Dyson Foundation, have made this film to promote the importance of design education in Britain’s schools and universities, its contribution to successful business, and its fundamental role in supporting the UK Economy. The film features contributions from leading figures from across business and industry including Sir John Rose, Sir James Dyson, Sir Paul Smith and many more.

Business leaders unite to promote Design and Technology education as key to the future of Creative Britain.

Seymourpowell, in partnership with the Design & Technology Association and the James Dyson Foundation, are today launching a campaign film featuring contributions from leading figures from across business and industry. The film promotes the importance of Design and Technology (D&T) education in Britain’s schools and universities, its contribution to successful business, and its fundamental role in supporting the UK Economy.

Those taking part in the campaign film include:

  • Sir Paul Smith, Fashion Designer
  • Sir James Dyson, Founder, Dyson and James Dyson Foundation
  • Sir John Rose, Former Chief Executive, Rolls-Royce
  • Ian Callum, Design Director, Jaguar Land Rover
  • Richard Seymour, Co-founder, Seymourpowell
  • Dick Powell, Co-founder, Seymourpowell
  • Paul Jackson, Chief Executive, Engineering UK
  • David Kester, Chief Executive, Design Council
  • Deyan Sudjic, Director, Design Museum

The film launch follows a special event on the same subject, held at the Institution of Mechanical Engineers in Westminster. On a panel chaired by Design Museum Director Deyan Sudjic, speakers included Dame Ellen MacArthur, Dick Powell (Seymourpowell), Ajaz Ahmed (AKQA), Paul Jackson (Engineering UK) and the inventor and entrepreneur Mandy Haberman.

Key topic areas discussed by the panel included the National Curriculum review, currently being undertaken, and its potential impact on D&T teaching – many fear the subject could be threatened with being removed as a compulsory subject for all pupils from age 5 to 14. Another issue raised was the English Baccalaureate, and the view held by many in the creative and manufacturing industries that it’s already skewing the curriculum in many schools away from creative and technical subjects towards traditional, academic subjects. Also discussed by the panel was the impact of cuts in higher education for non-STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Maths) subjects from across the creative sector.

Please visit www.data.org.uk from Monday 18 July to download an audio recording from the event.

Dick Powell, co-founder and design director at Seymourpowell commented, “The impact of design education in the UK – from school right through to higher education and beyond – has been immense. With this campaign we hope to highlight the far-reaching benefits and prosperity delivered to the UK by design education, and raise awareness of the subjects’ crucial role in helping maintain Britain’s position as an international innovation leader”.

Sir James Dyson adds, “Inventiveness helps the economy. Design and Technology is the only lesson where young people can apply science and maths in a practical way. If D&T is sidelined where will the next generation of engineers, designers and inventors get their inspiration from?”

Richard Green, Chief Executive, Design & Technology Association said, “Earlier this year, Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne outlined his vision to drive the nation forward with the words ‘Made, Created, Designed and Invented in Britain’. We too share in this credo, but also strongly believe D&T education is fundamental in realising this goal. We believe this film demonstrates the importance of retaining a curriculum that contains creative and technical subjects to unpin the UK’s current and future success as a creative leader.”

For more information and details on how to support visit www.data.org.uk

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