Joe Zee’s All on the Line Returns with Designer Drama, Powder Blue Velvet

“They’re leggings,” explains designer Angelo Lambrou, fondling a mud-colored puddle of jersey. “They’re awful,” concludes Joe Zee. The peppy Elle creative director doesn’t pull any punches in All on the Line, the reality-TV series in which he attempts to help fashion designers rescue their ailing businesses. In the show’s second season, which premieres tonight on Sundance Channel, Zee kicks off each episode with a kind of sartorial quickfire challenge: the embattled designer must whip up something on the spot (or at least in 72 hours) for a special guest style arbiter such as Rachel Roy or Mark Badgley and James Mischka. Having conquered that initial task, it’s onto the main event of creating a capsule collection for the scrutiny of big-time buyers, but not before Zee steps into the studio to offer guidance on a triumphant relaunch. The first season saw one featured designer seal a deal with Nordstrom, but success is anything but assured. In tonight’s season opener, Lambrou, who has carved out a niche in the custom bridal business, struggles at every turn. Midway through the episode, Zee pronounces his designs “complicated but still boring.” We won’t spoil the ending for you, but be warned: powder-blue velvet is involved.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Those Olympic posters: some alternatives

Earlier this month, 12 posters by leading artists for the 2012 Olympics and Paralympics were unveiled to a largely skeptical public. Given the same brief, Kingston University students have come up with their own versions

Over the current term, I have been doing some lecturing with the third year students on Kingston University’s graphic design and photography courses. A couple of weeks ago, following the release of the 2012 Olympics artists posters, course director Rebecca Wright and I asked the students if they would like to respond to the same briefy given the artists. We asked them for a personal response to the idea of the London Olympics and the intersection between art and sport. Here are their responses.

Leanne Bentley and Ben West came up with this cheeky and somewhat damning response to the artists involved with the official series: DNF stands for Did Not Finish, the ultimate Olympic fail.

For her poster, Ran Park overlayed images of athletes performing various sports to create this beautiful composition

 

A lot of the student responses were quite critical or dubious about the supposed benefits of the Games coming to London. Here Libby Wimble compares LOCOG’s ambitions to those of a Stalinist Five Year Plan: presumably she feels they have as little basis in reality as each other. The background to the poster is made up of 250,000 tiny tractors

 

Rosie Palmer and Helen Ferguson were also dubious, focusing on the terrorism threat

 

Tamara Elmallah was concerned about all the overcrowding the games will bring to the Tube, overlaying an image of spectators rendered in all the Olympic colours until it becomes a brown sludge of humanity

 

And Alice Tosey wants us all to ‘mind the gap’

 

And Paul Chanthapanya points to the insidious nature of sponsorship at the Games

 

While Stephen Messham points out that suffering in the world will not go away just because the Games are in town

 

Others, though, chose a more positive view. Benji Roebuck and Clara Goodger created their poster from the word for ‘hello’ in the languages of competing nations, allowing the ink from one word to run into another suggesting the coming together of different nations at the Games.

 

Coming together is also the theme of Jo Hawkes’ poster

 

And this cut paper piece by Fred North

 

Hannah Parker had a neat idea for a digital display in which segments would gradually appear over a period of time running up the opening of the Games until the image was completed

 

Maddy Whitty’s rather beautiful image of the madding crowd of spectators was created using jelly beans

 

Sam Carroll plays with those famous rings

 

While Signe Emma created this image from tape which she then photographed

 

Sophie Burt reminds us of the different races taking part in the games

 

While Felix Heyes, Josh King, Paul Nelson and Ben West cleverly capture the excitement of the starting block

 

The same team (minus Paul Nelson) also came up with this wonderfully witty idea. ‘Who’s there? The Olympics!’

 

Thanks to all the students who took part. They only had just over a week to come up with these, alongside all their other work. Set alongside the efforts of our illustrious artists, I think there are some worthy contenders here.

Read our opinion piece on the official 2012 Olympics posters here

Aria

Aria

I truly fell in love at first sight with the lowercase ‘a’ of Aria, capricious and full of happiness, and later with every letter of the roman weight. An inscription in a painting of the nineteenth century was the main source of inspiration for this display modern face, according to its designer Rui Abreu; it can be noticed in the capital letters A and H with their ‘broken’ cross-bar. But this epigraphic influence was shrewdly combined with a touch of English, energic calligraphic touch, reaching a perfect balance between exuberance, charm and artisanal quality. The italic weight is even more flourishing and lively, especially in the set of ligatures. It is also quite legible at medium text sizes, maybe it would be interesting to develop a text version? Enjoy the well-tempered beauty of these letterforms!

 

 


WANTED Creative Director Text w/m

Five new brands to launch at The Temporium

Helena Westerlind

Five new brands will launch their products at our Christmas pop-up store The Temporium, including a graduate accessory designer, a young duo making hi-tech jewellery and a brand-new fashion label.

Helena Westerlind

Helena Westerlind, who graduated from the Architectural Association this year, will launch her collection of hand-knotted rope neck pieces: www.knotted.me (website launches on 30 November).

Helena Westerlind

The rope formations are inspired by techniques such as knitting and crochet and adapt to the shape of the body.

Logical Art

Royal College of Art graduates Hanhsi Chen and Yookyung Shin are launching Logical Art, a new brand producing products that merge jewellery and technology: www.logical-art.co.uk

Logical Art

Their first products, called Empty Memory, are a range of USB sticks made of hand-finished stainless steel.

Jardins Florian

Products from Jardins Florian, a new luxury brand created by designer Florian Gonzalez, will be shown in a retail environment for the first time, including scented candles developed in collaboration with organic spa brand ila: www.jardinsflorian.com

Jardins Florian

Jardins Florian are also bringing the limited edition Düsenjäger bike by Dutch company Vanmoof to The Temporium.

Justin Oh

Fashion designer Justin Oh is used to creating bespoke clothing for private clients and is launching a brand new range of bags and accessories at The Temporium: www.justinoh.co.uk

Justin Oh

The line of cotton tote bags, cloth covered notebook sleeves and printed wallets are produced using natural fibres and sustainable methods.

Pom Pom Takoyaki

Finally, Pom Pom Takoyaki is a new company that makes delicious snacks inspired by traditional Japanese takayoki: www.pompomtakoyaki.com

Pom Pom Takoyaki

Pom Pom Takayoki will provide food for the opening of The Temporium on Thursday 1 December.

Dezeen presents The Temporium 2011

This year The Temporium is at 65 Monmouth Street, Seven Dials, Covent Garden, London WC2H 9DG from 1-24 December 2011. More info: www.thetemporium.com

See our special category for more details on the designers and brands taking part in The Temporium.

iWood Laptop @ DesignspotterSHOP

MUR by APOLLO Architects and Associates

MUR by Apollo Architects and Associates

Readers have been discussing “the abundance of introverted architecture that is coming out of Japan” recently, so here’s another Japanese house that blocks all views to and from the street but still draws light and air inside.

MUR by Apollo Architects and Associates

The single-storey house by Satoshi Kurosaki and APOLLO Architects is located in a residential neighborhood in Hodogaya Ward, Yokohama.

MUR by Apollo Architects and Associates

A wall behind the public approach allows for only a glimpse of the private courtyard within.

MUR by Apollo Architects and Associates

The windowless perimeter wall and a winding alley from the entrance give privacy to its single resident by leading visitors around the back of the living space.

MUR by Apollo Architects and Associates

Black floating steps creep up the courtyard wall to a terrace.

MUR by Apollo Architects and Associates

Large glass doors allow in light from the main courtyard and can be slid open to extend the living area.

MUR by Apollo Architects and Associates

Like boxes within a box, the living space and bedroom sit as separate elements within the perimeter wall but remain connected to the two courtyards and each other.

MUR by Apollo Architects and Associates

Photography is by Masao Nishikawa.

MUR by Apollo Architects and Associates

We’ve published a number of stories by APOLLO Architects & Associates including a house that features a pointy overhang and another house with no exterior windows. See all our stories by Apollo Architects and Associates.»

MUR by Apollo Architects and Associates
Here’s some more information from the architects:


MUR

This one-storey residence for a single woman is located in a hilly area.

MUR by Apollo Architects and Associates

The client requested a house with an internal courtyard that would eliminate the differences in elevation throughout the site while ensuring a sense of privacy and comfort.

MUR by Apollo Architects and Associates

In response, we decided to model the facade after a simple box encircled by the walls of the building.

MUR by Apollo Architects and Associates

In order to prevent the interior from becoming just a simple one-room space, we considered each of the necessary components to be a “story.”

MUR by Apollo Architects and Associates

Opening the door reveals a partial glimpse of the private courtyard that extends beyond the slender window in front of you.

MUR by Apollo Architects and Associates

A glass entrance door stands at one end of the long, narrow porch, while the skylight at the top fills the interior with a soft, gentle light.

MUR by Apollo Architects and Associates

The house is laid out in such a way that you can bypass and go around the long, narrow alley to arrive at the main living area.

MUR by Apollo Architects and Associates

In contrast with the dimensions of the alley, this voluminous space can also be integrated with the internal courtyard when the large sliding door is opened.

MUR by Apollo Architects and Associates

The bedroom, a small breakaway space that lines up with the large central portion of the building while being detached from it, also connects to the backyard, which is itself linked to the dressing room.

MUR by Apollo Architects and Associates

Click above for larger image

All of these living spaces were designed to invariably face the exterior while also ensuring a certain level of privacy.

MUR by Apollo Architects and Associates

Two different spaces and two gardens, laid out with a slight lateral deviation between them: a complex, nuanced interior was created just using a series of simple manipulations.

MUR by Apollo Architects and Associates

In contrast to the simple facade that resists being influenced by the exterior environment, a unique, individual and complex worldview takes shape within the interior of the house.

MUR by Apollo Architects and Associates

The manifold surprises that emerge from this process are precisely the essence of the “narrative” that we tried to create – the key to coaxing fresh perspectives out of both everyday and extraordinary life experiences.

MUR by Apollo Architects and Associates

Architecture: Satoshi Kurosaki/APOLLO Architects & Associates

MUR by Apollo Architects and Associates

Project Outline

Location: Hodogaya Yokohama Kanagawa
Date of Completion: Summer 2011

MUR by Apollo Architects and Associates

Principal use: private house
Structure: wood
Site area: 276.64m2

MUR by Apollo Architects and Associates

Total floor area: 80.39m2 (80.39m2/1F)
Structural engineer: Kenta Masaki
Mechanical engineer:Zennei Shimada

MUR by Apollo Architects and Associates

Material information

Exterior finish: acrylic emerson paint
Floor: solid flooring;Tiled/1F

MUR by Apollo Architects and Associates

Wall: plaster
Ceiling: plaster

Susan Kare, GUI Icon Design Pioneer (and What the Mac’s Command Key Actually Represents)

0susankare01.jpg

Did you ever wonder what the “Command” symbol on a Mac keyboard actually symbolizes? Read on.

In the early 1980s computers were low resolution and icons were actually icons, as opposed to the miniature photographs they’ve become now. You had a small number of pixels with which to draw something representational, and it became an exercise in minimalist expression: How could you arrange a small series of dots to indicate concepts like cut-and-paste or a paintbrush fill?

0susankare03.jpg

One of the pioneers in this field was Susan Kare, a graphic artist tasked with designing some of the Mac’s very first icons and laying out some of the first fonts. Her story is the subject of this fascinating NeuroTribes article by writer Steve Silberman. (The article is also the source of the sketches shown here.)

(more…)


Competition: Kaiser Idell Luxus lamp by Republic of Fritz Hansen to be won

Kaiser Idell Luxus lamp by Republic of Fritz Hansen to be won

Competition: we’ve got together with design brand Republic of Fritz Hansen to give readers the chance to win a Kaiser Idell Luxus lamp worth £600.

Kaiser Idell Luxus lamp by Republic of Fritz Hansen to be won

Now celebrating its 80th birthday, the lamp was originally designed in 1931 by silversmith Christian Dell and Republic of Fritz Hansen acquired the license to produce it last year. The Kaiser Idell Luxus comes as a table, floor, wall or pendant lamp in black, ivory, white, red and green.

Kaiser Idell Luxus lamp by Republic of Fritz Hansen to be won

We have one table lamp in ruby red to give away. To enter this competition email your name, age, gender, occupation, and delivery address and telephone number to competitions@dezeen.com with “Kaiser Idell Luxus” in the subject line. We won’t pass your information on to anyone else; we just want to know a little about our readers. Read our privacy policy here.

Competition closes 13 December 2011. The winner will be selected at random and notified by email. The winner’s name will be published in a future edition of our Dezeenmail newsletter and at the bottom of this page. Dezeen competitions are international and entries are accepted from readers in any country.

Subscribe to our newsletter, get our RSS feed or follow us on Twitter for details of future competitions.

Here are some more details from Republic of Fritz Hansen:


Celebrating 80 years of design: KAISER idell Luxus by Republic of Fritz Hansen to be won

Recognised as one of the most famous lighting designs that evolved from the Bauhaus era, the KASIER idell is the perfect gift to light up your Christmas.

Created by the German silversmith Christian Dell in 1931, the KAISER idell light collection is available as a table lamp, floor lamp, wall lamp and pendant in the original colours; black, ivory, white, ruby red and dark green.

Distinguished by its characteristic dome lampshade, embossed with the trademark words ‘ORIGINAL KAISER idell’, the iconic design creates a special sculptural effect whilst the hand-painted shade and base beautifully reflect the light, creating Danish ‘Hygge’ (meaning cosy and relaxing) during the dark winter months.

The KAISER idell series is today manufactured by Fritz Hansen who acquired the designed rights in 2010. The timeless design virtues of the KAISER idell series perfectly match Fritz Hansen’s design profile. As with Poul Kjærholm and Arne Jacobsen’s furniture designs, the lamps are design icons where aesthetics and functionality unite wonderfully to exude robust elegance and Bauhaus quality.

The designer behind the classic design icon Christian Dell (1893-1974), is recognised as one of the leading characters behind the innovative and pioneering designs that appeared in the early thirties. Trained as a silversmith at the “Sächsische Kunstgewerbeschule” (School of Arts and Crafts) in Hanau, Germany, Dell pursued his passion for craftsmanship and design working as a supervisor at the “Metallwerkstatt Bauhaus Weimar” (Weimar Bauhaus Metal Workshop) before being promoted as principal of the Metal Workshop at the “Frankfurter Kunstschule” (Frankfurt School of Arts) in 1926.

Dell’s influence was trend-setting and visible in many designs over the decades and he was particularly well known for his lamp designs. The KAISER idell series originally produced by the German lighting company Gebr. Kaiser & Co. was and still is a timeless design.

The story telling and iconic status of the KAISER idell lamp design makes it the perfect Christmas gift that will light up your Christmas in style. The KAISER idell is available to purchase from Fritz Hansen’s Republic Stores and authorised Fritz Hansen dealers in Europe.

Subscribe to Republic of Fritz Hansen’s newsletter and also follow them on Twitter and Facebook for more news.

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The dynamic of states like falling, floating or swinging is just hardly applied onto a static body. But if we think about dancing or acrobatics it bec..