ICFF New York 2012
Posted in: UncategorizedClerkenwell Design Week 2012
Posted in: UncategorizedPhotography by Glen Jackson Taylor for Core77
The best thing about Milan Design Week is using the satellite exhibitions as a premise for exploring the city and seeing spaces you might typically miss. In this gallery we clustered highlights from group shows seen at Spazio Rossana Orlandi, La Triennale di Milano, and Tom Dixon’s MOST exhibition at the National Museum of Science and Technology.
Tom Dixon’s contribution (both as curator and exhibitor) at design weeks in London, Milan, and New York increases every year, but more importantly his exhibitions serve to champion the role of the industrial designer. This year’s lighting exhibition simply titled Luminosity revealed the process behind minimizing material waste, demonstrated the digital fabrication technology—literally, and pointed to the shifting marketplace where large-scale manufacturers are interfacing directly with their end customer.
Other big names doing some interesting work included Ross Lovegrove with his new architectural glass laminate venture LiquidKristal in partnership with Czech company Lasvit, and Naoto Fukasawa’s range of paper products for the Japanese company Onao. As always, everything on display at Rossana Orlandi was extremely well curated and it was great to see new work from the super-talented Nika Zupanc.
Related Blog Coverage
» La Chance, Jekyll and Hyde at MOST
» Transnatural Art & Design Collection at MOST
» Tom Dixon’s Luminosity at MOST
» Fabrica x Benetton Bring the Italian Chair District to MOST
» Ross Lovegrove’s Liquidkristal for Lasvit at Triennale
» Fabrica x Grand-Hornu asks, “Objet Prefere?”
» TDM5 – Graphica Italia
» Roberto Giacomucci, “Il Piccolo Designer,” at the Triennale
» Konstfack, Design for a Liquid Society
» Dennis Parren, Colorful Mysteries of Light
Nokia Pure font by Dalton Maag
Posted in: UncategorizedLondon designers Dalton Maag have created a font for mobile phone brand Nokia to work in any language.
Called Nokia Pure, it’s been designed to accommodate languages using Latin, Greek, Cyrillic, Arabic and Hebrew alphabets, plus Devanagari and Thai, with more languages including Chinese to follow.
It was created primarily for digital screens but also transfers to print for use across all Nokia’s communications.
The project was recently announced as winner of the graphics category in the Design Museum‘s Designs of the Year Awards. See all the winning projects in our earlier story.
See more stories about typography on Dezeen »
Here’s some more information from Dalton Maag:
When Nokia decided that it was time to replace their font as part of their global rebrand, they came to Dalton Maag.
Nokia is a world leader in the mobile phone industry, but its market share has recently been diminished by tough competition in the smartphone market. Sales of traditional, simple telephones, with limited media capacity are shrinking as users demand a complete communications platform from their mobile device.
In order to reestablish itself as the premier manufacturer of stylish and highly-functional handsets, Nokia is simultaneously launching a brand new generation of mobile phones and upgrading its visual identity, which has been an important part of the company’s brand for nearly twenty years.
Nokia’s existing font family was dominating its visual identity with its strong personality. This made it a difficult typeface to work with in a wider brand perspective, even though its condensed character width allowed for a good character count, and its high contrast meant it was easy to convert to pixels on older devices. It was felt that the design now looked dated and no longer reflected the design ethos of the company.
Dalton Maag first became involved in the rebranding process when Nokia decided that it needed a new typographic direction for its communications. This would be combined with the launch of its new generation of mobile phones. It was the need for a new font family that united Nokia’s various departments, each with their own specific requirements, in a common approach to a shared problem.
Dalton Maag was asked by Nokia to design a font family primarily for use in digital media (mobile devices and the web), which would also be versatile enough to be the cornerstone for all of Nokia’s communications worldwide. The new font family had to reflect the traditions of Finnish design: simplicity, clarity, functionality and beauty of form – in short, Pure.
It needed to support languages using the Latin, Greek, Cyrillic, Arabic and Hebrew alphabets, as well as the Devanagari and Thai scripts in a first phase introduction. More languages, including Chinese, would follow in the future. Various weights would be required, and specific Display versions for use at larger sizes. The Text fonts also needed to be fully hinted to give the best possible screen display on handheld devices.
During the initial phase, Ron Carpenter and Bruno Maag of Dalton Maag worked closely with the Nokia team, helping to establish the correct typographic expression by providing several potential design concepts. Discussions at regular meetings about the overall look and feel, but also the details of individual characters, delivered the distilled design of the new Nokia font family as it is now – Pure. Throughout this initial phase we supplied all parties with functioning beta fonts, allowing Nokia’s design team to implement the ideas in real life scenarios and from that make informed decisions on the choice of concept design.
The first part of the project was a user interface (UI) font family consisting of Light, Regular, and Bold weights, featuring a fully hinted Dalton Maag Standard character set. These UI fonts, now named Nokia Pure Text, were also designed to function perfectly in print at body copy sizes, making them suitable for Nokia’s own internal communication needs and other small-size print copy.
A set of distinct Display weights, derived from the Text design, with tighter spacing and small changes in contrast, were needed for titling and other larger-sized branding environments. Covering the same Light, Regular, and Bold as the Text fonts, the Display font family also features Thin and ExtraBold weights.
As soon as the original design concepts were established, we began work in parallel to expand the fonts to the various script systems that Nokia needed for effective communication. Dalton Maag’s design and engineering teams made sure that each incremental font upgrade was released in a controlled fashion to ensure that everyone involved was in possession of the latest version.
We successfully guided the client through this important stage in their business’s development by helping to define a new visual language that spans different media and scripts. The result is a distinctive and sustainable typographically-driven brand, where the client can rely on our highly-skilled design and engineering team to help and support them in the future.
New Pinterest board: offices
Posted in: PinterestWe’ve just added a new board to Pinterest compiling all the best photos of offices from the pages of Dezeen. We now have over 3000 followers on Pinterest – join in here.
5 Point Film Festival
Posted in: 5 point, forge motion picturesUn impressionnant trailer dévoilé pour l’édition 2012 du festival « 5 Point Film » autour du thème de la nature. Un travail vidéo dirigé et édité par Anson Fogel, produit par Forge Motion Pictures sur une bande son du groupe M83. A découvrir en images dans la suite.
The new Paris store for fashion designer Stella Cadente is a tunnel lined in gold.
Designed by French architects Atelier du Pont, the cylindrical shop showcases clothing and accessories within the rectangular recesses of its curved walls.
Gold leaf covers almost every interior surface, including the mannequins.
The theme continues on the exterior, where a glazed facade is surrounded by a gilt frame.
We’ve noticed an increase in golden buildings in recent months and have recently featured both a library and a museum clad in golden metal. See these projects and more here.
Photography is by Sergio Grazia.
The text below is from Atelier du Pont:
Stella Cadente’s Paris boutique
Stella Cadente + Atelier du Pont = fabulous stories
The story of Stella Cadente and Atelier du Pont goes back a long way. It’s a story of a friendship between two women – Stella Cadente, a designer, and Anne-Cécile Comar, an architect – and, of course, of shared adventures, with their complementary professions and points of view.
For a previous concept store in Dubai, Atelier du Pont came up with a design midway between an ice palace and a crystal maze for Stella Cadente. It espoused the brand’s style based on light, crystal, magic and transparent dress. Thousands of stalactites changed colour, creating an impression that the store had come alive.
Now they have teamed up again in 2012 under the skies of Paris. Clothed in glass from top to toe, the boutique stands out from the sober lines of the Boulevard Beaumarchais due to its gilded metal frontage. This new Parisian space breaks with the conventions of usual stores. Inside it is cylindrical, broken into two ellipses. The shop window display stand is out: the clothes are laid out on a large draper’s table, and the soft, practical design makes a mockery of the XXS-sized Parisian boutique. The final radical change is in colour, as the interior is entirely covered in gold leaf.
Architect: Atelier du Pont (Anne-Cécile Comar, Philippe Croisier, Stéphane Pertusier)
Client: Stella Cadente
Location: 102 boulevard Beaumarchais Paris 11th – France
Completion: March 2012
Italian designer Simone Simonelli presented three little mobile storage units in Milan last month.
Called Maisonnette, the collection is intended for small homes and each piece has a dual function; the small table can be turned upside down and used as a tray, the trolley is also a side table and the tallest piece is a bookshelf-come-clothes rail.
Simonelli exhibited them as part of an exhibition called Uncovered 2012 – Qualities, curated by Michela Pelizzari and Federica Sala for art organisation Careof.
The Salone Internazionale del Mobile took place from 17 to 22 April. See all our stories about Milan 2012 here, plus photos on Facebook and Pinterest.
Here’s some more information from Simone Simonelli:
“Maisonnette” in French means small house. The aim here has been to propose a collection of furnitures that meets the contemporary need of sharing functions in the microliving spaces. It is a 3 piece set: a stand/miniwardrobe, a cart/table and a basket/tray.
Materials: solid alder wood treated with natural varnish and iron rod structure.
The contemporary art organization Careof, located in the Fabbrica del Vapore – on the occasion of the 51st Salone Internazionale del Mobile, in the framework Posti di Vista RI-CREAZIONE – presents UNCOVERED 2012 – Qualities, a project curated by Michela Pelizzari and Federica Sala.
What are the characteristics that give an object “quality design” status”? Durability, accessibility, functions, evironmental impact, innovation, the capacity to arouse an emotional response? These are some of the questions behind the work of six designers presented at UNCOVERED 2012 – Qualities.
Simone Simonelli (1980) studied Industrial Design at Politecnico di Milano and Brunel University London. He is involved in design field since 2003. He worked for different design firms in Italy and abroad. He launched his own practice in 2009.
Photography by Glen Jackson Taylor for Core77
The historical neighborhood of Brera is full of high-end furniture showrooms, boutique shops and galleries, with tiny picturesque streets and hidden courtyards embodying everything you would imagine a design destination in Italy to be. We headed straight to Via Palermo, home to some of the most sophisticated and well-curated group exhibitions seen in Milan this year.
Our favorite show in this year was presented in a small Milanese apartment by Japanese manufacturer Karimoku New Standard. For drama, the Austrian Design show, staged in a jai alai stadium, was filled with trees that were grown and then trucked on site specifically for the exhibition. Right across the street, the restrained exhibition design for Japan Creative’s Craft and Design collaborations created a stark contrast—we especially loved Jasper Morrison’s cast iron collaboration with 160-year-old Oigen Foundary. Other Brera district highlights include a crazy basket-making machine that we saw last year at Art Basel Miami, a minimal pendant lamp by French designer Florent Degourc, and Inner Design, a new design network that presented the winners of their Eco-Creative contest in historic bike shop, Rossignoli’s.
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