Munich Creative Business Week 2013: Revealing Cassina’s Secrets and the iF Design Awards

01_mcbw_ifdesign.jpgWelcome words by Ralph Wiegmann (iF design’s Managing Director) at the reception.

02_mcbw_cassina.jpgGianluca Armento (Brand Director of Cassina) explaining the importance of their archive

Over the course of three posts, we take a look at the highlights of the second edition of the Munich Creative Business Week (MCBW), which took place from February 16–24, 2013.

Die Neue Sammlung,” an impressive museum run by the Free State of Bavaria, houses the largest collection of industrial and product designs in the world. We found it difficult to concentrate on curator Corinna Rösner’s introductory remarks about the museum as we walked by amazing products that most of us only know from design history classes. During our 20-minute walk, it felt like we are traveling through time, passing by Gerrit Rietveld’s chairs, Richard Sapper’s TV and AIBO dogs. Suddenly, we found ourselves in front of a huge paternoster system featuring the “secret archive of Cassina” with a dozen items from the Italian manufacturer, which has been archiving products and prototypes since the 1930s. Gianluca Armento (Brand Director of Cassina) elaborated on the importance of an archive and how it can help brand management. As a company, you need to keep track of your history in order to make strategies for the future.

03_mcbw_cassina.jpgThe “Refuge Tonneau” reconstructed by Cassina

04_mcbw_cassina.jpgBasic kitchen inside the Refuge Tonneau

The exhibition also features the so-called “Refuge Tonneau,” designed by Charlotte Perriand and Pierre Jeanneret in 1938, during the threatening early years of World War II. The space-shuttle like mountain shelter has been reconstructed by Cassina for the exhibition to demonstrate that design is not only about objects but also about vision and ideas.

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Bitchy tutorial Vol.III “Saddle Up”

Terzo e ahimè ultimo appuntamento per la mini-serie Bitchy tutorial. Regolare la sella è fondamentale, lo si capisce da come viene maneggiato il grasso 🙂

Dezeen Music Project: Control by Spoek Mathambo

Dezeen is at Design Indaba in Cape Town all this week, for the first stop on our Dezeen and MINI World Tour. For the first year at Design Indaba, there is a music festival running alongside the main conference, which is showcasing a range of exciting South African musical talents, and we’ll be choosing some of our favourites to feature on Dezeen Music Project.

Spoek Mathambo will be closing the conference on Friday, which gives us the perfect excuse to feature his excellent ‘township tech’ cover of Joy Division’s She’s Lost Control.

Make sure you also check out the excellent music video for the track.

About Dezeen Music Project | More tracks | Submit your track

The post Dezeen Music Project: Control
by Spoek Mathambo
appeared first on Dezeen.

Daily Obsesh: Daytime Dazzle

imageMany people shy away from metallics during the daytime and save the glitters for the evening. However, it is never too early to add a little bit of dazzle to your daily outfit. That is exactly why we love this white jacket with gold lining on the sleeve that is featured in the Girl’s Life magazine. Simple and chic white fitted jacket is accented with sparkling metallic gold on the sleeve, making this jacket more attractive. Match it with simple or soft colored bottom to complement the bright top, or go all out with stylish prints or little bit more sparkle.

Herschel Supply Co. Packable Collection

Tutte le borse della Packable Collection si compattano dentro ad una comoda tasca grazie al loro morbido materiale.

Herschel Supply Co. Packable Collection

Olow S/S collection 2013: Memories Remain

La nuova collezione dei francesi di Olow vi aspetta sul loro store. Qui nel post alcune immagini del lookbook scattate da Manu Fauque.

http://think.bigchief.it/wp-content/files/2013/02/olow1_news.jpg

http://think.bigchief.it/wp-content/files/2013/02/olow1_news.jpg

http://think.bigchief.it/wp-content/files/2013/02/olow1_news.jpg

New York City’s Central Park

Vista dall’alto di uno dei parchi più famosi al mondo. Scattata dal russo Sergey Semenov.

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CLAE Introduces the Mills

Intersuola in sughero, il nuovo must. Queste sono le Mills di CLAE.

CLAE Introduces the Mills

CLAE Introduces the Mills

Vinci Gramophone con usefulandglamour

Il titolo dice tutto. Se volete cercare di portarvi a casa questo Gramophone per iPhone cliccate qui.

Vinci Gramophone con usefulandglamour

Vinci Gramophone con usefulandglamour

Vinci Gramophone con usefulandglamour

Vinci Gramophone con usefulandglamour

From the WTF Department: A Rotating Book Server, Designed During the Renaissance, Recreated and Mis-built by Architecture Students, Destroyed by Terrorists

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My favorite thing about the iPad is having dozens of books in one place. Having grown up lugging my share of dead trees around, I’ll never not appreciate digital book storage and access.

This is especially true after coming across the Bookwheel, the rather massive sixteenth-century design for a mechanical book “server” that you see above. Designed by Agostino Ramelli, a military engineer who spent his professional career creating siege machinery, the more peace-minded Bookwheel was intended as a convenient way to reference multiple books. Heavy tomes didn’t need to be lugged from shelves, and they could be left open on the last page you’d read, unmolested by the rotations; Agostino’s design ensured each shelf remained at the same angle no matter the wheel’s position.

The device was reportedly never built, at least not in Ramelli’s era; but the design for it was revealed in his humbly-titled book The Various and Ingenious Machines of Captain Agostino Ramelli, printed in 1588. Interestingly enough, Ramelli’s designs have since been criticized as the work of an egomaniac; detractors claim his mechanisms were overly complicated, with extraneous convolutions added purely to demonstrate his mechanical prowess.

That didn’t stop Daniel Libeskind from creating a version of the Bookwheel for the 1986 Venice Architecture Biennale. Libeskind’s version, reverse-engineered from Ramelli’s image, was called the Reading Machine.

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An interview with architect Hal Laessig, a former student of Libeskind’s who had helped with the Biennale installation, reveals it to be a truth-is-stranger-than-fiction endeavor.

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First off, according to the interview, then-professor Libeskind pressed his Cranbrook students into building the machine for him. And apparently architecture students at Cranbrook weren’t taught about wood expansion back then:

…There were two guys who built the Reading Machine by themselves with no power tools, out of ash, which is an incredibly hard wood. I don’t know how they did it. They basically slept in the woodshop.

But when we got to Venice, the hot, humid air had swollen all the wood, so it wouldn’t turn. And the teeth on the gears would start snapping. So we had to sand all the parts down—for days—to get it to turn.

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