LiveView for iPhone & iPad

liveview

 

If you are a iphone or ipad designer you  need to have this cool tool called LiveView.

LiveView is a specialized remote screen viewing application intended as a tool to help designers create graphics for mobile applications, it has also proven to be useful for creating quick and dirty simulations, demos, and experience prototypes.

FOR VISUAL DESIGNERS — Develop pixel–perfect graphics for the iPhone and iPad quickly and easily with a live view of your canvas/artboard while you work. LiveView is compatible with both standard and Retina displays.

FOR INTERACTION DESIGNERS — With your iPhone or iPad tethered via WiFi, you can interact with software prototypes and demos running on your Mac to communicate and iterate your concepts quickly.

FOR EVERYONE — If you’ve ever needed to press a button from afar or wished that you could take a piece of your monitor with you across the room, this app may prove useful from time to time.

 

Superhero Noir Posters

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I am really diggin Marko Manev ’s black and white Noir superhero series.

Cool Hunting Video Rough Cut: HHI V7 Wayward: A spin around NYC on the latest custom creation from Phili-based motorcycle design and build shop

Cool Hunting Video Rough Cut: HHI V7 Wayward

Built to accomodate the daily commute or a bare bones cross country ride, the V7 Wayward from Hammarhead Industries is your minimalist’s dream motorcycle. Unveiled in late January of this year and based on the Moto Guzzi V7 Classic, the V7 Wayward is a loud, powerful mid-sized bike designed…

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The Sigman Gift and German Expressionism: German Expressionist Masterpieces and highlights from Jugendstil to the Bauhaus at NYC’s Neue Galerie

The Sigman Gift and German Expressionism

by Stephen Pulvirent Last night saw two compelling openings at NYC’s Neue Galerie, a museum dedicated to German and Austrian art and design from the early 20 century. Highlights from collector Harry C. Sigman’s recent gift to Neue—which total more than 100 works representing the very best of the Jugendstil…

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Symmetry Is Overrated: Paolo de Giusti’s XXXVI DG Bicycle Concept

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Based on the description of his latest project, it’s safe to assume that Paolo de Giusti is sick of all of the newfangled concept bikes that seem to be all the rage these days. Whether they’re design competition entries or simply eye-catching renderings, the Italian art director simply isn’t impressed. But beyond hoarding vintage Campy components like your average retrogrouch (not that there’s anything wrong with that), he proposes yet another variation of the concept bike:

It is not a folding bike, nor is it an electric- or battery-powered bike. It is not iOS-ready. You can’t plug your music/phone/camera into it. This is the XXXVI DG—quite simply, this is a bicycle. Two wheels. Two pedals. One Seat. Inspired by bicycles for bicycle lovers, combining traditional elements and components in an unconventional yet innovative way. The frame takes its shape from a simple desire for asymmetric aesthetics, while at the same time providing a stable cave-like covering for the wheels and preserving the bicycle’s ergonomic features.

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Its name, of course, refers to the diameter of its wheels: “The 36” wheels are, themselves, blasts from the past, having been commonplace many years ago for their uniquely smooth, relaxed and sturdy rolling, perfect for the everyday cruiser.”

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Of course, a particularly jaded cycling enthusiast might cite Cannondale’s “Lefty” single-bladed fork and similarly experimental asymmetric frames as precedents to de Giusti’s XXXVI DG. But in fairness to the designer, the highly unorthodox bicycle merits consideration beyond its overlapping frame and fork: from the undersized chainring—presumably to compensate for the placement of the single chainstay—to the angled line of the top tube, the XXXVI DG would likely make for an unconventional ride… to say nothing of actually building the thing.

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See additional zoomable views over on the Coroflot project page for XXXVI DG.

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Highly Impressive Snow-Clearing: Japan’s Tateyama-Kurobe Alpine Route

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Here in the American northeast we’ve got a bit of a storm on, with six to twelve inches of snow projected to fall on Core77 HQ. That sounds like a lot of snow, until you put it in perspective by looking at the Tateyama Kurobe Alpine Route, which connects the Japanese municipalities of Tateyama and Omachi.

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Dyson Airblade Tap: The innovative Brits build off the Airblade to bring together hand washing and drying

Dyson Airblade Tap

Whether we’re drying our hands with the Airblade hand dryer, warming up next to the Hot air multiplier or tidying the office with the Root 6 vacuum, we’re never far from a Dyson product here at CH HQ or at at home. As longtime supporters of British company’s innovative…

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80 Sheets of Mountains by Nendo

Stockholm 2013: Japanese design studio Nendo made a mountain range from laser-cut foamboard at the entrance to the Stockholm Furniture & Light Fair, which ends tomorrow (+ slideshow).

80 Sheets of Mountains by Nendo

As the Guest of Honour at this year’s Stockholm Furniture & Light Fair, Nendo was invited to create a large-scale installation in the entrance hall to mark the start of the exhibition.

80 Sheets of Mountains by Nendo

The designers laser-cut 80 sheets of five-millimetre-thick foamboard and pulled them out into tall loops to form rows of softly curving partitions.

80 Sheets of Mountains by Nendo

Above: photograph by Dezeen

The partitions were then arranged in the space alongside matching white lamps and aluminium chairs, which resemble some earlier furniture by Nendo such as the Thin Black Lines Chair.

80 Sheets of Mountains by Nendo

Above: photograph by Dezeen

Nendo also tried to minimise the installation’s environmental impact by cutting the sheets of foamboard on site so that they could be delivered on just one truck.

80 Sheets of Mountains by Nendo

Also in Stockholm this week, Nendo unveiled an installation of 30 lamps made from modular parts in collaboration with Swedish lighting brand Wästberg.

80 Sheets of Mountains by Nendo

We’ve been reporting on product launches and events in Stockholm all week, such as brass coat hooks and flower pots made by a 400-year-old Swedish brassworks and an installation of robotic arms and delicate glass – see all news and design from Stockholm 2013.

80 Sheets of Mountains by Nendo

Other Nendo products launched recently include bowls so thin they quiver in the wind and a collection of furniture inspired by splintered wood– see all design by Nendo.

80 Sheets of Mountains by Nendo

Above: photograph by Joakim Blockstrom

Photographs are courtesy of Stockholm Furniture & Light Fair, except where stated.

Here’s some more information from Nendo:


Nendo has been selected as the Guest of Honour of the Stockholm Furniture & Light Fair 2013

80 sheets of mountains / Guest of Honour Installation

An installation created for the entrance hall for the main exhibition space at the Stockholm International Furniture Fair 2013, at which we were honoured to be the Guest of Honour.

80 Sheets of Mountains by Nendo

We laser-cut and stretched 80 sheets of 3mm aluminium into a set of partitions shaped like mountains, and arranged them to create a landscape of snow-capped mountain ranges in the space. It expresses the way design expands, starting from a single small idea – a method at the basis of our design philosophy.

80 Sheets of Mountains by Nendo

We also wanted to minimise the exhibition’s environmental impact. We stretched the steel sheets on site so that the delivery only needed one truck, and the sheets could be flattened for clearing from the site and recycled.

The post 80 Sheets of Mountains
by Nendo
appeared first on Dezeen.

“Apartments make better places to work than offices” – Jean Nouvel

Jean Nouvel on office design and repurposing empty buildings

News: French architect Jean Nouvel will curate an exhibition of office spaces in Milan in April, presenting a range of scenarios to replace the “grey cultural world” of purpose-built offices (+ interview).

“Very often now, our apartments make better places to work,” Nouvel told Dezeen at the preview of the exhibition in Milan yesterday. “The opposite is right too: often it is better to live in the space designed to be an office.”

The installation, called Project: Office for Living, will present eight alternative working environments, with the first three representing a Milanese apartment, a loft and an industrial hangar repurposed as work spaces.

“All of these are new conditions to create space for offices,” said Nouvel. “We don’t have to repeat and to clone exactly the same organisation and the same furniture for everyone.”

At the centre of the installation, a violently ripped-apart system of standard workstations will represent his rejection of bland corporate environments. “The office today is a repetition of the same space for everyone,” he says. “General solutions are bad solutions for everyone.”

The Project: office for living installation will be on show in pavilion 24 of SaloneUfficio at the Salone Internazionale del Mobile in Milan from 9 to 14 April 2013.

Jean Nouvel on office design and repurposing empty buildings

Above: visualisation of layout for Project: office for living

For skyscrapers, Nouvel advocates flexible spaces that can be reconfigured to suit individual workers: one section of the installation will feature pools of illumination that can be individually altered rather than generic overhead lighting, another will showcase furniture that can be reconfigured like Lego building blocks and a third is partitioned by mobile screens.

Classic furniture by designers Nouvel admires including Jean Prouvé and Charlotte Perriand will be showcased alongside contemporary examples from elsewhere in the furniture fair and Nouvel suggests that furniture companies should make less distinction between domestic and commercial products: “I want people to imagine that furniture for offices is also for the home.”

Portrait is by Barbara Chandler.

Here’s an edited transcript of the interview with Jean Nouvel:


Rose Etherington: You’ve called the project Office for Living. What do you mean by that?

Jean Nouvel: We spend more and more of our lives in work places than at home and it shows a kind of contradiction because for a lot of people, to work is not to live.

Very often now, our apartments make better places to work. And the opposite is right too: often it is better to live in the space designed to be an office. I want people to imagine that furniture for offices is also for the home.

Rose Etherington: What’s wrong with office design?

Jean Nouvel: The office today is a repetition of the same space for everyone. You have a frame and you have the right to a number of squares in this frame, so it’s only a functional and rational approach. General solutions are bad solutions for everyone. This arrived at a very grey cultural world and what I want to show is that now we will have new adaptations of the cities.

It’s possible now to work in other places than the traditional office buildings with glass. It’s right to reuse buildings: all these [traditional] buildings at the entrance of the city or corrugated metal structures at the edge; all of these are new conditions to create space for offices. What is important now is to show that we will probably work in different conditions.

You can imagine different buildings are empty and they could become your office and we don’t have to repeat and to clone exactly the same organisation and the same furniture for everyone.

Rose Etherington: I’m told that you prefer to work at home or in a restaurant. What do you get from those environments that you don’t get from the office in Paris?

Jean Nouvel: It’s quieter and if I have to think with a team in a seminar or something I don’t have to have so many people around and all the noises of the city. So I do it in a quieter place, a more agreeable place. But it depends on the nature of your work.

We’ve talked about “tele-travail” since a long time. You can work at home but you can also work in every place, so every person has to invent his natural office. We will see one of the offices of Philippe Starck in the installation and he works by the sea.

When we do an exhibition like this, it is to talk to people who want to think about the question of offices: the companies designing all the material but also people researching their needs and which kind of furniture they will take.

So the idea is to show that now we do not have to stay in this frame and it’s possible to think in another way in relation to the natural world and empty spaces in the city. I just want to open these new conditions.

Rose Etherington: How have you put this into practice in offices you designed?

Jean Nouvel: The CLMBBDO [advertising agency in Paris] was such a special commission because I was commissioned by Philippe Michel, one of the most famous creatives of advertising in the ’80s and ’90s and he wanted to create this new office.

He said to me: “I want to put out the traditions of the stupid office like I had all my life. We are free and I want a building without an edge.” He said: “Okay, I don’t want a building for the future. I don’t want a building of yesterday. I want to do what is the most agreeable and the most fulfilling for a sense of wellbeing.”

And we arrived at this building along the Seine with balconies. You can open all the façades, you can work outside or you can work inside. When the weather was good, you could open the roof.

You could put the offices in different spaces and you can have flexibilities on each floor. With the furniture, you could walk on every seat and you could sit on the backs. Sometimes the central space was for work, sometimes that was a space to have meetings or to do sport. All of that was completely free.

Rose Etherington: Lots of creative and technology companies have offices with places for play as well as work, almost like playgrounds.

Jean Nouvel: The programme is very important, of course, and you have to imagine spaces for the expressions of the people. We design offices now with one wall where you can do what you want and it becomes a big screen with music or with your preferred image. In my office, for example, nobody controls if you are here or not here, how long you stay and so on. So it’s also one possible way to work.

When someone can have a break, it’s not only to drink a coffee but it could be to do exercise or to meet people. When you work for five or six hours, sometimes you need to find contrast and then you work in a better condition and you are more efficient.

But like in all my work since the beginning, I don’t think we research one ideal solution. We don’t want to have standard conditions and impose these conditions in every city in the world. We just show some examples.

The post “Apartments make better places to
work than offices” – Jean Nouvel
appeared first on Dezeen.

Sweet cold session with Gianmarco Pollacchi

Il nostrano Gianmarco Pollacchi filmato tra le onde toscane di Livorno e Cinquale.
Girato da Alessandro Cinquini.