Trendlet: Amazing Origami and Peculiar Papercraft

Zim&Zou-PaperBBQGrill-1.jpg

Our nostalgia for paper manifests itself in more than just bespoke greeting cards and pocket-sized Moleskines. Papers of different thicknesses and colors can be cut and folded into forms that take on a strange intimacy, or even digitally recreated into characters from the craft store. Here’s what’s pertinent this week in pulp.

Zim&Zou-PaperBBQGrill-2b.jpg

Just as beers and backyards are finally having their moment in the sun, the French design studio Zim & Zou crafts another seasonal staple: a full-sized barbeque grill made entirely of paper, complete with stacked skewers, drumsticks plump as hot air balloons and a geodesic bottle of Heinz to accompany it all. Although some of the images look like computer renderings, everything is handmade by the 25-year-old designers Lucie Thomas and Thibault Zimmermann, whose previous constructions include a paper Game Boy, a stop-motion greeting card for IBM and a lush leather-and-paper jungle for an Hermès window display.

Zim&Zou-PaperBBQGrill-3.jpg

(more…)

    

Daily Obsesh: Stackable Rings

imageThe best way to rock some cool jewels is to go for the stackable pieces. These stackable rings are unique and beautiful. They are a fantastic jewelry piece. The three individual rings come as a package piece. Three rings for one amazing fashion statement! Each ring has a unique design. They incorporate brass, yellow gold, and bamboo texture. You can wear all three at once or mix them up on different fingers!

“Design Feeling” and Neo-Transitional Objects: Designer objects fraught with meaning counterbalance uncertainty in the digitally dependent reality




by Stefano Caggiano Everyday objects shape our lives into cognitive patterns. Often, however, these objects are ill-designed. Design thinking is then called in to untangle the not-always-coherent running of our object-related routines. However important, this design thinking—or making user-experience more seamless—cannot solve all…

Continue Reading…

Minuscule Series Part II

Déjà auteur de l’excellente série Disparity Miniatures, le journaliste et photographe américain Christopher Boffoli basé à Seattle revient avec de nouvelles photographies de miniatures, révélant à nos yeux de très sympathiques mises en scène. Des images drôles à découvrir dans la suite de l’article.

bof1
bof2
bof3
Minuscule Series Part II7
Minuscule Series Part II6
Minuscule Series Part II5
Minuscule Series Part II4
Minuscule Series Part II3
Minuscule Series Part II1
Minuscule Series Part II2

Talent spotters: New Blades

Photo: Sim Goodwin

I have been a regular visitor to the New Blades degree show – which focuses purely on modelmaking, model design, special effects and character creation course – for the last nine years, since I graduated…

2013 saw attendances from The Arts University Bournemouth, University of Hertfordshire, University for the Creative Arts and University of Bolton. The quality of the work has come on in leaps and bounds since I was a modelmaking student! I think one of the reasons for this could be the now common presence of machines such as laser cutters and 3D printers.

This year there were 98 exhibitors, with such a wide range of creations to see. There seemed to be a shortage of architectural models though, which is the area that I work in and have done since graduation. It is also the area from industry that attends in greater numbers, looking for the emerging talents, so it seems silly that there were so few.

Photo: Sim Goodwin

There were three gems of models that caught my eye at the private view, the first of which was created by Annie Iorizzo, a student on the Character Creation & Technical effects course from University of Hertfordshire.

She captured such a great character and true likeness in her creation of an orangutan; it’s cheeky, true-to-life face caught my eye almost immediately.

Photo: Sim Goodwin

My second pick of the show was a wonderfully executed model of a bridge made by another University of Hertfordshire student, Joshua Horobin.

It was made using maple timber and had a lovely effect with strings, with each one going through a meticulously drilled hole in the carved wood with tiny, neatly arranged screws holding them in place and under tension.

It’s common knowledge in architectural modelmaking that you cannot hide any mistakes with a wooden model, as you can’t fill or spray to get rid of them which is why I had a close look and wasn’t disappointed.

Joshua was awarded the runner-up prize of a silver plated scalpel for the Best in Show.

Photo: Sim Goodwin

My final mention from this degree show is of Tom Le Gallez, a student from The Arts University Bournemouth.

He made a beautiful 1:6 scale model of Slimsfab’s The Haymaker motorbike, with such great attention to detail it even had the Kawasaki branding on the engine.

Tom has made this bike to an exceptional level it is no wonder he was awarded not only the Best Product Model accolade but also the prestigious gold plated scalpel for the Best in Show, too. And if I might add, it was very well deserved.

New Blades was at Holborn Studios, 49-50 Eagle Wharf Road, London N1 7ED. More details at modelshop.co.uk/Static/New-Blades.

Pink Floyd fans may recognise the cover of our June issue. It’s the original marked-up artwork for Dark Side of the Moon: one of a number of treasures from the archive of design studio Hipgnosis featured in the issue, along with an interview with Aubrey Powell, co-founder of Hipgnosis with the late, great Storm Thorgerson. Elsewhere in the issue we take a first look at The Purple Book: Symbolism and Sensuality in Contemporary Illustration, hear from the curators of a fascinating new V&A show conceived as a ‘walk-in book’ plus we have all the regular debate and analysis on the world of visual communications.

You can buy Creative Review direct from us here. Better yet, subscribe, save money and have CR delivered direct to your door every month.

CR for the iPad

Read in-depth features and analysis plus exclusive iPad-only content in the Creative Review iPad App. Longer, more in-depth features than we run on the blog, portfolios of great, full-screen images and hi-res video. If the blog is about news, comment and debate, the iPad is about inspiration, viewing and reading. As well as providing exclusive, iPad-only content, the app updates with new content throughout each month. Get it here.

Core77 Design Awards 2013: Watch the Furniture & Lighting Jury Announcement LIVE, NOW!

core77-announcements-2013.jpg

Wow, what a week! With 14 jury broadcasts in the bag and just three to go, the live announcement of the 2013 Core77 Design Awards winners for the Furniture & Lighting category is our final broadcast of the week (Food and Visual Communication will be on Monday, June 17, at 2pm and 4pm EST respectively).

Unfortunately, Jury Captain Matali Crasset is unable to make it, so Core77 Editor-in-Chief Eric Ludlum is stepping up to announce the winners. (Rest assured she will prepare a video with her jury comments by next week—stay tuned for more.)

Professional
Winner: David Irwin – M Lamp
Runners-up:
»Lydia Cambron and Von Tundra – 99
»Ryszard Manczak – Tango Pouf
Notable: Michael Yates Design – Giacoma Rocker

Student
Winner: Erika Cross – Vertebral Chair
Runner-up:
» Michael Neville – Rocking Lump
» Dan Ipp – Illuminated Side Table
» Ryan Pieper – High/Low’ Table
Notable: Knauf & Brown – Profile Chair

C77DA13-FurnitureLighting.jpg

(more…)

    

Sound on the Spot

Sound + Go is a travel-friendly wireless speaker that lets you take your phone and tablet tunes everywhere you go. A durable exterior makes it perfect for toting to the beach, park, or anywhere at home while its rechargeable battery system offers hours of playtime. It’s also a great first portable audio solution for kids! Get it here!

Designer: Eduardo Alessi


Yanko Design
Timeless Designs – Explore wonderful concepts from around the world!
Shop CKIE – We are more than just concepts. See what’s hot at the CKIE store by Yanko Design!
(Sound on the Spot was originally posted on Yanko Design)

Related posts:

  1. Hit That Warm Spot
  2. A Spot Of Tea
  3. Spot the Watch!

    

Help! I Want to Save a Life by Graham Douglas for Help Remedies and DKMS

A bandage pack containing a bone marrow donor registry kit has won a White Pencil at the D&AD Awards (+ movie).

Help! I’ve Cut Myself and I Want to Save a Life kits, which can be bought over the counter, contain plasters and bandages for covering small cuts, as well as cotton swabs. A small amount of blood from a cut can be caught on a swab and posted to a marrow donor registry in a pre-paid envelope, which also comes in the simple green and white package.

Graham Douglas, a member of creative agency Droga5, came up with the idea after his twin brother was diagnosed with Leukaemia and an unknown bone marrow donor saved his life.

Marrow Donor Registry kit wins D&AD White Pencil Award

“Unfortunately, the marrow donor registry is one of the most underrepresented donor programs in the world,” says Douglas. “It’s no wonder really – most people think registering as a marrow donor is painful and complicated, when really all it takes is a couple of drops of blood.”

Douglas’ idea aims to catch potential donors when they are already bleeding, and give them all the necessary components to send their sample to a donor registry easily.

He set up the scheme with pharmaceutical company Help Remedies and international marrow donor registry DKMS, and registrants have tripled as a result.

Help Remedies create colour-coded medicine packets named after symptoms rather than ingredients, for example paracetamol labelled Help! I’ve Got a Headache.

Marrow Donor Registry kit wins D&AD White Pencil Award

The annual D&AD Awards honour exemplary design and advertising projects. One White Pencil is awarded each year to reward creativity for social good.

Other winning projects at this year’s D&AD Awards, which took place earlier this week, include Thomas Heatherwick’s Olympic Cauldron, BarberOsgerby’s Olympic Torch and the new UK Government website.

Last year, Apple was named best design studio of the pasty fifty years at a special ceremony commemoration the awards’ 5oth anniversary, while D&AD president Neville Brody described plans to remove creative subjects from the school curriculum in the UK as “insanity”.

More medical design we’ve featured includes Christmas stockings filled with blood for donation and a range of pill containers by Yves Behar.

See more design for health »
See more stories about D&AD »

The post Help! I Want to Save a Life by Graham Douglas
for Help Remedies and DKMS
appeared first on Dezeen.

T-Chaise-Longue

Part of T-Furniture Collection for Venues, Festivals and Home Use – For Outdoors and Indoors. Material: planed spruce; Finishing: None; Joints: Nailed..

SMART: San Miguel Art Festival: Artists and gallery owners from Mexico and beyond meet up in San Miguel de Allende to celebrate art, creativity and innovation

SMART: San Miguel Art Festival


The art-filled public spaces of Hotel Matilda provided the central hub for the recent SMART San Miguel Art festival. The boutique hotel and passion project of art collector Continue Reading…