33 Fun Facts About 33 Colleges
Posted in: Uncategorized33 fun facts about US colleges…(Read…)
33 fun facts about US colleges…(Read…)
Inspried by Jeffrey Brown’s Darth Vader and Son and Vader’s Little Princess. The books..(Read…)
While his images—made from bubblegum, honeybees and toothpaste—quickly grabbed the attention of collectors and curators worldwide, LA-based artist Matthew Brandt continued to explore the potential of other curious media in order…
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Just how Bad did Walter White Break?
Have you ever wondered exactly how much aluminum a soda can contains? Or exactly how many CDs you could label with a Sharpie? Or whether 360-thread-count sheets actually have 360 threads per inch?
Wonder no more. Since 1998, California-based Rob Cockerham has been periodically updating his “How Much is Inside?” website by conducting (admittedly unscientific) experiments to answer the questions above. Said experiments range from straightforward—magnifying and painstakingly counting the threads in a sheet—to sideways approaches, like weighing a soda can and comparing it to the equivalent weight of sheets of aluminum foil to calculate how many cans one could make out of a roll.
Tucked behind a lush residential street in West Hollywood are the offices of leather goods maker Parabellum. “It has been a busy year,” Head Designer Jason Jones tells CH, as he welcomes us with his very…
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Microscopic views of flower petals informed the rippled timber facade of this flower kiosk in west London by British firm Buchanan Partnership (+ slideshow).
Buchanan Partnership used a combination of digital and handmade fabrication techniques to build the St Helen’s Gardens flower stall in Ladbroke Grove.
Horizontal timber slats were CNC-cut with wavy profiles to create a rippling effect around the facade. These were then layered up and bolted to a galvanised steel structure that sits on the lozenge-shaped concrete base.
The studio wanted to look beyond conventional floral motifs for the small commission. “We took inspiration from electron scanning microscopic images of flower petals, which reveal tiny three-dimensional ridge patterns across the petal surface,” said architect Kyle Buchanan.
The kiosk doors rotate open during the day, creating space to prepare and wrap the flowers on the Accoya timber countertop.
Stainless steel letters spelling out “THE KIOSK” sit on the roof of the structure.
The flowers are displayed on shelves that are placed on the surrounding pavement, and are stored and locked in the kiosk at night.
This project came about as part of a change of use application for a neighbouring shop, which had previously been a florist. Initially turned down by planners, the project won approval after gaining huge local support.
In researching the proposal, the practice looked at Thomas Heatherwick’s Paperhouse, a set of newspaper kiosks also in the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea, CZWG’s nearby public lavatories at Westbourne Grove as well as other kiosks throughout London, says Buchanan.
“London has an interesting history of kiosk buildings, including the ornate ironwork public toilet on Foley Street and the police station in Trafalgar Square, which is in the base of a lamp post and was the smallest police station in the world when it was manned,” he said.
The project is one of the first completed by the practice’s recently opened London office.
Photography is by Charles Hosea.
Here’s a project description from Buchanan Partnership:
Flower Kiosk
A new permanent flower kiosk in Ladbroke Grove, built using digital and handcrafted fabrication techniques.
This project, for a permanent flower kiosk in Ladbroke Grove, came about as part of a change of use application for the neighbouring retail unit, which had previously been used as a florist.
The concept for the rippling CNC-cut timber layers of the facade resulted from an ambition to reinvent the conventional idea of a floral motif.
We took inspiration from electron scanning microscopic images of flower petals, which reveal tiny three-dimensional ridge patterns across the petal surface. These ridges intensify the colour of the flower and act as a graspable surface for bees and other insects.
Using both digital and traditional fabrication techniques, the ridges are referenced in the external form of the kiosk, so that the nano-condition of the petal is translated into a contemporary interpretation of the floral motif in the architecture.
The lozenge shape of the kiosk rotates to be open during the day, creating space to prepare and wrap the flowers. The flowers are displayed on shelves that are placed on the surrounding pavement, and are stored and locked in the kiosk at night.
Contract value: £47,000
Location: St Helen’s Gardens, London
Client: Mountgrange Heritage and The Cundall Partnership
Fabrication: William Hardie Design
Planning Consultant: Ian Fergusson of Turley Associates
Structural Engineers: Tall Engineers
The post Undulating timber slats surround this London
flower kiosk by Buchanan Partnership appeared first on Dezeen.
No, you’re not on drugs (or at least we should hope not, on a schoolnight)—you’re just seeing the flight pattern of a traveling group of starlings. Recently, we’ve seen a lot of ways that nature is making a power-play in the design world—whether it’s worm secretion making a debut in the medical industry or the hidden design in sand crystals, there’s always something surprising about the make-up of the natural world around us.
Dennis Hlynsky has been bringing us footage of animals’ transit paths since 2005, but the Internet has recently caught on to just how cool they are. What started with a Flip video recorder and an interest in the flight patterns of birds, has become beautiful compiled footage following the habits of avians aloft. Dennis Hlynsky has since upgraded to a much more detail-oriented camera and mastered his hand at editing with programs like After Effects to create his timelapse-esque films. The end result is not unlike this time-lapse video of 4.5 hours worth of airplanes flying into San Diego International. Check out a few of his films:
Walking through the rows upon rows of exhibits at San Francisco’s Winter Fancy Food Show proved to be a herculean task. The goal of surveying as many products as possible was made easy with McConnell’s Fine…
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Il buon amico fotografo Chris Milliman ha rimesso mano al suo sito.
Metropolis is a project designed to express two opposing bedside tables- one representing day and the other night. The overall shape of the tables are the same, but the details and colors are in complete contrast. Day is portrayed as more calm, friendly and inviting… while the night has more of a extroverted, polarizing, even sinister character.
Designer: Brian Khouw
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(The Same, But Different was originally posted on Yanko Design)
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