Table top by MIT designers ripples when people are nearby

Milan 2014: designers from MIT Media Lab’s Tangible Media Group have created a shape-shifting table that reacts to human presence with a series of 1,000 tiny motors built into the frame (+ movie).

Transform by Tangible Media Group MIT

Named Transform, the table is divided into three separate surfaces, where more than 1,000 small squares attached to individual motors that are hidden from view.

Transform by Tangible Media Group MIT

When a user passes their hand across the surface, the individual squares rise up in sequence and create a ripple effect.

Transform by Tangible Media Group MIT

The table can also create abstract shapes on its own, and transfer objects across the surface, thanks to a series of pre-programmed animation sequences.

Transform by Tangible Media Group MIT

Transform was created by Daniel Leithinger and Sean Follmer and overseen by their professor Hiroshi Ishii.

“A pixel is intangible,” Ishii told Dezeen. “You can only use it through mediating and remote control, like a mouse or a touchscreen. We decided to physically embody computation and information.”

Transform by Tangible Media Group MIT
Hiroshi Ishii, head of concept design for Transform

According to the team, the concept is a look at how furniture could evolve in future. It forms part of the MIT Tangible Media Group’s Radical Atoms project, which explores human interaction with materials that are reconfigurable by computer.

Transform by Tangible Media Group MIT

“We don’t want the furniture to become more important than the motion. We want to make it feel like it’s a unified design and they are not separate,” said Amit Zoran, one of the product designers on the project.

Transform by Tangible Media Group MIT

Transform changes shape by a series of sensors that detect movement above the surface. However, the table could change according to the emotions of people around it, and create a melody to soothe those around the table, said its creators.

Transform by Tangible Media Group MIT

“Imagine, this is equivalent of the invention of a new medium. Painting, plastic, and computer graphics. It has infinite possibilities,” said Ishii.

The project was part of Lexus Design Amazing exhibition, which premiered in Milan last week.

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when people are nearby
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Wish I Was Here Trailer

« Wish I Was Here » raconte l’histoire d’un père qui ne peut plus payer l’éducation de ses enfants et qui leur fera cours à domicile. Plein d’imagination, ce film a été réalisé par Zach Braff à l’aide de Kickstarter : la sortie est prévue prochainement dans nos salles. Le teaser est à découvrir dans la suite.


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Dezeen Music Project: Microcosmos by Histibe

Kiev-based producer Histibe has sent us this dark drum and bass track called Microcosmos. The track starts off in an eerie, slightly muted fashion before a truly ferocious beat kicks in around one minute in.

About Dezeen Music Project | More tracks | Submit your track

The post Dezeen Music Project: Microcosmos
by Histibe
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Re-Up, Beijing: A cafe and event space aiming to be a 360-degree upcycling experience

Re-Up, Beijing


In a country where fast development is often synonymous with waste and where the cityscape often looks like a never-ending construction site, Chinese consumers are constantly searching for the “brand new,” often without the proper awareness of…

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La verità dei fatti illustrata

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Ce ne sono decine e tutte terribilmente vere! Queste sono le mie preferite. Tutte le altre le trovate qui.

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Hye Jin

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Lei è Hye Jin.

Chris Milliman ha fatto qualche scatto in una ciclistica domenica francese

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Il nostro amico Chris ha fatto un giro domenica nei paraggi della Paris-Roubaix e scattato un po’ di momenti raccolti nell’album ‘Sunday in France’.

Forthcoming Photojojo Project: The Drone Selfie

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Photography accessory company Photojojo might consist of “a small and passionate team” of designers (who are hiring, by the way), but despite their dimunitive size, the SF-based outfit distributes a staggering array of product. And what they’ve got in the pipeline is bound to draw some attention: “We’re working on some stuff to make drone photography easier for anyone to get into,” the company writes. Specifically, they may be helping to usher in a new category of photography: The drone selfie.

What’s a drone selfie? Well jeez, whaddaya think it is?

That one was shot by Amit Gupta, the SF-based entrepreneur who runs Photojojo. No word yet on what the physical products they’ll be releasing are.

(more…)

Simon Legald of Normann Copenhagen: Our brief chat with the young Dane about his methods for designing on a diverse scale

Simon Legald of Normann Copenhagen


Each year during Milan Design Week we look forward to checking in on brands whose work we continuously admire. Normann Copenhagen is always an inspiring stop, and during our visit to Salone del Mobile in 2013, newcomer ,…

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Kengo Kuma adds lattice of glistening tiles to Shang Xia boutique in Paris

White ceramic tiles create a brickwork pattern across the walls and roof of this Paris boutique designed by Kengo Kuma and Associates for Chinese lifestyle brand Shang Xia (+ slideshow).

Shang Xia store in Paris by Kengo Kuma and Associates

Japanese firm Kengo Kuma and Associates previously designed the Beijing and Shanghai stores for Shang Xia. For the brand’s first retail space in Europe, the architects designed an interior covered in over 10,000 tiles that extends to a layered ceiling installation.

Shang Xia store in Paris by Kengo Kuma and Associates

The studio chose rectangular tiles with a glossy surface to reflect light through the store, describing the material as having an edge “thin enough to pass through light”.

Shang Xia store in Paris by Kengo Kuma and Associates

“We used the same material for tiles to hang from the ceiling and cover the space,” explained the studio. “Taking advantage of this glazed white surface that softly mirrors its environments, we set up a place like a cloud brimming with light.”

Shang Xia store in Paris by Kengo Kuma and Associates

The tiles also form a backdrop for the shopfront display windows, creating a screen that alternates between solid and void.

Shang Xia store in Paris by Kengo Kuma and Associates

Located on a corner plot close to Boulevard Saint-Germain, the oval-shaped boutique showcases a range of furniture, homeware, accessories and clothing.

Shang Xia store in Paris by Kengo Kuma and Associates

A tiled partition divides the store and is punctured by rectangular recesses, creating display spaces for jewellery. Tabletops and boxy stools are positioned in front, where customers can take a seat while trying on jewellery.

Shang Xia store in Paris by Kengo Kuma and Associates

Glass-topped storage cases present a range of accessories, while more recessed shelving on the perimeter walls are filled with homeware items.

Shang Xia store in Paris by Kengo Kuma and Associates

Scarves and shawls are tied to silver railings near the entrance and racks of clothing are set into the outer tiled walls, along with a selection of furniture. Polished wooden floors feature throughout.

Shang Xia store in Paris by Kengo Kuma and Associates

The design has a similar aesthetic to Shang Xia’s two stores in China. While the Beijing store contains a lattice of extruded aluminium sections, the Shanghai boutique features a faceted white interior.

Shang Xia store in Paris by Kengo Kuma and Associates

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to Shang Xia boutique in Paris
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