Balloon Coffee Table
Posted in: UncategorizedUP Balloon Coffee Table by Chris Duffy. He’s building 25 of these tables made of glass, metal..(Read…)
UP Balloon Coffee Table by Chris Duffy. He’s building 25 of these tables made of glass, metal..(Read…)
Filmed in Lulworth Cove and Brighton, this footage was shot in 1898. Some girls are showing quite a..(Read…)
LEGO announces 71016 The Kwik-E-Mart”Features opening rear walls, a removable roof with secret..(Read…)
Water is confusing. Can’t make up its mind, whether it wants to be ice or snow. Either way, you got to break your back shoveling your sidewalk. Luckily, the Ice Breaking Shovel is a nifty multi-tool, because frozen water can be such a double-sided affair. Use it either as an ice cracking tool, or an ice shoveling tool. The power is yours!
Designer: Ho-Jin Choi
Author: Sarang Sheth
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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!
(Breaking the ice was originally posted on Yanko Design)
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The “internet of things” is an absolute phenomenon. Everything you see now is connecting to the internet. Smart shoes that track your movements, smart toaster that burns Instagram images onto your toast, the list goes on with each possibility more ridiculous than the previous one. Amongst all the fluff, there are a really just a handful of meaningful smart-things and apps out there. Beam is one of them. Designed to fit into a light-bulb socket, this supremely simple and compact projector works like a charm, beaming content from your phone onto any flat surface you can find around you.
The Beam app makes for a smooth transition from one screen to another, allowing you to even choose what to broadcast to the Beam Projector. Definitely better than having a Smart-washing machine that connects to your facebook…!
Designer: Beam Labs Inc.
Author: Sarang Sheth
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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!
(Pint-Sized Projector was originally posted on Yanko Design)
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La WaterNest 100 est un projet de cabane flottante signé EcoFloLife. Avec la forme d’une capsule, elle a été pensée sur le concept du nid en respectant l’environnement avec des matériaux entièrement recyclés : le bois laminé et l’aluminium donnent à cette maison une apparence futuriste. A découvrir en images.
Le duo de réalisateurs McBess & Simon ont imaginé un spot animé pour les lunettes Ray Ban Round et sur la baseline « Never Hide », lancée depuis quelques années par la marque. On y voit un employé de bureau qui quitte tout après avoir enfilé ces nouvelles paires de lunettes qui lui donnent un esprit libre et rock. Une production Passion Paris.
« Object O » est une installation lumineuse conçue par le designer Arnout Meijer et Paul van Laak, dans le cadre du Amsterdam Light Festival 2014. Pour illustrer les changements constants de la lumière urbaine, le jour et la nuit, cette pièce en forme d’anneau propose une interprétation des différents éclairages qu’on peut trouver dans une ville.
Egypt is to unveil plans for a vast new privately funded administrative capital for seven million residents that would extend Cairo eastwards to the coast of the Red Sea.
The Capital Cairo project, due to be launched today by Mostafa Madbouly, Egypt’s housing minister, at a development conference in Sharm el-Sheikh, would involve creating a new urbanised zone covering 700 square kilometres.
The north African country is hoping to secure backing for the £44 billion project from a Middle Eastern developer.
“We are talking to a master developer,” Egypt’s investment minister Ashraf Salman told Emirati newspaper The National. “A signature will take place by the conference, and after that the construction will begin.”
Salman said the project would be entirely funded by private investors. “The government will incur zero cost in the city, and this will be totally developed, masterplanned and executed by a private sector company – a developer from the Gulf,” he said.
The National reported that Dubai property developer Emaar, whose projects include the world’s tallest building, the Burj Khalifa, was being linked to the project. Emaar refused to comment.
Salman added: “We’re talking a very big city. It is just the size of New Cairo itself… It is the ‘new New Cairo'”.
According to the Financial Times, the project is based on an election pledge by Egyptian president Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, who last year promised to extend Cairo to the Red Sea port of Suez if voted into power.
The project will involve relocating government buildings and foreign embassies from central Cairo and is intended to relieve congestion in the existing capital, which is home to an estimated 18 million people.
The Egyptian government is also set to formally present plans for a 200-metre-high skyscraper modelled on the Pyramids at the development conference – an event it hopes will boost investment in the country’s troubled economy.
If built, the tower would become the country’s tallest building, surpassing the 143-metre-high Ministry of Foreign Affairs by over 50 metres.
Image courtesy of Shutterstock.
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Photo essay: French photographer Ann Ray provides a personal insight into the life and career of British fashion designer Alexander McQueen with this series of images, which were recently acquired by London’s V&A museum.
The selection of Ray’s photographs of McQueen – who died five years ago – offer rare glimpses into the backstage world of fashion’s enfant-terrible.
Related story: Alexander McQueen: Savage Beauty opens at London’s V&A
A close friend of McQueen’s, Ray was given privileged access to his shows and photoshoots, documenting his creative process and gaining a unique insight into his character.
“As a photographer, you sometimes see further than you wished to see,” said Ray. “In the frantic experience that can be the act of photography in a challenging environment and fugitive moment, you work in a kind of surreal presence/absence. You just focus, observe and capture. It’s only later that you take time to discover, and realise, and think.”
The 13 photographs are now part of the permanent collection at the V&A, which is hosting the Alexander McQueen: Savage Beauty retrospective exhibition of his work.
Life is a joke. Or, as Lee McQueen said it once, “it’s only a game”. There is no nihilist approach here; it’s just that there is something strange about time. Yesterday I was seventeen and a half, and nowadays people call me “Madame”. Yesterday I met Lee Alexander McQueen, and we connected, and we became close, and with a few decisions and a reasonable amount of serendipity, I was moving to London and taking photographs, and it was fun, and exciting, and inspiring, and challenging.
And suddenly, just like that, it disappeared – it still hurts. Lee took his own life. Another decision, his decision. I had to accept it, and face the facts. The journey had lasted 13 years.
I remembered a conversation in 2009 when Lee said apparently casually “you have my life in pictures, and I wanted it that way, because I trust you.” Here I was, with an endless grief that I have since learned to manage, and something like 35,000 analogue images – on film, yes Sir – and suddenly the words “duty” and “legacy” became more than significant.
No Game is the name of the photograph where you can feel, more than see, the extraordinary energy of Lee McQueen. His sharp mind would notice everything, including the sound of the shutter of my camera. He would check – nobody else was allowed to photograph him backstage – and see me, and keep working. A silent agreement. We never needed any contract.
We did look at contact-sheets together, Lee and I, and he would say in a loud joyful voice “Iconic! This is an iconic picture!” And we laughed. Now I don’t laugh, but I do smile about some of these iconic images finding a place in a prestigious institution like the V&A, a place that Lee McQueen treasured. 13 seemed like the right figure.
It’s about time that I reveal the beautiful and damned. The photographs that Lee loved especially, and why. The photographs that I find essential, too. It’s about truth, and beauty.
One of the images is named Insensé, which was also the title of the exhibition I did in the then small Alexander McQueen shop on Conduit Street in 2000, as I was reluctantly leaving London for Paris. When I showed the postcard with that image and the title – in French – to Lee, he asked: “What does it mean?” “Insane,” I replied. “Get out of my head!” he laughed.
Today there is a form of insanity in celebrating a living artist as a fashion designer, and celebrating a dead fashion designer as an artist in a museum. It was far too soon or too late in 2011. It’s the right time in 2015, especially in London.
“Reverse” is a good word though, so close to “rewind”. I wish I could. When I saw Shalom Harlow in her virginal white dress being attacked by two painting robots at the end of the N°13 show in September 1998, I knew. Rarely, but sometimes, as a photographer and a human being you have the awareness of the eternity of an instant.
I could feel it, under my skin, in my soul. I knew this instant would not, could not, be forgotten. And what I am searching for when photographing at that precise moment was that kind of virgin innocence on Shalom’s face, in her body language, a form of pride beyond acceptance. Untouched. Strong and fragile, like Lee.
The madness of my passion and work with Lee is that I have so much material. I just published 400 images in a book called Love looks not with the eyes (titled after the tattoo that Lee had on his arm, this quote from Shakespeare: love looks not with the eyes, but with the mind).
I guess that by doing a drastic editing of the 35,000 pictures you may end with something like 5,000 outstanding images. For instance, I recently printed three images from the show that produced Insensé that had remained unrevealed, existing just on the contact-sheets. Meaning nobody had ever seen these.
One of Shalom just before the “painting”, holding with grace the white dress on her chest, in a beautiful light. She seems ethereal. Another one very close but different from Insensé; a slightly different expression on her face and in her body, and a different intention on my side. And lastly a third image of Shalom coming back from the stage, with Lee McQueen by her side, giving a bow with his dogs. So many images unrevealed. So many treasures in boxes.
The V&A acquired Insensé as a cyanotype, a 19th century printing process that I liked to use in a wild way, applied to the savage beauty that Lee created. It makes so much sense: Lee highly appreciated these specific prints, enough to order a large size cyanotype of his portrait called Pale Blue Eyes. I did 13 different versions for him – since every cyanotype is unique.
Recently I laid them out on the floor at home, as we did years ago with Lee for him to choose the one he preferred. I am delighted to see that print in the V&A collection now. The large print remained in Lee McQueen’s studio for years, from 1997 to six or seven years later.
Les Oiseaux, Red Featherweight and Birdy II speak about Lee’s love for birds. You can see every symbol you wish here, but at least I know that wild birds are free to go. Les Oiseaux reflects the VOSS show, when insanity was combined with a violent irony – I remember the audience watching itself in the mirror walls of the cube that was the actual stage.
Red Featherweight is one of the rare still-lifes I did, because the beauty, volume, and colour of the garment made it alive to my eyes, even on a hanger. I do love photographing in colour when there is a strong intention, as is obviously the case here. Apart from the dress, everything is just shades of grey. I can almost feel the vibration of the red feathers.
And finally Birdy II, one of the numerous portraits I did for The Widows of Culloden Autumn Winter 2006 collection. Philip Treacy – one of Lee’s favourite “partners in crime” – created such beautiful head pieces for this show. The young women became Lee’s creatures that I wanted to immortalise. Out of time women.
Erin as Angel and The Naked Truth – as a gum bichromate print – feature two women that Lee highly appreciated, with extraordinary garments or art pieces. Erin O’Connor – who over-inspired me each and every time with her unique elegance in body, face and soul – wearing these delicate wooden wings in the N°13 show, and Carmen Kass wearing the most beautiful black dress in the Supercalifragilistic show, at the Conciergerie in 2002.
I didn’t produce these photographs by myself. Erin and Carmen have always been generous. They understood my vision, as they understood Lee’s visions. They were giving me something special, so it is fair to say that we made these images together. We met often, as they were back and back again in numerous shows. Lee was faithful in many ways.
Unfallen Angels II I particularly cherish. Not swans, not women. Something else. I was just carried away by these two creatures that Lee made real, like a dream come true. I photographed them a lot, which was rare in my work, since everything was happening in 15 minute shows. Everything, that meant so much: Lee McQueen’s visions, one performance, 15 minutes.
I had many thoughts about Lee over the years. Many. Hardly when I was photographing, much more afterwards, when I was wandering alone through the contact-sheets, as every photographer does. We all love these lonely hours when you feel joy and despair in front of the images – the ones you found, the one you missed, the ones you dreamt, with just a weapon in your hand to make the crucial choices: a red pen.
As a photographer, you sometimes see further than you wished to see. In the frantic experience that can be the act of photography in a challenging environment and fugitive moment, you work in a kind of surreal presence/absence. You just focus, observe and capture.
It’s only later that you take time to discover, and realise, and think. So I had these many thoughts about Lee McQueen. Sometimes I would tell him, sometimes not. Silent is nice too. So I never told him about my fantasy: I wish I could have witnessed an encounter between Lee McQueen and Andy Warhol. It would have been quite a witty joke.
Images are copyright Ann Ray/Victoria and Albert Museum, London.
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photographs of Alexander McQueen appeared first on Dezeen.