Converse Essentials Collection: Launching the new range for all genders, along with a collaboration with Fragment founder Hiroshi Fujiwara

Converse Essentials Collection

Diverging from the tech-heavy, ’90s-influenced activewear and athleisure gear that’s still saturating the industry, Converse announced its Essentials collection today. Comprised of super-simple, 100% cotton pieces, the range does have a retro tinge……

Continue Reading…

New Visuals for KENZOxH&M Collection by Jean Paul Goude

H&M a dévoilé les visuels de sa toute nouvelle collection en collaboration avec la maison de couture Kenzo. Derrière l’objectif n’est autre que le photographe Jean-Paul Goude, auteur d’images visionnaire et célèbre pour son travail subversif depuis les années 60. Une rencontre au sommet donc, pour un shooting basé sous la signature « French Connection », haut en couleurs, mettant en scène par des poses excentriques des ambassadeurs de tous horizons comme Iman, Chance the Rapper, et l’artiste vietnamienne Suboi autour de compositions très graphiques.

h&m-3
h&m-2
h&m-1

Explosive Liquid Sculptures cast in Resin Glass

L’italienne Annaluigia Boeretto, connue sous le nom de Annalù, est la créatrice de ces sculptures fantasmagoriques. Originaire de Venise, elle constitue ses sculptures surréalistes avec de la résine, donnant forme à des pages de livres et des pétales de fleurs d’apparence liquide que l’on aurait figé dans le temps et l’espace.

Annalù-10
Annalù-9
Annalù-8
Annalù-7
Annalù-6
Annalù-5
Annalù-4
Annalù-3
Annalù-1
Annalù-0

Buck Off is the world's first sex toy for transgender men

Trans activist and entrepreneur Buck Angel has created a sex toy designed specifically for gender-transitioning men (+ slideshow).

The Buck Off is a masturbation aid made for people who have transitioned or are currently transitioning from female to male.

Buck off sex toy

The product, which Angel claims is the first of its kind, was designed in collaboration with sex toy brand Perfect Fit, and is made from the company’s ultra-soft SilaSkin, a silicone composite material.



The shape of the toy is designed to be more comfortable for those experiencing the effects of testosterone as part of their transition, including the enlarging of their genitals.

Buck off sex toy

Although it is largely based on regular masturbation sleeves, the Buck Off is shorter and wider, and features a ridged inside that creates suction.

It also has the advantage of allowing transgender men to masturbate without touching their genitals directly, something Angel hopes will help individuals who don’t feel comfortable with their own body.

Buck off sex toy

“A lot of people who are making or have made the transition from female to male do not want to touch their genitals,” Angel told Vice. “They are very disassociated from their vaginas because it doesn’t feel masculine to them.”

A number of designers have sought to combat sex toy stereotypes, including Anna Maresova with her set of minimal rounded eggs and a vibrator that could be used for stimulation both internally and externally.

Buck off sex toy

More recently, Design Academy Eindhoven graduate Bastiaan Buijs designed a male sex toy with a bright pink torso that can be mounted like a vaulting horse.

The post Buck Off is the world’s first sex toy for transgender men appeared first on Dezeen.

Bill Maher Losing Hope That President Obama Will Appear on Real Time

At the end of Friday’s Real Time With Bill Maher Overtime session, Bill Maher noted that there are just six episodes left on which President Obama can appear. The comedian remains at a loss as to why POTUS has bypassed the program and admitted he was “losing hope” this situation can be rectified.

Maher then turned to Maureen Dowd, sitting to his immediate left, and asked for her thoughts. She is, after all, someone who has supported the idea of President Obama gracing Real Time. “I don’t understand how you lost out to Bear Grylls and Anthony Bourdain,” Dowd replied. “That’s embarrassing. Even that girl with the green lipstick.”

Dowd is referring to YouTube personality GloZell, who got to sit down with Obama in January 2015.

At the beginning of this year, Maher chatted with Jimmy Kimmel about turning 60 and petitioning the White House. Kimmel agreed it’s crazy such an interview has not taken place, especially he joked since Maher in 2012 donated $1 million to an Obama SuperPAC.

Screen grab via: YouTube

Bloomberg Pursuits Taps Troy Patterson as Style Editor

BloombergPursuitsSeptemberFallCoverEarlier this year, Troy Patterson wrote about “The Politics of the Hoodie” for The New York Times Magazine. And in 2015, in the pages of Slate, he debated with Amanda Hess the virtue of men’s short shorts.

Starting next week, Patterson will lend this general fashion perspective to all corners of Bloomberg Pursuits as the publication’s style editor, a new position. From today’s announcement:

Most recently a contributing writer at The New York Times Magazine, Patterson has also been the television critic at Slate, a style and etiquette advice columnist at Slate, the movie critic at SPIN and the book critic at Entertainment Weekly, where he began his career as an editorial assistant. Patterson holds a B.A. in English Literature from Princeton University.

“Troy is a fantastic writer who brings an unparalleled intelligence to his style coverage,” says editorial director Emmy Rosenblum. “I can’t wait for him to share his curiosity, wit, and good taste with our readers.”

Patterson has also contributed to a number of other publications over the years including the Wall Street Journal, GQ, W and Men’s Vogue.

Pictured: September/Fall Style issue

Soon, You Too, May Bedazzle Your Home in Internet

Anyone who’s experienced slow-loading videos and seemingly never-ending downloads knows the pain of a poor WiFi connection. It’s a problem many are trying to solve (just take a look at Starry and OnHub), but newcomer Plume thinks they have the solution: magic internet jewels.

Advocating for users to ditch their router, Plume is introducing a system of faceted WiFi-powered nuggets that they believe will revolutionize WiFi distribution. The system works through a series of small pods that can be plugged into any outlet and placed around the home. Through a centralized router in the cloud, these pods coordinate to optimize the flow of bandwidth to the devices that are using it.

The concept first arose when technology pioneers Fahri Diner, Aman Singla, Adam Hotchkiss and Sri Nathan got together at the end of 2014. With their collective achievements in the field of technology including long-distance fiber optic networks and a WiFi chip that’s now more common in phones than the Facebook app, the crew was more than equipped to tackle the challenges of spotty WiFi coverage. Together they came up with a better way of distributing WiFi around the house by moving the dynamic “brain” function to the cloud and placing links to the source, in the form of little pods, in every room of the home. “We refer to this as ‘Adaptive WiFi,'” says Diner, now CEO at Plume.

While traditional routers have two functions, compute and radio, Plume works by deconstructing the router and separating these two responsibilities. “We’ve moved the compute functions to the cloud, where processing power is scalable, powerful and inexpensive,” Diner says. “In the cloud, decisions can be made about channels, bandwidth and connected devices. We’ve left the radio functions in the home, making them smaller, so that they can be sprinkled all around the house for better WiFi coverage.”

Thanks to the abundant power of the cloud (hello, 2016), the Plume team says that the system is able to self-optimize the WiFi network for each home, balancing the bandwidth needs of various devices and learning their habits over time. “Adaptive WiFi doesn’t just respond to events in real-time, such as neighbors getting home and WiFi becoming congested,” Diner says. “Plume is intelligent enough to learn, for example, that someone watches a 4K stream on a TV in the living room at 7PM on Wednesdays, and will automatically configure your home’s WiFi in advance of 7PM to ensure that the streaming won’t buffer.”

With this concept in mind, Plume teamed up with San Francisco-based design studio Branch Creative to give it shape and form. “The shape was inspired by the simple idea that these products need to work together as part of a greater system,” says Josh Morenstein, a partner at the studio. “Until they are deployed throughout your home, the identical pods nest and ship beautifully and efficiently together.” Resembling small chunks of plastic crystals broken off a magical internet-bestowing geode, the pods arrive in a lined box in sets of six.

“Once the concept was selected we worked through hundreds of sketches and models to bring the concept to reality while preserving the design intent,” says Nick Cronan, another partner at the studio. “When creating a new piece of technology, there should always be a healthy push and pull between design and engineering—when both the design and engineering teams are excited, you know you have something special.”

That push and pull was very much real. “One big challenge was to keep the design free from overly functional details—things like holes for vents and ribs for cooling,” Morenstein says in a statement that would make any engineer cringe. The Branch team wanted the pods to be “more akin to home furnishings than something associated with consumer electronics.” The designers also pushed for the pods to be as small as possible to convey the magic of their technology.

“Designers are usually pushing for things to be smaller and this was no exception,” Cronan says. “However, in this case size was even more critical because the Pods are placed directly in outlets, where space is already at a premium. The Pods are designed to fit international standards for wall outlets without monopolizing the entire wall plug.”

Meanwhile, the Plume team had hundreds of components they needed to fit in Branch’s idealistic design. “It required meticulous precision,” Diner says on the internal hardware. “Everything is considered, even down to the screw size and length.” Balancing that push and pull proved to be one of the biggest challenges of the project as Branch pushed for the pods to be perceived as small gems, while functional requirements of the small electronics pulled against those limits.

Despite hundreds of components, the Plume team assures us that the hardware inside the pods isn’t especially complex. “Our chips aren’t as muscular as some of the more expensive centralized routers you might find on the market, but we don’t believe putting all the WiFi horsepower in one location of the house is the best architecture,” Diner says. “Instead, each home is covered by multiple, distributed WiFi pods, delivering comprehensive coverage through coordination with the Plume cloud. We hold 15 issued patents, with another 24 patents pending, for our Adaptive WiFi platform.”

Antennas for 5GHz and 2.4GHz have been custom designed and tuned to perform as well as larger WiFi routers, even when crammed into the small, individual pods. Adaptive WiFi algorithms were refined and perfected using data over the past few months, and the team says they will continue to improve once they’re out in the world on a larger scale.

“Many router manufacturers are focusing on the wrong thing: bigger size and more power from a single unit,” Diner says. “But that approach is just like trying to light an entire home using one light bulb in the living room. We knew that our approach to WiFi—moving the router to the cloud—was not only going to give us infinitely better performance, it was going to give us a new kind of freedom in our design.”

The entire network of pods is controlled through an app that lets users control who can use the WiFi as well as track speeds and add or remove additional pods. “Our mission was to make home WiFi better, faster, more reliable and beautiful, and we got to design something from scratch in order to do so,” Diner says.

The Plume networks are currently available for pre-order through Plume’s website at $39 per pod with a minimum order of six pods (a final pricetag of $234). Clever. They also come in classy tones like champagne, silver and onyx. While the concept sounds promising (and I much enjoy the idea of putting tiny inexpensive internet jewels throughout my apartment), I’m eager to hear reviews from folks once these roll out.

ListenUp: Francis And The Lights feat. Kanye West: My City's Gone

Francis And The Lights feat. Kanye West: My City's Gone


Francis and the Lights (Francis Farewell Starlite’s project) has just released a gorgeous, minimal but still grand track called “My City’s Gone.” The song features Kanye West, but in a way that might not be obvious or expected: West’s contributions……

Continue Reading…

Le Mans Goes Green

pagani_01

There have been a few electric proposals for future Le Mans races but this Pagani is one of the first that harnesses hydrogen power! Called the Ganador (Spanish for “winner”), it races ahead using a monstrous V12 hydrogen-powered prototype engine.

It’s wicked aesthetic looks like a bullet on wheels, with an elongated, enclosed cockpit that protects the driver (even using internal heat-sensing tech to monitor their condition) from wind and the elements without obstructing views.

Other innovations include carbon-fiber wind flaps that act as air brakes, wind-turbine wheels that collect wind energy for reuse, and hard/soft hybrid tires that allow the driver to continue lapping at high speeds before heading to the pit!

Designer: Igor Dzukovski

pagani_02

pagani_03

pagani_04

pagani_05

pagani_06

pagani_07

pagani_08

pagani_09

pagani_10

pagani_11

pagani_12

pagani_13

pagani_14

pagani_15

pagani_16

Ron Arad creates OLED light panel installation for LG Display at London Design Festival

Dezeen promotion: Israeli designer and architect Ron Arad has teamed up with LG Display to create an artwork of OLED light panels for trade fair 100% Design during this year’s London Design Festival (+ slideshow).

Arad worked alongside design studio Zinoo Park to create the lighting installation for LG Display, a South Korean monitor and panel manufacturer.

The aim was to show how light can be used as a design element.

LG Display OLED light installation by Ron Arad
Arad worked alongside design studio Zinoo Park to create the lighting installation for LG Display

Arad’s piece, called Envelopes, features a wall made up of squares of LG Display’s OLED light panels – a digital lighting device that creates illumination across a surface rather than from a point.

“OLED light panels provide a distinct form of light that is extremely thin, lightweight, and flexible,” explained LG Display.

“
This unique form factor can be easily integrated into various designs regardless of material, enabling your design to maintain its graceful thinness and curves.”

LG Display OLED light installation by Ron Arad
Ron Arad’s installation is called Envelopes

Each OLED – short for organic light-emitting diode – panel is identical in shape and size, but coloured and angled differently.

“As an opportunity to experience how the new material, OLED light panels, can make aesthetic impacts on spaces, the audience could encounter with art combined with technology,” said LG Display.

“Instead of projecting direct light, their artworks will lead the audience to an extraordinary visual delight by distributing reflected, filtered light,” they said. “The concept revitalises new perspective in light, and allows us to explore the awe of lights in a whole new dimension.”

LG Display OLED light installation by Ron Arad
LG Display’s OLED light panel products include plastic-based flexible OLED light panels

Envelopes was on show at the 100% Design trade fair in London, which took place from 21 to 24 September 2016 as part of this year’s London Design Festival.

Next to the installation is Zinoo Park’s Mirror of Orbits – a round mirror attached to a spiralling gold structure.

Arad and Park presented their project during Ron Arad’s Talk Show at the Auditorium on 22 September 2016, chaired by writer and editorial consultant David Michon.

During the talk, Arad discussed his career, his most recent artwork and projects he is looking forward to working on in the future.

LG Display OLED light installation by Ron Arad
Ron Arad presented the projected and his recent works during a talk at the Auditorium

Israel-born Arad set up his design firm Ron Arad Associates in 1989 in London, and then later set up his architecture studio in 2008. He was professor of Design Products at the Royal College of Art in London up until 2009 and was awarded the 2011 London Design Week Medal for design excellence.

He became a Royal Academician of the Royal Academy of Arts in 2013.

www.lgdisplay.com

The post Ron Arad creates OLED light panel installation for LG Display at London Design Festival appeared first on Dezeen.