Titanic Parody Costume
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With the gigantic increase in customers going online to order their medication and proscription drugs, it forced companies such as CVS against the ropes in order to hit back. The only method that CVS had of keeping a hold of customer loyalty was the prescription service itself – around a third of repeat prescriptions never get refilled, of the ones that do, about one third are forgotten after the first couple refills. Luckily for CVS, they were approached by Deborah Adler. Adler, after seeing her grandmother accidentally take her grandfather’s medication, took it upon herself to design a system that could be color coded for patients – both the prescription schedules and the pill bottles themselves. Immediately picked up by Target and the MoMA, Adler’s design was later awarded a Design of the Decade by the Industrial Designers Society of America.
How did CVS get involved? Adler took her work to CVS, saying “I felt they had the commitment and the will to see about such a large change.” It’s only five years on that the first piece of that system is being rolled out – a single sheet that patients get, showing exactly how all their medicines should be taken. By next year, the redesigned pill labels will hit the market. Adler’s prescription charts and pill bottles are only the beginning of an entirely new service redesign.
Designer: Deborah Adler
Les oeuvres de l’illustratrice et peintre originaire de Los Angeles Joanne Nam dépeignent des visages caractérisés par des apparences froides, douces et mystérieuses. L’usage de couleurs froides, constant, apporte une certaine touche de tristesse tout en renforçant l’aspect doux et innocent des protagonistes.
Brevite, developer of functional and versatile everyday-carry backpacks has returned to Kickstarter with the Hadley Series, which includes three different daily-carry backpacks offering backers the opportunity to choose the pack that best fits their individual life adventures. Taking a different approach to the current landscape of bulky everyday-carry backpacks, the Hadley Series’ sleek design balances form and functionality by incorporating Brevite’s unique removable insert system to deliver more adaptable solutions for daily uses.
Brevite has a mission to design functional travel accessories that help people get out and experience the world around them. We specialize in designing backpacks for photographers, commuters, and travelers.
For anyone who has experienced it firsthand, a visit to the gynecologist can easily be a dreaded one. Some purport the experience to be so awkward, they skip the opportunity to visit a doctor entirely, which can be seriously detrimental to a woman’s overall health. Last week designers at frog announced Yona, a complete healthcare overhaul of the annual gynecology visit that aims to stop this vicious cycle of neglect and ask, “is there a better way to design the doctor’s visit experience?” Combining extensive research with abundant prototyping, the team has developed not just a more material and form-friendly redesign of the speculum, but also an experience that is relaxing, empathetic, and even lighthearted.
“Our research showed us that many people with vaginas feel anxious about pelvic exams, which is no help to their health. Through Yona, we wanted to create a conversation and highlight that it is possible to balance human needs with clinical needs in the pelvic exam setting,” said Hailey Stewart, the industrial designer who led the project alongside her research partner and former frog designer Sahana Kumar, with help from Mechanical Engineer Fran Wang and Visual Designer Rachel Hobart. Yona was originally a passion project the designers worked on with support from frog in between client projects and outside of work, conducting research and talking with medical professionals to learn more about the OBGYN visit experience on both sides.
The focal point of their pitch with Yona is to improve on the standard speculum, a metal instrument used to dilate the vagina and cervix invented in the mid-1800s with a controversial backstory (the inventor, James Marion Sims, apparently developed his original design based on research experiments he conducted on slave women without anesthesia). Amazingly, the design of the speculum has remained much the same since its development over 150 years ago.
The Yona speculum takes into account not only the ergonomics of the tool but also the material—two simple fixes that could result in a drastically more comfortable experience. Noteworthy features of the speculum include a three-vs-two “duckbill” design, which opens in a triangular shape that allows doctors a clear view while also reducing how wide the instrument must open, a silicone build, silent mechanics, and finally, a more ergonomic handle that is angled at 105 degrees as opposed to the typical 90-degree handle.
This redesign is not just aimed at giving more comfort to patients, as it also provides a chance for better accuracy with doctors. The currently dated design of the speculum forces doctors to open the cervix to an uncomfortable degree while also not necessarily even guaranteeing a good look into the vaginal canal. Stewart and her team prototyped different speculum designs and then put them into the hands of OB/GYN physicians to test, who noted that the improvements in ergonomics and form ultimately improved ease of use and efficiency when conducting exams.
On top of an upgrade of the medical instruments used in pelvic exams, the design team wanted to take it one step further by evaluating the exam experience as a whole. Before even prototyping, the designers conducted a series of in-field research sessions with patients and providers to understand the true pain points of gynecological visits in both a technical and emotional sense. “We realized that redesigning the speculum was the right place to start, but it was inseparable from the context in which it is used…There are so many moments in the exam process that are anxiety-inducing, and simple adjustments in the overall experience can go a long way in reducing that anxiety and discomfort, making for a more human exam experience. We wanted to consider the end-to-end exam by improving a few specific elements and moments and how they flow together to empower the patient and promote healthy outcomes,” noted the team.
The first part of the Yona experience design involves an exam room app where you can set your exam procedure preferences and ask a health provider any prior questions you may have before getting started.
The team also designed products for the actual exam room that promote a more seamless and relaxed environment, like a hanger that allows you to hang your clothes as opposed to piling them in a corner as well as a playful graphic that shows you exactly where your butt should go (in an attempt, as they write it, to reduce “lots of awkward scootching and cold butts on crinkly paper”)
The Yona experience even incorporates a special meditation app that makes time waiting for the doctor more about zoning into a calm space rather than waiting awkwardly and nervously for your exam, which in turn makes the doctor’s job that much easier.
Although at the moment Yona is a conceptual project very much still in development, the whole team says this is just the beginning: “We will be continuing to prototype, test and refine all the concepts included in Yona…eventually, we want to branch out to other aspects of the pelvic exam, like the stirrups and the exam table, and even other exams entirely.”
The women who designed Yona are hoping to eventually partner with the right organization to bring this to life, but for now, they say it’s about refining their concept to get the details just right—the most important part of the process is dreaming up a more human healthcare experience.
With treehouse-hideaways, scratching mats, beds and more, IKEA’s first-ever furniture range designed specifically for pets was created in collaboration with a vet, in order to make sure animals’ needs were accounted for. Designed by Inma Bermudéz……
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Like a third shot of espresso, mild electrocution or a punch to the chest, the music of Django Django offers a surge of delirious energy. The band’s latest psychedelic rock number “Tic Tac Toe” comes complete with a rapid-fire, zany music video directed……
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A safety vest unlike any other, Quiksilver’s
Highline Airlift vest—developed in collaboration with Aqua Lung and big-wave surfers Peter Mel and Jamie Mitchell—represents years’ worth of research and development. Very much resembling a wetsuit……
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IKEA‘s first furniture collection designed specifically for pets includes a treehouse-like cat hideaway, and a bowl that encourages dogs to eat slowly.
The Lurvig collection was designed by Inma Bermudéz, who felt there was a gap in the market for reasonably priced but nice-looking pet products.
As well as cushioned beds and scratching mats, the range includes scaled-down versions of iconic IKEA products, such as the Klippan sofa.
When developing the collection, the Valencia-based designer worked alongside vet Barbara Schäfer to make sure that different behaviours types and habits were being accounted for.
“It’s really important to use an animal’s natural needs and behaviours – like how they sleep, eat or play– as a starting point,” said Bermudéz.
“Dogs will definitely chew on their toys and bring in dirt from their daily walks,” she continued. “Cats will definitely scratch on most surfaces and are sensitive to smell and texture. So safe, durable materials are very important.”
Bermudéz’s 62-piece collection covers the basic areas of sleep, eat, play, travel and walk.
For sleeping, she designed the mini Klippan sofa, a treehouse-like hideaway, and cocooning inserts for Kallax shelving units.
A “friendly-smelling bed” is designed to be filled with owner’s old clothes and blankets, while a bed frame can be used as a cosy nook or turned upside down as a kennel.
“The piece that I’m most proud of is a pet cushion: we encourage owners to fill it with their old clothes, blankets or towels,” the designer explained. “The idea is that pets get a comfortable cushion with comfortable, familiar smells too.”
For dinner time, she developed a shallow bowl that encourages dogs to eat slowly.
“Cats are generally good at regulating how much food they eat, however a number of dog breeds still retain the desire to overeat,” she said.
“That’s how the slow feed bowl became part of the Lurvig range. By using a design that breaks up a bowl’s internal surface area, it prevents the dog from being able to inhale their food in one or two gulps.”
The rest of the collection includes reflective leads and collars, a travel basket, a play tunnel and a brush.
The designer even considered the less-than-savoury moments of pet ownership – creating a colourful range of poo bags and a litter tray shovel.
IKEA isn’t the first company offering tasteful design for our feline and canine counterparts. New brand Dote has just launched a range of pet accessories made from recycled materials, while Nendo’s range of Cubic pet accessories is designed to complement minimal interiors.
The post IKEA launches first range of furniture for cats and dogs appeared first on Dezeen.
Foster + Partners has unveiled plans for an office that will become Budapest’s tallest building – which readers are comparing to France’s most hated skyscraper in this week’s comments update.
Building a pest: readers are protesting against a tower designed by Foster + Partners for the Hungarian capital, saying it will block views of a famous hill and become a blemish on the skyline.
“Mr Foster, thanks for ruining a UNESCO World Heritage historical landscape with your phallus-shaped building,” said JaxonPollock. “Budapest will get its very own Tour Montparnasse.”
“I feel this is the wrong building in the wrong place and is disrespectful to the fabric of Budapest,” agreed Clichy. “I would have no objection to the scheme elsewhere in the city, where it did not impact on the skyline.”
Some readers had other concerns. “Something vaguely Hadidian about this,” wrote Melon Design, possibly referencing the building’s undulating form. “What’s nice about it? It looks very banal and dated,” said R2D2.
But regular commenter HeywoodFloyd defended the development, saying the city needs to grow:
What do you think of the design? Have your say in our comments section ›
Blade runner: readers are praising a decision by the Museo de Lourve for cancelling a sculpture it describes as “sexually explicit”, despite protests from the artist.
“Hooray for Louvre president Jean-Luc Martinez for showing the art world that taste is still paramount in Paris,” wrote Joe.
Readers tried to be tactful about its form, which resembles a man penetrating a four-legged animal. “It’s almost subtle enough to look as if they didn’t notice it until they erected it (pun intended),” wrote HeywoodFloyd. “Maybe smaller scale would have been less ludicrous?”
“I thought it was an android dreaming of electric sheep, but what do I know?” said Wally-Jumblatt.
But not everyone was offended:
Read the comments on this story ›
Neave it: readers are debating the state of social housing in the UK after Royal Gold Medal winner Neave Brown claimed that the poor shouldn’t have to live in poorly equipped high-rise blocks.
Stevenx47 said the lack of affordable housing was a design problem. “I think it is because of Neave Brown’s schemes that politicians have decided not to build public housing,” he wrote. “The general public do not like what he and other architects designed.”
“I think [Neave Brown] is exactly correct,” wrote Jan. “But it appears that massive high-rises will have to take over and, at the least, surround the towns and cities where the work is and, at the worst, become the norm for every hamlet in the state.”
h30 agreed with Brown’s remarks on how slab blocks foster poverty. “Isolation and segregation are exactly what leads to stagnation and decline, thus propelling the condition and worsening the environment for everyone.”
One reader changed his mind on the matter after reading the interview:
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Seasick: readers say this family home in Brooklyn made from stacked shipping containers is an interesting take on the architectural trend.
“This is a fresh approach to shipping container architecture, which I felt was getting slightly repetitive,” wrote Moho.
“LOT-EK’s work with containers is a real curiosity,” said TFO. “It’s not cheap by any stretch, which is what the general public can tend to think.”
“Pretty intense,” wrote Chris. “Gotta hand it to these guys for sticking with a theme.”
One reader praised the house for taking a risk:
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