Puma’s self-lacing sneakers come with a touch-sensitive control panel

Puma’s FI (Fit Intelligence) sneakers are here, and they look slightly different. Where you’d expect the laces to criss-cross on the front sits a grey block. Inside it lies Puma’s self-lacing tech. A motor that operates the laces, and a control panel on the top that lets you slide upwards to tighten and downwards to loosen the footwear.

“PUMA was the first to craft a laceless sports shoe with Velcro™ straps in 1968, the first to put a computer inside a shoe in 1986 and the first to introduce a wirelessly connected adaptive fit shoe called AutoDisc in 2016. Ever since, we’ve worked tirelessly on improving the functionality, the user interface and the durability of the shoe. The result: a technology that is smarter, lighter and more commercial.”

Following the trend first set by Nike (after they made their version of the self-lacing sneakers from Back To The Future), Puma’s FI are perhaps a more evolved, more acceptable form of the technology. The shoe comes with a breathable upper that allows it to be worn in most active scenarios, and an industrial grade fiber replaces the laces, wrapping around the sides of the shoe, tightening it effectively.

The FI’s all set to launch as early as 2020, and will come with an app that lets you remotely tighten or loosen the shoe. We’ve got our reservations on the idea of an app that controls your shoe, but the self-lacing shoe itself could be exceptionally useful for specially-abled users or even children!

Designer: Puma

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Never again

It is a wise person who can learn as much from failure as success. I try my best to gain what I can from mistakes and botched attempts, but there are times when it takes me more than once to learn a lesson.

Until last week, it never crossed my mind that I could track these failures and learn from them in a more systematic approach. Then, I saw this unique file folder:

The actual paper folder is unnecessary, but the fundamental idea behind it is brilliant. After seeing it, I created a folder on my computer called “Never Again.” Then, inside that folder, I made a series of plain text documents: Restaurants, Books, Websites, Ideas, Hotels, Vacations, Wines, and Gifts. In these documents I recorded important notes to myself about mistakes I’ve made in the past.

An excerpt from my “Never Again: Gifts” file —

  1. Anything with nuts in it for Mary (allergic)
  2. Massage gift certificate for Katie
  3. Scented candles for anyone
  4. Lilies for Dana (allergic)
  5. Smoking items for David (quit September 2008)

The documents I put inside my “Never Again” file are on subjects that I instantly knew I had information to record. I’m sure that in a couple weeks I’ll have even more documents. Learning from mistakes helps improve productivity, saves time, and keeps us from spinning our wheels. Tracking our mistakes in an organized manner can help us to learn (probably best not to buy anyone a gift with nuts in it) and to free space in our mind to think of something else.

If you’re worried about someone gaining access to your “Never Again” file on your computer, make the file password protected. A simple password will keep your mistakes from becoming public information.

What “Never Again” documents would you create? Do you think this is a way that could help you learn from your mistakes and save you time in the future?

 

This post has been updated since its original publication in 2009.

Post written by Erin Doland

DIY Fix for a Snap Hook Failure

On yesterday morning’s walk my fox-colored dog, Betsy, suddenly became free of the leash.

Luckily I managed to capture her before she went too far. (My fear is that she will wander onto a nearby farm and get shot, being mistaken for a fox. Everyone around here owns a rifle and you hear gunfire often.) 

Back in the house, I examined the leash to figure out what happened.

The snap hook failed. Not the bolt-spring mechanism, but the eyelet that captures the thicker part of the stem and allows the snap hook to rotate. 

The eyelet appears too worn to capture the stem any longer.

The stem appears only slightly worn, but is just a tad out of round.

I then purchased a new snap hook at the local farm supply place, intending to either sew up a new leash, or unstitch the old leash, insert the snap hook, and sew it back together. These are time-consuming tasks but do-able.

My wife suggested simplifying the task with a carabiner. One potential problem is that since the carabiner has no rotating mechanism, the leash would twist. This is problematic since I walk two dogs at once. 

But the carabiner was perfect for simply attaching the new snap hook to the old leash. It’s a little heavier on the dog’s neck, but seems to work fine and allows rotation.

In any case, this is the first time I’d ever seen a snap hook fail in this fashion. I can’t tell if this is normal/acceptable wear from use (I’ve owned this leash for about ten years), or if the cold had something to do with it; the past few mornings it’s been about 10F degrees (-12C). 

Either way I’ll likely replace the snap hook on the other leash, or build in some kind of redundancy, just in case.

The Perfection of Eggs as Packaging

Because we have free-range chickens, we often find eggs laid in random places around the farm. Every day is like Easter here.

These become breakfast, courtesy of the missus.

When a chicken’s diet consists primarily of bugs and grass (supplemented by feed in the colder months), the yolks are extremely orange-ish and delicious.

It’s hard to tell from the photos above, where eggs match. For contrast, below is a photo of a store-bought egg alongside an egg from our farm. I believe you can easily tell the difference.

In any case, eggs are really an incredible form of package design. 

That they just occur naturally is staggering. As evidence of the perfection of their structure, check out this egg my wife showed to me this morning.

It had frozen in the cold, and cracked. Look at how the crack runs perfectly straight, right down the axis of the egg.

Biodegradable to boot. I’d like to see a package designer top that.

A Desktop Machine That Lets You Make Your Own Bubble Wrap

Bubble Wrap obviously takes up a lot of space; indeed that’s kind of the point. So for businesses that go through a lot of the stuff, it would reduce their warehousing and shipping demands if they had a way to produce Bubble Wrap on-site.

Which is why Sealed Air Corp. sells the Bubble Wrap Inflator Nano, a desktop machine (28″ x 17″ x9″) that lets you do just that. You load in a roll of flat film, press the button, and it starts churning out everyone’s favorite packaging material:

The machine will set you back about $1,200, and you can choose 8″-, 10″-, 12″- or 16″-widths for the film.

Nike and MAD among companies on Dezeen Jobs hiring for lots of roles

This week we’ve selected five companies with plenty of job opportunities available on Dezeen Jobs, including a number of vacancies at sportswear giant Nike and Beijing architecture studio MAD.


Jobs at Nike

Jobs at Nike

Global sports giant Nike is recruiting for a number of technical design roles at its world headquarters based in Portland, including jobs as apparel computational designers and algorithm designers. The company recently unveiled its flagship store Nike House of Innovation 000.

View more job vacancies at Nike ›


Roles at MAD

Roles at MAD

This mixed-use complex in Nanjing, China, features supertall towers with cascading white louvres that will house offices, hotels, shops and apartments. MAD is seeking architects of all levels, interior designers, landscape designers and various roles in PR and marketing in Beijing, China.

View more job opportunities at MAD ›


Vacancies at Grimshaw

Vacancies at Grimshaw

Grimshaw has grown rapidly over the past 30 years, expanding its offices from London to Los Angeles, New York, Paris, Sydney, Doha, Dubai and more. The firm is seeking architects, urban designers and interior designers to join its London and Los Angeles offices. The studio recently completed the National Ecology Center in South Korea.

Visit Grimshaw’s company profile ›


Opportunities at Dezeen

Opportunities at Dezeen

Work with us at Dezeen! We are recruiting for a number of positions in London and New York, including roles in editorial, digital, sales, internships and someone to lead our hugely successful awards programme.

View the latest roles at Dezeen ›


Positions at Studio Fuksas

Positions at Studio Fuksas

Italian architects Studio Fuksas has opportunities for interior designers, product designers, BIM coordinators and roles in business development. The studio designed the Rhike Park’s music theatre and exhibition hall in Tbilisi, Georgia.

Browse all company profiles on Dezeen Jobs ›

The post Nike and MAD among companies on Dezeen Jobs hiring for lots of roles appeared first on Dezeen.

10 outdoor furniture designs for making a living room in your garden

Outdoor furniture was out in force at the recent Maison& Object and IMM Cologne furniture fairs, as brands responded to a big increase in customer demand. We pick out 10 of the best new designs, including rugs, shelving and a kitchen.

The two fairs saw many established brands launch outdoor furniture collections for the first time, like contemporary Danish brand Muuto, which unveiled the Linear table and bench.

“Venturing into the outdoor furniture category is something that we’ve been wanting to do for a long time,” explained design director Christian Grosen. “The demand has definitely been there,” added PR manager Katrin Fieseler.

Response “very positive” to outdoor shelves

It’s not only simple tables and seating on offer – many brands are offering furnishings not traditionally found in the garden. One example is heritage brand String, which has adapted its famous shelving system for the outdoors.

“We started to get a lot of requests for bigger shelves that could be used outdoors and we realised that, with some adjustments, the metal range would work perfectly,” said Peter Erlandsson, co-owner of String Furniture. “The response was very positive when we launched at IMM.”

Rugs “even more important” outdoors

New outdoor textiles are also being developed making it easier than ever to bring soft furnishings into the garden.

According to Nani Marquina, founder of the eponymous rug company, the introduction of textiles has been transformative in garden design.

“As you know, rugs define a room and create different environments while adding warmth and comfort. Thus it’s even more important in outdoor environments, where there’s an absence of walls and delineated spots,” she said.

Here are 10 of the most impressive new designs, picked by editor Amy Frearson:


Outdoor furniture: String Outdoor by Anna von Schewen and Björn Dahlström

String Outdoor by Anna von Schewen and Björn Dahlström

The String shelving system is one of the most famous Scandinavian design products of the last century. But now, for the first time in 70 years, Nisse and Kajsa Strinning’s modular design is available for the garden as well as the home.

Debuted at IMM Cologne, String Outdoor comes with newly developed shelves in aluzinc – a steel coated with aluminium-zinc – making the product resistant to moisture and rust. Meanwhile the floor panels are hot-dip galvanised to prevent corrosion.

“The material we use requires no additional surface treatment. Should rusting occur, the material has the ability to mend itself and stop the rust from spreading,” said String Furniture CEO Jonas Wetterlöf.


Outdoor furniture: Outdoor by Nani Marquina

Outdoor by Nanimarquina

The first outdoor rug collection from Spanish brand Nanimarquina is designed to “transfer the warmth of interior spaces to outdoors”.

Unveiled at Maison&Objet, the collection includes some of the brand’s successful indoor designs, like the colour-graduated Shade Palette and Tres Texture ranges. It also features a new design by the brand’s eponymous designer Nani Marquina, called Oaxaca, which combines floral and chequered patterns. All of the rugs are made from PET plastic, although they don’t look like it.

“We were surprised that PET offered similar aesthetic characteristics to wool, as well as visual and tactile similarities,” said Marquina. “PET has the same behaviour as wool in terms of fire resistance, but it provides great water and UV resistance.”


Outdoor furniture: Linear by Thomas Bentzen for Muuto

Linear by Thomas Bentzen for Muuto

Danish brand Muuto has moved into outdoor furniture with a table and chair set by Copenhagen-based designer Thomas Bentzen, unveiled for the first time at IMM Cologne.

Based on the traditional picnic bench, the Linear collection is made from powder-coated steel, and characterised by clean lines and folded edges. The table top is hot-dip galvanised to make it weather-resistant. It is available in black, cream, brown and green shades.

“The Linear Steel Series has been very much about delving into every singular detail that makes up the design while using the simple lines of Scandinavian design as a guiding principle, to create something that would remain relevant for years to come,” explained Muuto design director Christian Grosen.


Outdoor furniture: Patio Fabrics by Kvadrat 

Patio Fabrics by Karina Nielsen Rios for Kvadrat

Danish textile brand Kvadrat supplies fabrics to many of the world’s leading furniture companies, so the launch of its inaugural outdoor textile collection could pave the way for even more designs to be adapted for outdoors.

Developed with Copenhagen-based designer Karina Nielsen Rios, the new Patio fabrics are made with three colours of a highly durable flame-retardant polyester yarn called Trevira CS. They are suitable for all outdoor spaces, even spaces with high-humidity and chlorine like spas and pools.

“In addition to its technical features, it also stands out for a soft touch compared to other outdoor fabrics and offers exceptional colour vibrancy,” said Kvadrat.


Indoor-Outdoor by Bodil Kjær, reissued by Carl Hansen & Son

As well as new designs, outdoor furniture models of the past are also being launched. Among the brands doing so is Carl Hansen & Son, which recently added designs by Danish architect Bodil Kjær to its collection.

The Indoor-Outdoor collection is made from warm-toned teak, able to withstand changing weather conditions.

“Teak has a warm reddish-brown colour and, due to its natural oils, is highly durable,” said Carl Hansen & Son CEO Knud Erik Hansen. “The wood requires minimal maintenance and takes on a more beautiful colour over time, if you choose not to treat it with oil.”

The range was first unveiled in Milan last year, but is now available in stores.


Outdoor furniture: Kettal Outdoor Kitchen

Kettal Outdoor Kitchen

Outdoor furniture brand Kettal has added an outdoor kitchen to its collection, taking cooking al fresco to the next level.

Presented at IMM Cologne, the kitchen is made from aluminium with optional teak cabinet doors. It comes with a sink and a hob, and also provides space for a wine cooler or fridge. A matching trolley can be added, providing transport and additional storage.


Outdoor furniture: Vimini by Patricia Urquiola for Kettal

Vimini by Patricia Urquiola for Kettal

Kettal’s collection also includes a range of wicker furniture designed by Patricia Urquiola.

Launched in Milan last year, the Vimini collection is based on the classic Basket Chair designed by Nanna Ditzel in the 1950s. It combines a curving wicker basket with large colourful cushions and wooden legs.

“I fancied something really traditional, something a bit modernist, relaxed in the way we treated the fibre,” said Urquiola. “And the Vimini, the chair with its classic braiding and baskets, is captivating.”


Outdoor furniture: Liz by Ludovica Serafini and Roberto Palomba for Expormim

Liz by Ludovica Serafini and Roberto Palomba for Expormim

Hollywood icon Elizabeth Taylor was the inspiration behind this outdoor armchair designed by Italian architects Ludovica Serafini and Roberto Palomba, which Expormim showed at Maison&Objet.

It comprises a tubular metal frame, with fabric stretched over it, plus a fully upholstered cushion and backrest.

“Liz is a project inspired by the flair of the 1950s,” said the designers. “The elastic fabric stretching along the metallic tubular structure marks lines and transparencies, giving rise to a play of graphics and lightness that make you feel the soft embrace of Liz.”


Outdoor furniture: Mazzo di Fiori floor light by Massimo Castagna for Exteta

10th Mazzo di Fiori floor light by Massimo Castagna for Exteta

Italian architect Massimo Castagna has created an entire collection for outdoor brand Exteta, but one of the highlights is this outdoor floor lamp.

Handmade in burnished brass, each light comprises six stems topped with globes of polycarbonate plastic.


Outdoor furniture: Globe Planters by AYTM

Globe Planters by AYTM

Danish brand AYTM has made its bestselling indoor products available for outdoors. The Globe Planters consist of a painted stainless-steel bowl perched on a golden ring base.

Debuted at Maison&Objet, the planters come in a wide variety of sizes and colours, making them suitable for any garden.

The post 10 outdoor furniture designs for making a living room in your garden appeared first on Dezeen.

10 important architectural sites in Super Bowl 2019 host city Atlanta

Atlanta skyline

Atlanta is gearing up to host the 53rd Super Bowl this weekend, so we’ve put together a guide to the Southern US city’s most interesting buildings in case American football isn’t your thing.


High Museum of Art, Atlanta

High Museum of Art by Richard Meier, 1983, expanded by Renzo Piano, 2005

Known to locals as The High, this minimalist museum found its home in Meier‘s 135,000-square-foot (12,500-square-metre), white-concrete edifice the year before the New York architect won the 1984 Pritzker Prize.

It was later expanded by fellow Pritzker laureate Piano to add more exhibition space. The museum now houses an impressive collection, and hosts a rotating series exhibitions and installations by international designers, who have recently included Daniel Arsham, Jaime Hayón and Yuri Suzuki.


Hyatt Regency by John Portman, Atlanta, Georgia

Hyatt Regency by John Portman, 1967

A soaring atrium – which allegedly provided a model for Star Wars’ Death Star – sits at the heart of this 22-storey hotel, one of the first of its kind completed by late American architect John Portman.

Created as part of his major downtown redevelopment called the Peachtree Center, the Hyatt Regency‘s central space is surrounded by balconies and features futuristic elevators, all illuminated by a translucent skylight.

Photograph by Darren Bradley.


Atlanta Fulton Central Public Library by Marcel Breuer

Atlanta-Fulton Central Public Library by Marcel Breuer, 1980

Breuer‘s monolithic Central Library bears similarities to his famous Manhattan museum, with large expanses of flat external surfaces, punctured sparingly by small inset openings.

The Hungarian Bauhaus member and teacher died shortly before the building was inaugurated. His structure came under threat from demolition in 2016, but was saved by preservations and will now undergo renovation works instead.


191 Peachtree Tower by Johnson/Burgee Architects, 1990

Architects Philip Johnson and John Burgee completed this 50-storey office building in 1990, comprising conjoined towers wrapped in granite and grey-tinted windows.

Each is topped with a decorative crown that is illuminated at night, creating a pair of beacons to signal the city’s current fourth-tallest skyscraper.


Cannon Chapel by Paul Rudolph, Atlanta

Cannon Chapel by Paul Rudolph, 1981

This brutalist chapel at Emory University is most recognisable for its tiled barrel roofs, arranged in rows at different heights, and the tall concrete panel that bears a crucifix.

Inside, the curved ceilings are exaggerated by exposed beams, and wooden surfaces add warmth to the otherwise austere material palette.

Photograph by Mary Ann Sullivan.


Michael C Carlos Museum by Michael Graves

Michael C Carlos Museum by Michael Graves, 1993

Elsewhere on the Emory campus, postmodernist Graves created a 40,000-square-foot expansion to a Henry Hornbostel-designed law school that his studio previously renovated into museum galleries and classrooms.

The new wing was completed in 1993, visually reinterpreting elements of the original building in a more simplistic and streamlined way.

Photograph by Mary Ann Sullivan.


Playscape by Isamu Noguchi, Atlanta

Playscape by Isamu Noguchi, 1976

Japanese sculptor Isamu Noguchi formed this children’s playground – one of several he designed throughout his career – with equipment made from simple geometric shapes and coloured with primary hues.

Triangular red climbing frames, oversized 3D Tetris blocks and a blue slide spiralled around a cylindrical tower are among his objects clustered together within Atlanta’s Piedmont Park.


AmericasMart by John Portman, Atlanta

AmericasMart Atlanta by John Portman, 1957

Another section of Portman’s huge Peachtree development, the seven-million-square-foot (650,000-square-metre) AmericasMart is one of the world’s largest permanent wholesale trade centres.

Comprising three buildings connected by pedestrian bridges, the complex hosts several major trade shows each year, and retailers can rent permanent showroom spaces that open year-round.

Photograph courtesy of International Market Centers.


National Center for Civil and Human Rights by Phil Freelon and Marc Johnson

National Center for Civil and Human Rights by Phil Freelon and Marc Johnson, 2014

This 42,000-square-foot (3,900-square-metre) facility was constructed on land donated by the Coca-Cola Company – at the heart of the city’s tourist district – and acts as an educational and community hub for the past, present and future of the Human Rights Movement.

The building’s multi-toned metallic panels are intended to represent different skin colours, while its angled curving walls mimic protective hands.

Photograph by Marco Correa.


HOK's Mercedes-Benz Stadium will host the 53rd Super Bowl

Mercedes-Benz Stadium by HOK, 2017

For sports fans or not, HOK‘s 71,000-seat venue that plays home to the Atlanta Falcons NFL team is a spectacle – built from huge faceted plates that overlap to surround the central bowl.

The stadium’s most notable feature is its retractable roof, formed from eight ETFE “petals” that slide past each other like a camera aperture to open or close.

Find out more about Mercedes-Benz Stadium ›

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Laced Scenes of Intimacy

Agnes Herczeg est une artiste hongroise, dont le travail consiste à tisser des motifs figuratifs à l’aide de brins de nylon colorés et de morceaux de bois trouvés, soit en les intégrant dans son image, soit en les utilisant comme cadre. Ici dans cette série de scène intimes, l’artiste mêle des scènes bucoliques avec et sans sujets centraux, en tissant des noeuds qui dessinent par transparence le motif. Les oeuvres ainsi produites sont ensuite suspendues, et c’est avec quelque distance que l’oeil est capable de voir l’image que l’assemblage de fils produit. Les dégradés de couleur sont admirables, tout comme l’usage de morceaux de bois inégaux qui supportent et mettent en valeur de tissage dans son entier.





Typography and Portraiture Harmoniously Combined by Sam Rodriguez

Sam Rodriguez est un artiste américain originaire de San José, en Californie. Dans son travail, il explore deux types de portraits qu’il appelle «Typographical Portraiture» et «Type Faces». «Les portraits topographiques sont réalisés en stylisant un portrait avec des lignes et des formes topographiques, de la même manière que ceux trouvés à travers des images sur des cartes géographiques. Mes « Type Faces », incorporent typographie et portrait. J’ai développé ces formes de portrait à travers d’innombrables sessions en studio, dans l’intention de les utiliser comme plateforme pour explorer mon intérêt pour l’hybridité sociale, historique et culturelle », explique-t-il.

« J’essayais de comprendre comment faire un portrait que l’on pourrait regarder dans 50 ans et déterminer que c’était un produit de l’époque dans laquelle je vivais. D’autre part, je souhaite que mes œuvres durent dans le temps, et n’aient pas l’air démodées, mais ça ne relève finalement pas de moi. Quand j’ai enfin commencé à mélanger des formes dans mes visages, j’ai remarqué que d’autres faisaient de même, alors j’ai réalisé que je devais apporter quelque chose d’autre », dit-il.

Pour en voir plus @Samrodriguezart