Knitters Chronicle Climate Change With “Temperature Scarves”

From the “sky scarf” of the early aughts to the Tempestry Project today, knitters tap into climate change for guidance in their stitching. While the former accessory is about aesthetic inspiration, the latter aims to preserve data reported by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration through “temperature scarves.” These are two examples of the way colorful yarns tie into the climate crisis and our reaction to it. Knitting has been used as a teaching aid, as a means of reflection, and even to make a statement—as with BlackRock CEO Larry Fink’s “temperature scarf” at Davos. Read more at The New York Times.

A Visual History of Sneaker Design: "The Adidas Archive" Book Documents 350+ Pairs of Kicks

Here’s something every aspiring footwear designer will want to have for reference: The Adidas Archive, a 644-page tome cataloging “the history of the adidas shoe, from its earliest beginnings until today” as seen through over 350 shoes.

The adidas story is one of groundbreaking designs, epic moments, and conceiving the all-around sports shoe, worn by the likes of Lionel Messi, Run DMC, and Madonna.

A mecca for sneaker fans, this book presents adidas’s history through 357 pairs of shoes, including one-of-a-kind originals, vintage models, never-before-seen prototypes, and designs from Stella McCartney, Yohji Yamamoto, Parley for the Oceans, and more.

Strangely, publisher Taschen doesn’t have a linkable page to the book on their website, but you can find and pre-order it if you scroll down through this link. Alternatively you can pre-order it on Amazon. The book will be released on March 20th.

See Cars Floating Inside That Ship That Sank (And the Technique They'll Use to "Recover" Them)

Last year a car-carrying ship called Golden Ray capsized off the coast of Georgia, in the St. Simons Sound. All 24 crew members managed to escape, but the cars inside (a mixture of Kias and GM vehicles) did not. Yahoo News says there are nearly 4,000 vehicles on board.

The St. Simons Sound’s Incident Reponse Unified Command managed to get a LIDAR rig (I’m guessing via submersible drone, but they haven’t specified) into the hold of the ship. Using the laser, they were able to create 3D images of the interior, which is of course unlit. In these images of the 4th and 9th decks, we see cars peacefully floating.

In photos extracted from the Tweet above, you can see oil draining from the ship after the incident:

The Drive reports that a response team has since removed “over 320,000 gallons of fuel, oil, and water” (that last one has got me scratching my head) from the vessel. However, it occurs to me that the cars themselves also likely contain fluids; while I doubt they’re shipped with full tanks of gas, I’d imagine they at least have oil in them, and I wonder how long until they start to leak.

I’m wondering because, some five months later, the ship is still sitting there in the water. And I think I know why: Who do you call in this situation, outside of a team of superheroes?

Actually, there is at least one company that has successfully raised a sunken car-carrying ship before. A few years ago we covered the story of Dutch company Smit International, which specializes in tricky ocean salvage work. When a 50,000-pound Norwegian freighter carrying 2,800 BMWs, Volvos and Saabs went down in the English Channel in 2002, no one knew how to get it out. Smit International figured out that you’ve got to saw the entire ship into slices, and pull them out one-by-one. And that’s what they did!

A Volvo XC90 turned into an XC45

“Hello, Mr. Jones? This is Bill from Springfield BMW. I know you said you couldn’t afford the 535, but a situation has come up and we may be able to get you into one for significantly less”

A pair of Dutch workers reflect on how awesome Dutch problem-solving is while lamenting that no one wants to learn their language

Click here to see more images and details of how they pulled this off.

Light + Building fair postponed to September due to coronavirus

Frankfurt’s Light + Building has become the latest design fair to be postponed over coronavirus fears, and will now take place in September instead of March.

The show, which describes itself as “the world’s leading trade fair for lighting and building-services technology,” was due to take place in the German city from 8 to 13 March.

The announcement by organiser Messe Frankfurt follows the postponement of a string of design fairs in China and the coronavirus outbreak in Italy, which has jeopardised Milan’s Salone del Mobile.

“In view of the increasing spread of the coronavirus in Europe and after intensive consultations, Messe Frankfurt has decided to postpone Light + Building,” organisers said, blaming the new outbreak in Italy and the difficulty of screening overseas visitors.

“The unexpected appearance of [coronavirus strain] covid-19 in Italy since last weekend demanded a new analysis of the situation in close cooperation with the public-health authorities of the City of Frankfurt,” they said in a statement.

“A multi-stage health check on guests from China has been called for, the implementation of which would be extremely challenging for Messe Frankfurt.”

“Additionally, more and more travel restrictions are being put into place thus making it difficult for both visitors and exhibitors to attend the fair.” The event “will now be held in Frankfurt am Main between the middle and end of September 2020,” they added.

The decision comes after a number of brands pulled out of the fair.

“Our colleagues and partners have been forced to cancel their flights for the Light + Building trade fair in Frankfurt and, given that many other stands have already pulled out, we have decided not to participate in the trade fair for the aforementioned reasons,” said Italian lighting brand Fabbian last week.

Signify, formerly Phillips Lighting, decided to withdraw earlier today.

“Although we were looking forward to meeting our customers and presenting our newest innovations at Light + Building, we must contribute to helping to contain the issue,” said Signify CEO Eric Rondolat. “The health, safety and wellbeing of our employees, customers and partners is and remains our number one priority.”

The new strain of coronavirus, which first appeared in Wuhan, China in December last year, is increasingly disrupting international business and travel.

Yesterday the organisers of MIDO, the world’s biggest eyewear event, announced it was postponing its 2020 event in Milan due to the virus. Earlier this month, Mobile World Congress in Barcelona was called off for the same reason.

Milan’s Salone del Mobile is consulting with exhibitors and authorities about whether to go ahead with this year’s event. An announcement is expected later this week.

The new coronavirus outbreak has so far killed 2,600 people, with more than 79,000 people in 36 countries infected.

Main image courtesy of Messe Frankfurt.

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A Journey in Colors through Morocco

Sebastian Holmer a déjà prouvé ses compétence de photo reportage avec ses magnifiques clichés en Iceland, en Italie ou encore au Sri Lanka. Avec cette nouvelle série, le photographe allemand présente sa perspective sur les paysages, la nature et la vie urbaine du Maroc. Entre la frénésie des souks et le calme du désert, c’est toute l’essence du pays qu’il capture. A travers des images fascinantes, il présente « A Journey in Colors ».







The V3 Blaze is to wallets what Marie Kondo is to wardrobes

The genius of Jerry Seinfeld and Larry David was in the way they could accurately put their finger on ‘relatable memes’ LONG before it was a thing… one of the many cases-in-point, George Costanza’s wallet. Costanza’s wallet was like a hoarder’s paradise. Filled with things he never needed, but still carried because he could possibly need it someday. Costanza’s wallet was filled with items that Marie Kondo would agree “didn’t spark joy”, but it would be wrong to blame Costanza, because the wallet’s inherent structure is what allows us to abuse it. Make a wallet minimal and you’re forced to store it minimally. Allocate space within it cleverly and that minimalism doesn’t become a constraint, it becomes a feature.

The V3 Blaze Wallet from Valmor Design is the birth-child of a wallet and a lanyard card-holder. It’s small but expandable, and stores all the important stuff. Roughly the size of a card, the V3 Blaze stores as many as 4-5 cards that can be ejected using a retractable pull tab. Unlike most modern wallets that give cards preferential treatment, the V3 Blaze is equally accepting of banknotes and even coins. With dedicated slots for cash, coins, and a special RFID-protected slot for your cards, the V3 Blaze revamps the idea of a traditional wallet, allowing you to store the essentials in a format that’s compact and a design that cuts the clutter so you can access your currency or cards in a split second without needing to ‘rummage’. The wallet also comes with built-in NFC that you can configure with your smartphone, and there’s even a dedicated slot for an anti-theft tile-tracker!

The V3 Blaze’s renewed wallet avatar still sticks to traditional wallet materials. The wallet comes with a combination of top-grain leather on the front and elastic on the back to give it the ability to look classy while staying expandable. Measuring a mere 0.2-inches in thickness, the wallet prevents pocket bulges, and makes carrying your belongings easier. A key-loop on the top lets you either add a retractable lanyard to the wallet, or string your keychain in to combine all your EDC into a singular, compact bunch. Each V3 Blaze comes with rugged stitching to ensure it lasts for years, while that leather front cultivates a beautiful patina over time. Designed to restructure the wallet in a way that lets you be a power-user and not a space-abuser, the V3 Blaze allows you to prioritize, store, and access your belongings in swift seconds… because a fat wallet shouldn’t be ‘relatable AF’.

Designer: Saumiya Rachel

Click Here to Buy Now: $24 $46 ($22 off). Hurry, only 14/620 left.

V3 Blaze Wallet – Everything You Need in a Minimalist Wallet

The Blaze Wallet by Valmor Design is completely custom-designed for busy modern day professionals on the go.

Crafted from classic top-grain leather that will patina beautifully; each crease, nick, and mark burnishing it with one-of-a-kind highlights showing every step of your journey.

– Crafted from premium top-grain leather that will patina beautifully
– 2 cards in front pockets
– Central pocket that holds 3-4 cards, which is RFID protected
– Pull tab strap to easily access cards
– Highly durable elastic band stores up to 3-4 cards
– Drop-free coin pocket
– Lanyard loop/keyring attachment
– GPS tracker pocket
– Built-in NFC
– RFID protection
– Work ID or transit card easy scanning slot
– Slim, low-profile design
– Eco-friendly packaging

Slim and light. 0.2″ thick, 3″ wide and 4″ long.

Convenient pull-tab ejects cards in a flash.

Leather can be easily flipped open for easy access to coins, receipts and keys.

GPS tracker-friendly with a special pocket.

Tap and Go.

Click Here to Buy Now: $24 $46 ($22 off). Hurry, only 13/610 left.

A Watch Frozen in Time: Why CW&T is Removing Features from a Classic Digital Timepiece

Picture a digital watch. Not a smart watch or activity tracker—the most basic digital watch you can imagine. Chances are you’re thinking of something that looks like the Casio F-91W, the ubiquitous black plastic LCD watch that’s been on the market since 1989. Its simplicity, affordability (it costs about $10), and accuracy (twice that of a $30,000 Rolex) has made it a favorite with hardware hackers, artists, and—infamously—terrorists building bombs.

Now it’s getting a radical makeover from CW&T, the Brooklyn-based design duo Che-Wei Wang and Taylor Levy. Their Solid State Watch, currently live on Kickstarter, uses the F-91W’s inner workings as a starting point for a timepiece designed to make you think about your relationship with time.

Turning a generic product into a relic

“We extract the movement from the Casio and place it into a 3D-printed case. Then we pour resin into the case to permanently seal the movement,” Wang explains. “The upside is it’s completely waterproof, dust-proof, and user-error proof—the three great enemies of electronics.”

Taylor Levy and Che-Wei Wang making a Solid State Watch in their workshop

This process of encasing the electronics also renders the buttons useless and makes it impossible to change the battery, meaning the watch can never be reset and, after 10 years, it will lose power and cease to tell time.

CW&T embrace these limitations. Levy says, “We believe it’s important for designers to be upfront about the life cycle of any product, especially one that is electronic, since the technology is outside the scope of what most people understand. One of our studio mantras has always been that if someone buys something we make, to make sure they really feel like they own it. We do this by being as transparent as possible about how things are constructed and setting up expectations.”

Wang says, “If you think about it, 10 years is a long time for any electronic device to run, let alone a product that has gone three decades without an update. So our first intuition was to highlight and celebrate this amazing capability.” A decade of operation on a single battery cycle certainly is impressive compared to the phone in your pocket, which requires a daily charge and you’ll probably replace after a couple of years thanks to planned obsolescence. But CW&T’s point of reference for the Solid State Watch is less gadget shop and more natural history museum: “We think of this like an insect caught in amber. It’s frozen in time, but because it can live in a totally sealed environment, it continues to work for another 10 years before it becomes a relic.”

The Solid State Watch alongside some of CW&T’s other creations

Little Ingots of Time

Time and how we experience it has been a focus of CW&T’s work for years. Past projects of theirs include Time Since Launch, a single-use timer that counts for up to 2,738 years, and a series of “over-engineered” pens designed to last for generations. Wang says, “We use timekeeping like a painter uses canvas and paint. It’s a medium and a framework to explore subjects that surround time such as technology, materials, fabrication, long thinking, precision, accuracy, and decay.”

Making a watch was a natural evolution in their practice. But telling time in a straightforward way was never the goal.

Levy says, “Working with the F-91W movement felt a lot like working with raw material. It’s almost as if these things are little ingots of timekeeping. I guess we have the engineers at Casio to thank for that.”

Daily wearers of the Solid State Watch will have CW&T to thank for a more purposeful—if not always convenient—relationship with time.

“Right off the bat, you might be wondering how we deal with daylight savings time,” Wang acknowledges. “Since you can’t adjust the time, you can remember that it’s DST and adjust the time in your head or… get two watches.”

The Solid State Watch says that it’s 11:11:31 (but is it really?)

And while this humble marvel of ’80s engineering is remarkably accurate, it will inevitably drift over time. Wang explains, “You’ll notice it’s a few seconds ahead or behind, then a few minutes, then towards the end of its 10-year life, it might be off by half an hour. We want to celebrate that drift.”

—Nick Yulman, Head of Design & Technology at Kickstarter

CW&T’s Solid State Watch campaign is live on Kicsktarter until March 4, 2020 at 10:20 am EST

Giorgio Armani holds show behind closed doors due to Italian coronavirus outbreak

Giorgio Armani holds empty show amid Italian coronavirus outbreak

Italian fashion house Giorgio Armani has staged its women’s Autumn/Winter 2020 show in Milan without an audience for public health reasons as the coronavirus outbreak hit Italy.

Giorgio Armani released a statement early on Sunday 23 February telling guests not to attend the show and instead announcing that it would be live-streamed on its website and Instagram and Facebook pages.

The statement said the decision was made in order to “support national efforts in safeguarding public health”, and to protect the invited guests by stopping them attending “crowded spaces”.

The decision was made amid rising concern over the coronavirus outbreak in Milan. The Salone del Mobile furniture fair, which is due to be held in April, is “consulting with stakeholders and the government” over its response to the outbreak.

Giorgio Armani holds empty show amid Italian coronavirus outbreak

The Giorgio Armani show was held inside an empty showroom on 23 February at 4:00pm CET, at the close of this year’s Milan Fashion Week, which began on 18 February.

The show saw models walk around a raised rectangular runway surrounding a central display that used blue, moving lights to emulate ripples in a pool of water, populated with structures made to look like plants and petal-like forms suspended from the ceiling.

Giorgio Armani reinterpreted the grand costumes of literary heroes with a feminine focus for the show, incorporating epaulettes, small jackets with high buttoning and knickerbockers tucked into boots.

Giorgio Armani holds empty show amid Italian coronavirus outbreak

While the colour black permeated the collection, it was kept vibrant with additional shades of pink, lime green and blue, and beaded embellishments or feathers.

“The dialogue between the men’s and women’s wardrobe takes place in an atmosphere drenches with subdued romanticism,” said Giorgio Armani.

Giorgio Armani holds empty show amid Italian coronavirus outbreak

At the end of the show, 12 Chinese models emerged onto the catwalk wearing archival pieces from Armani’s couture Spring Privé collections from 2009 and 2019, which each took design cues from Chinese culture.

This was intended as “a message of love” for the country where the coronavirus outbreak began and the majority of infected people and deaths have been reported.

Giorgio Armani followed the models to close the event, gesturing thank you and waving to an audience that was not present.

Giorgio Armani holds empty show amid Italian coronavirus outbreak

Giorgio Armani was the only Italian fashion house to cancel its planned event amid the coronavirus outbreak. The National Chamber for Italian Fashion said in a statement that the rest of Milan’s runway shows went ahead as planned on Sunday.

The last-minute move was made amid news that the virus had spread within Italy to infect more than 200 people. There have been seven deaths in the northern regions of Lombardy – of which Milan is the capital – and Veneto.

Giorgio Armani holds empty show amid Italian coronavirus outbreak

Milan’s mayor, Giuseppe Sala, has said schools will be closed from today onwards while the outbreak continues, as well as universities in both Lombardy and Veneto until early March.

In total, more than 79,000 people have been reported as infected in 36 countries by the current coronavirus outbreak. The global death toll now stands at over 2,600.

Images courtesy of Giorgio Armani.

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A Journey through Japanese Culture

Nikko Pascua est un photographe basé à Singapore. Avec cette série, il nous emmène au coeur des villes japonaises pour un magnifique voyage artistique.

Dans la région du Kansai, il capture la culture conviviale et colorée de ce beau pays. D’Osaka a Kyoto, il photographie les moments de vie de chaque quartier, donnant lieu à une série photo-reportage sublime.

« Les maisons typiques japonaise et les feuilles d’automne les plus rouges sont ce qui m’a le plus marqué. Je peux passer tout un voyage à Gion tout seul et me contenter de photographier ses rues et ses ruelles, jour après jour. »







Farewell to Mathematician Katherine Johnson, Crucial “Hidden Figure” at NASA in the ’60s Space Race

From her time as a childhood math prodigy in West Virginia to her crucial role as a “computer” at NASA, where her calculations helped lead astronauts into orbit and then the moon, black mathematician Katherine Johnson was a pioneering figure in spaceflight. Johnson’s work was critical to NASA’s earlier successes—especially during the space race—but they wouldn’t get mainstream recognition until President Barack Obama awarded her the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2015. Johnson’s story was then chronicled in the film Hidden Figures two years later. Johnson has passed away at age 101. Read more about her the Washington Post.