New keyboard layout promises to increase tablet typing speed

KALQ split-screen keyboard

News: researchers at the University of St Andrews in Scotland have rearranged the letters on a split-screen keyboard to almost double users’ typing speed on a tablet.

The KALQ keyboard for touchscreen devices rejects the usual QWERTY layout in favour of placing vowels on the right side of the keyboard and most consonants and most first letters of words on the left.

The key to optimising a keyboard for two thumbs is to minimise long typing sequences that only involve a single thumb, say the researchers. Experienced KALQ users learn to keep both digits moving so that while one is tapping a key, the other is moving towards its next target.

After only 10 hours of training with the KALQ keyboard, researchers found that testers were able to type 37 words a minute compared with the average 20 words a minute on a QWERTY touchscreen device.

KALQ split-screen keyboard

Project leader Dr Per Ola Kristensson, a lecturer in human computer interaction at St Andrews, said: “The legacy of QWERTY has trapped users with suboptimal text entry interfaces on mobile devices.

“However, before abandoning QWERTY, users rightfully demand a compelling alternative. We believe KALQ provides a large enough performance improvement to incentivise users to switch and benefit from faster and more comfortable typing.”

The St Andrews team plans to release KALQ as a free app for Android-based smartphones and tablets next month, and users will be encouraged to tweak the layout of the patent-free keyboard however they like.

Earlier this year, BlackBerry’s head of design Todd Wood told Dezeen that the smartphone maker’s latest touchscreen keyboard will eradicate the “embarrassing” mistakes common on rival devices – see all technology news on Dezeen.

We recently reported on a transparent computer that allows users to reach inside the screen and manipulate content with their hands – see all computer design.

The post New keyboard layout promises to
increase tablet typing speed
appeared first on Dezeen.

Dezeen Mail #149

Dezeen Mail #149

Dezeen Mail issue 149 leads with OMA’s Shenzhen Stock Exchange (above) and designers discussing copying in Milan. It also features all the latest news, jobs and reader comments from Dezeen.

Read Dezeen Mail issue 149 | Subscribe to Dezeen Mail

The post Dezeen Mail #149 appeared first on Dezeen.

“Dumbed down” design and technology curriculum scrapped by UK ministers

James Dyson, photo by Eva Rinaldi

News: UK government ministers are to scrap the draft design and technology syllabus for secondary schools amid claims by industry figures including inventor James Dyson (pictured) that the curriculum had been “diluted” with skills such as cooking and gardening.

The Department for Education will now review subject requirements after admitting to the Telegraph that the curriculum, which was drawn up just two months ago, had been “dumbed down”.

The document was criticised after it emerged that pupils aged between five and 14 would receive lessons in sewing and knitting, bicycle maintenance and cultivating plants for “decorative displays”.

Writing in The Times in February, James Dyson, inventor of the Dyson bagless vacuum cleaner, said the academic rigour demanded in other core subjects was missing in the government’s “diluted” design and technology draft syllabus.

“Life skills such as how to grill a tomato and what to do if your bike chain falls off take pride of place,” he said. “Gardening has become a key component in a subject that should contextualise science and maths in a practical format.”

Pupils should learn to invent as well as mend and maintain, he added. “If the British automotive industry is to continue its renaissance it needs young engineers capable of questioning and improving rather than just fixing.”

During consultations, which ended on 16 April, Britain’s Design Council urged people to campaign against the “potentially retrograde proposal for design in our schools”, while the Design & Technology Association, a body that campaigns for design and technology teaching, said the draft syllabus would “seriously undermine 20 years of development in the subject”.

A government source yesterday told the Telegraph the revised curriculum would be geared towards helping pupils towards jobs in manufacturing, engineering and computer-aided design. “We have had a lot of good ideas on how to make the D&T curriculum more rigorous and more in line with what industry needs,” the source said.

The move comes just two months after the government abandoned controversial plans that would have removed design and other creative subjects from the compulsory school curriculum after age 14, proposals that were fought by key industry figures such as Apple’s Jonathan Ive and architect Norman Foster as part of the #IncludeDesign campaign.

D&AD president Neville Brody had described the government’s plans to “demolish” creative education as “insanity”, telling Dezeen: “The creative industries need high-quality creative graduates. If we’re not getting the graduates, we’re not going to sustain the industry.”

See all news about design and education.

Photograph by Eva Rinaldi.

The post “Dumbed down” design and technology
curriculum scrapped by UK ministers
appeared first on Dezeen.

Made by Humans by Universal Everything

UK studio Universal Everything motion-captured a dancer to make this animation, which is projected onto the world’s highest-resolution screen (+ movie).

“We choreographed a contemporary dancer in a motion capture studio,” Universal Everything founder Matt Pyke told Dezeen. “We then transformed the motion capture data into a digital sculpture, formed from the trails of human movement.”

Made by Humans by Universal Everything

The hundreds of white light points that form the dancing figure become strands that glow yellow, then red, before solidifying into blue as the dancer moves across the screen.

Universal Everything produced animations at a highly detailed 16K resolution for the 25-metre-wide by four-metre-high screen in the Hyundai Vision Hall, located at the South Korean motor group’s Seoul campus.

Made by Humans by Universal Everything

“The film was produced at such a high resolution to achieve a life-sized dancer moving through the space,” said Pyke.

The studio and various collaborators created 18 short films for the hall to turn it into “a space that inspires leaders, engineers, scientists, workers and designers to learn, rethink, and collaborate.”

Made by Humans by Universal Everything

More digital installations on Dezeen include Arik Levy’s interactive screen that uses visitors’ movements to mutate computer-generated crystals and a wall of digital animals that distract children on their way to surgery.

See all our stories about installations »

Universal Everything sent us the following information:


Hyundai Vision Hall

Euisun Chung, Vice Chairman of the Hyundai Motor Group (HMG), has a vision for the company that he leads. His aim is to align HMG with the best contemporary art, sculpture and digital design in the world. Artistic invention and innovation will be at the heart of both Hyundai and Kia’s future vision.

“The Vision Hall at Hyundai Motor Group’s Mabuk Campus is a symbolic space for presenting employees with Hyundai Motor Group’s values, providing them with a sense of pride, and sharing with them its dreams. The media wall, the central focus of the Hall, screens three video artworks that convey the vision and core values of the group.

An interactive artwork ‘Who Am We’ by world-renowned artist Do-Ho Suh was designed to develop pride and solidarity among the group’s employees and was produced through the participation of employees throughout the world. A metaphorical film series ‘Mobius Loop’ by Universal Everything expresses the group’s vision, management philosophy and core values. The third film, ‘Documentary’ depicts the last 10 years of Hyundai Motor Group’s history.

The Vision Hall – through continuous development of diverse creative content in collaboration with the group’s employees is a digital media archive that conveys and communicates the vision of Hyundai Motor Group” – Euisun Chung

To date HMG have collaborated with leading exponent and practitioner of Korean art Do Ho Suh, architect Elho Suh, and Peter Schreyer – Chief Design Officer for KIA, one of the world’s leading automotive designers (and a fine artist in his own right). The latest talent to be invited on-board are Universal Everything (UE) – an internationally acclaimed, UK based multidisciplinary studio working at the crossover of digital art and design.

The HMG Vision Hall

The Vision Hall is the first physical manifestation of E.S. Chung’s thinking. A contemplative and Zen like space at the entrance to Hyundai’s Mabuk University Campus – Elho Suh’s minimalist masterpiece that sits high in the verdant hills outside Seoul. Measuring around 900sqm the Hall is stripped of superfluous decoration, allowing visitors to appreciate its rich palette of materials and more importantly to concentrate the eye on its focal point and crowning glory – a 25m wide, 4m tall, 44k resolution screen seamlessly constructed from 720 micro tiles.

This is a space that will greet the majority of HMG’s 80,000 worldwide employees over the coming months – a space that will allow leaders, engineers, scientists, workers and designers alike to learn, rethink, collaborate and be inspired.

Universal Everything’s brief

Universal Everything were commissioned to fill the world’s highest resolution screen with content that would simply ‘inspire’. Such creative freedom is indeed rare. Matt Pyke, UE’s founder and Creative Director, was specifically asked not to include any brand related slogans or logos – furthermore he was requested not to feature Hyundai or Kia cars currently in production.

The sole ‘commercial’ request was to nod at the ‘mobius loop’ concept that underpins HMG’s whole ethos and production process. This loop symbolizes the infinite cycle of resource circulation and serves to connect all the innovative, creative activities and events of the Group into an organic whole. As an illustration HMG make steel to make cars, and then the cars are recycled to make more steel.

“The sheer scale of the vision hall, and the freedom that the HMG granted us gave us the power to create powerful, immersive audio-visual experiences which had never been seen or heard before. The commission allowed us to push our ambitions, transforming familiar subjects and materials into hyper real beautiful abstract expressions” – Matt Pyke

The intention is to allow Hyundai and KIA’s staff to digest the work openly and personally – to allow a deeper connection and to arrive at their own interpretations of the artworks – possibly seeing the familiar in the unfamiliar. The shear scale and resolution of the onscreen content combined with an immersive sound system would instill HMG’s staff with a sense of shared pride and solidarity – making them realize that they are indeed an integral part of the ‘bigger picture’.

Why ask UE?

UE were asked on board at the inception of the Vision Hall project as HMG’s ‘digital artists in residence’. The invitation came on the back of artistically pioneering and challenging work created for (amongst others) La Gaite Lyrique – Paris’ brand new Digital Art Museum, Deutsche Bank’s Hong Kong HQ and Coldplay’s sell out world tour of 2012.

UE’s response

The project has been the studio’s most ambitious project to date – requiring the core staff of 4 to swell to over 30 for the duration of the project. Matt Pyke and long term collaborator, director Dylan Griffith’s response to the challenging brief has yielded 18 films in total, ranging in duration from 00’40” to 02’45”. Created exclusively for their architectural context, the films allow the giant screen to become a ‘stage’ – a performance space that is often filled with life size humans and abstracted production processes.

The films mix a myriad of animation styles and live action – building upon UE’s trademark ethos of ‘maximum innovation’. Abstraction is pitted against familiarity to engage all types of viewer – whilst themes such as nature, technology and mans relationship with them feature heavily. All areas of HMG’s activity are explored with hyper real vision and audio – from steel creation to architecture, construction, future technologies, the corporation’s diverse multi-talented workforce to car design and production.

GGI studios in London, sound engineers in Germany and the UK, Korean programmers, an Italian Director of Photography and Film Directors from Amsterdam and Hong Kong were choreographed from UE’s home base of Sheffield, UK.

The post Made by Humans
by Universal Everything
appeared first on Dezeen.

YouTube Space Tokyo by Klein Dytham Architecture

Tokyo-based Klein Dytham Architecture has used the television-shaped icon of YouTube’s logo to decorate the walls of the video website’s new production studio in the Japanese capital (+ slideshow).

YouTube Space Tokyo by Klein Dytham Architecture

Architects Mark Dytham and Astrid Klein reproduced the red logo in lacquered ceramic to tile the walls of the reception. The tiles continue through to a lounge and a kitchen area, gradually fading to pink and then white.

YouTube Space Tokyo by Klein Dytham Architecture

“Clear branding is everything in the trillon-clip video landscape we live and surf,” Dytham told Dezeen. “It is seems to work; Time magazine uses the wall in their news articles about YouTube globally!”

YouTube Space Tokyo by Klein Dytham Architecture

In some places the shape is also used to create wooden box shelves, while elsewhere it provides the framework for a wall of black and white photographs.

YouTube Space Tokyo by Klein Dytham Architecture

Located in the KPF-designed Mori Tower, YouTube Space Tokyo is the company’s third video production suite to open, following others in London and Los Angeles, and it contains filming studios, editing rooms, training areas and lounges.

YouTube Space Tokyo by Klein Dytham Architecture

The main studio is arranged in front of a large window, allowing a skyline view as a backdrop for filming. Other features include a long curtain that can be used to partition spaces and modular sofas that can be reconfigured for different formats.

YouTube Space Tokyo by Klein Dytham Architecture

Dytham explains that the biggest challenge was fitting studio lighting into the ceiling heights of a typical office floor. “By locating the studios in areas of the floor plan with the least amount of air-conditioning ducting we could make them work in standard floor to floor heights,” he explained.

YouTube Space Tokyo by Klein Dytham Architecture

Klein Dytham Architecture also recently completed a Tokyo bookstore that, like the YouTube Space, uses the logo of the brand for the pattern on its walls. Dytham discusses this project in an interview we filmed at the World Architecture Festival.

YouTube Space Tokyo by Klein Dytham Architecture

See more architecture by Klein Dytham »
See more new projects in Tokyo »

YouTube Space Tokyo by Klein Dytham Architecture

Read on for more details from Klein Dytham Architecture:


Klein Dytham architecture
YouTube Space Tokyo

Klein Dytham architecture’s (KDa) project has its origins in a global act of generosity. YouTube has created YouTube Space Tokyo that provides free facilities for the use of their top video producers in Asia. Including studios, production suites, training areas, and lounges, the Tokyo center is one of a number of similar facilities YouTube are creating around the world – others are in London and Los Angeles. YouTube’s goal was to create a kind of ‘collaborative production facility’, providing both training and production support to help their most energetic producers elevate their videos to a fully professional level.

KDa’s unique interior project is located high in the Mori Tower in central Tokyo. On entering, the visitors encounter a visually striking wall of red panels derived from the YouTube’s iconic logo – the logo is three-dimensionalized, cast in lightweight ceramic and lacquered. Serving to orient visitors to the facility, the logos fade from bright red in the reception area to pink in the lounge to white in the café and kitchen area.

Around this KDa have arranged production studios, an audio recording space, a green screen studio, control rooms, an editing suite, a make-up room, green rooms, a VIP space, a café, and a large training room for seminars and learning software. All of the spaces – not just the studios – have been designed to allow shooting. The variety of wall surfaces, carpet shades, and ceiling configurations is intended to provide a wide range of settings. One wall serves as a ‘Hall of Fame’ showing images of the top producers. A super-long curtain – made from fabric by famed Tokyo manufacturers, Nuno – snakes through the interior allowing flexible division of the space. A custom-designed sofa can be rearranged to suit a variety of formats – panels, interviews, and so on. The space has also been arranged to maximize the use of the skyline view, including the iconic Tokyo Tower, as a shooting backdrop.

The project is remarkable in squeezing fully equipped production studios into a standard office floor. In the past, production studios required high ceilings to prevent the hot lighting rigs literally cooking performers. Modern LED lights, however, are cool and can be used in the space offered by high-rise office floors. KDa still needed to overcome considerable technical challenges, which they achieved in part by carefully placing the studios in areas of the floor relatively free of ducting and thereby gaining extra ceiling height.

The post YouTube Space Tokyo by
Klein Dytham Architecture
appeared first on Dezeen.

Herman Miller acquires Maharam for £101 million

Herman Miller acquires Maharam

News: American furniture brand Herman Miller has agreed to acquire New York-based textile manufacturer Maharam in a deal worth about £101 million.

The leadership of Maharam – a fourth-generation family firm founded in 1902 by Louis Maharam – will remain the same for the next two years, with current owners Michael and Stephen Maharam staying at the helm. They said the sale would provide the fabric company with “the greatest opportunity to flourish over time.”

“Much as we have struggled with this decision, the realities of generational transition coupled with timing and circumstance in our lives have brought us clarity,” they said in a statement yesterday.

“Our philosophical kinship makes this difficult step a far easier one. We believe that Herman Miller has the appropriate culture, intellect and resources to ensure Maharam a bright future while valuing our spirit and ways.”

Herman Miller CEO Brian Walker said the deal was “a natural and complementary union anchored in our shared values” as it looked to expand its product offering.

The purchase price is around one and a half times the value of the fabric company’s 2012 revenues, which stood at approximately £68 million.

The two companies have worked with the same designers in the past. Over its 111-year history, Maharam has created textiles for architects and designers including Gio Ponti, Hella Jongerius and Tord Boontje, as well as architect George Nelson and famed design duo Charles and Ray Eames.

In 1945 Nelson became director of design at Herman Miller, where he brought in a raft of modern designers including the Eames, who produced the majority of their furniture for the Michigan-based company while it was under Nelson’s leadership.

We previously filmed a movie with San Francisco designer Yves Béhar in which he explains how a suspension bridge inspired his office chair for Herman Miller.

Photograph shows Charles and Ray Eames’ Dot pattern fabric for Maharam.

The post Herman Miller acquires Maharam
for £101 million
appeared first on Dezeen.

New collection by La Chance

Milan 2013: French design brand La Chance launched its second collection in Milan earlier this month, featuring a bright red winged bench by Luca Nichetto and a fragmented coffee table by Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance (+ slideshow).

New collection by La Chance
Earhart by Luca Nichetto

Among the new products unveiled by La Chance this year was Italian designer Luca Nichetto’s Earhart outdoor bench, which is named after aviation pioneer Amelia Earhart and finished in the shiny red of her Lockheed Vega aeroplane.

New collection by La Chance
Borghese coffee table by Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance

French designer Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance contributed a coffee table to complement his Borghese sofa, while Israeli designer Dan Yeffet and Lucie Koldova presented Apollo, a cone-shaped glass and marble floor lamp.

New collection by La Chance
Apollo by Dan Yeffet and Lucie Koldova

La Chance has also initiated new collaborations with Paris-based architects Tolila + Gilliland, who created a wall-mounted wood and marble coat hook called Jeeves, and German designer Sebastian Herkner, who came up with an occasional table to go with his Salute armchair.

New collection by La Chance
Jeeves by Tolila + Gilliland

Nathalie du Pasquier, a founding member of the influential Memphis Group, unveiled a rug called France, while Beijing architects PIDO (People’s Industrial Design Office) came up with a tilted shelving system made of cross-shaped modules that can be positioned horizontally or diagonally.

New collection by La Chance
Jeeves by Tolila + Gilliland

French designer Guillaume Delvigne produced two pendant lamps – Hal, a thin LED disk that fits under different glass shades, and Swan, a large glass pendant (not pictured).

New collection by La Chance
Salute occasional table by Sebastian Herkner

Finally, Spanish and Ecuadorian designers Jorge de la Cruz and Diana Vernaza Gonzenbach came up with Podium, a tubular candle holder that places one of its three candles at a lower height.

New collection by La Chance
France by Nathalie du Pasquier

The collection was unveiled in the Brera district of Milan during the city’s design week earlier this month – see all products and news from Milan 2013.

Last year’s inaugural collection by La Chance included designs by Nichetto, Duchaufour-Lawrance, Note Design Studio and Francois Dumas, and we also filmed an interview with the brand’s founder Jean-Baptiste Souletie while reporting on 2012’s design week.

Here’s some more details from La Chance:


One year after its launch during Salone 2012, La Chance is back in Milan to present 10 new products: tables, seating, shelves, but also a new range of lighting, a rug, and some accessories. The French brand carries on developing a distinctive style with references to Art Deco with a great variety of materials in graphic and decorative yet practical designs.

New collection by La Chance
Tilted wall system by PIDO

La Chance continues the collaboration with hyperactive designer Luca Nichetto who created Earhart, a scenic and aerial outdoor bench inspired by the aircraft industry. It is named after the American aviation pioneer Amelia Earhart and shares the shiny red color of her Lockheed plane. Noé Duchaufour Lawrance enriches the Borghese range with a coffee table that completes the acclaimed Borghese landscape sofa. They share the characteristic vegetal structure inspired by the pine trees of the Rome’s Villa Borghese. Dan Yeffet and Lucie Koldova pursue the research on marble they began with the Iconic standing mirror and present Apollo, a surprising floor lamp that makes marble glow.

New collection by La Chance
Hal by Guillaume Delvigne

In addition, La Chance has initiated new collaborations and continues its search for talents worldwide with Spanish, German, American, French, Italian, Ecuadorian and also Chinese designers join in the team. Franco-­American architects Tolila + Gilliland have updated the conservative valet / jacket stand into an elegant wallmounted object made of wood and marble. It is called Jeeves in reference to the P.G Wodehouse novel character, a butler who defines himself as a gentleman’s personal gentleman. La Chance also works with Nathalie du Pasquier – founding member of the Memphis group ­‐ who created a rug called France. Strong graphics and explosive colors are the ingredients to this rug in line with her most spectacular creations. The rising star of German design Sebastian Herkner presents Salute, an occasional table meant to stand proudly by the side of the most iconic armchairs.

New collection by La Chance
Podium by Jorge de la Cruz and Diana Vernaza Gonzenbach

French designer Guillaume Delvigne has designed two very different pendant lamps: Hal is a small and easy lamp with a very simple and pure construction: a thin LED disk on which you can put different glass shades. On the other hand, Swan is an opulent large glass pendant with smooth curvy lines. La Chance also confirms its will to work with emerging talents and collaborates with Spanish and Ecuadorian designers Jorge de la Cruz and Diana Vernaza who designed a candle holder called Podium. La Chance also initiates one of the first collaborations between a European and a leading member of the boiling Chinese design scene. Beijing based architects PIDO 众产

Homedia TV by Robert Bronwasser

Milan 2013: Robert Bronwasser of Amsterdam design studio Smool presented a television set wrapped in fabric at Ventura Lambrate in Milan earlier this month.

Homedia TV by Robert Bronwasser

The Homedia TV by Robert Bronwasser has a curved fabric back and stands on brightly coloured legs.

Homedia TV by Robert Bronwasser

“While the number of channels in the past 20 years has quadrupled, the industrial design of the TV exterior did not evolve,” explains Bronwasser. “The average telly is a technical black shrine constructed of hard plastic. And the worst part is, its uninspiring form is dominating our interior.”

Homedia TV by Robert Bronwasser

The prototype TV was unveiled at Ventura Lambrate in Milan, where other designs on show included patterned rolling pins that make edible plates and a dining booth shaped like an old train compartment.

Homedia TV by Robert Bronwasser

Elsewhere in Milan, Italian designer Luca Nichetto presented a lamp that’s the height, size and luminosity of a TV – see all news and products from Milan 2013.

The post Homedia TV by
Robert Bronwasser
appeared first on Dezeen.

Rijksmuseum Café by Studio Linse

Interiors firm Studio Linse selected classic furniture by celebrated Dutch designers for the cafe of the recently reopened Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam.

Rijksmuseum Café by Studio Linse

The new cafe occupies an elevated platform in one of the former courtyards of the historic decorative arts museum, a space that now functions as the building’s entrance hall following an extensive renovation by Cruz y Ortiz Arquitectos.

Rijksmuseum Café by Studio Linse

Studio Linse used tables and chairs by Gerrit Rietveld, Wim Rietveld, Kho Liang Ie, Friso Kramer and Martin Visser to create a symmetrical dining area featuring pale shades of cream, grey and beige.

Rijksmuseum Café by Studio Linse

“The main goal was to honour the architecture of the building, so we designed something that was not too overwhelming and in the same colour tones as the rest of the space,” designer Barbara de Vries told Dezeen. “We then decided to take Dutch design classics and tried to choose really timeless pieces.”

Rijksmuseum Café by Studio Linse

The studio used the same polished Portuguese stone as the new flooring to create a long counter spanning the length of the cafe. “We wanted the bar to look like it rises out of the floor,” added De Vries.

Rijksmuseum Café by Studio Linse

To complete the space, two statues from the Rijksmuseum’s large collection were relocated to the entrance points and positioned to face one another.

Rijksmuseum Café by Studio Linse

The Rijksmuseum reopened to the public earlier this month. See pictures of the renovated galleries in our earlier story.

Rijksmuseum Café by Studio Linse

See more cafes on Dezeen, including one that also combines a laundrette and a hairdressing salon.

Rijksmuseum Café by Studio Linse

Photography is by Ewout Huibers.

The post Rijksmuseum Café
by Studio Linse
appeared first on Dezeen.

Tax Forms by FormNation

New York design studio FormNation has proposed a redesign for two US income tax forms to make them clearer and easier to use (+ slideshow).

Tax Form by FormNation

FormNation, launched in 2012 by Dutch designer Jan Habraken, decided to revamp the 1040 and W-9 forms to show how good design can make a complicated task much simpler.

Tax Form by FormNation

“I’ve had this idea for quite a while,” explains Habraken. “I thought there was an obvious need out there for a simple tax form that people could complete themselves without getting an instant headache. This is the direction that people want, but instead they often find themselves with added stress at tax time because they feel overwhelmed at decoding the forms.”

Tax Form by FormNation

The existing black and white 1040 and W-9 forms, which take up just a few sides each, have been expanded to create a less cluttered appearance, while blocks of colour help users prioritise the most important sections.

Tax Form by FormNation

Though the project was self-initiated, FormNation hopes to discuss the redesigned forms with the US Internal Revenue Service in the future.

Tax Form by FormNation

The redesigned UK government website was recently named overall winner of the Designs of the Year Awards given by London’s Design Museum – watch our movie interview with lead designer Ben Terrett and find out about his team’s 10 principles for good design.

Tax Form by FormNation
The existing 1040 form

We also recently featured a redesigned birth certificate featuring space for a baby’s footprint, religion and star sign – see all graphic design on Dezeen.

Tax Form by FormNation
The existing W-9 form

Here’s some more information from FormNation:


Since their inception, taxes have proved something of a confusing and downright unpleasant phenomenon, leading them to be listed alongside inevitabilities like death. A look at the current tax forms suggest that now more than ever, design can really help to innovate, promote ease of use, and add value to business and society.

This year when designer Jan Habraken sat down to tackle his taxes, he encountered the regular black and white cluttered paper with a mish mash of fonts and a maze of boxes. Instead of waiting for a change of heart by the IRS, Jan and his team at FormNation set out to create a user-friendly solution themselves.

“I’ve had this idea for quite a while,” says Jan. “I brought it up with my team at FormNation about it because I thought there was an obvious need out there for a simple tax form that people could complete themselves without getting an instant headache. This is the direction that people want, but instead they often find themselves with added stress at tax time because they feel overwhelmed at decoding the forms.”

FormNation set out to design a clear and easy to use form. The clever inclusion of color that allows users to prioritise parts of the form, streamlined fonts, and uncluttered space are indicative of genuine efforts by FormNation to minimise the confusion associated completing paperwork at tax time. “It’s about positive change where we can,” says Jan. “Change in the broad sense can be transitional, revolutionary, and transformative. It’s about making life easier, and making things more possible.”

This tax form is just one way in which FormNation is encouraging collaboration in fields where design hasn’t been seen as necessary, or an afterthought. Once viewed as something purely aesthetic, the design industry has grown cognisant of the fact that design shouldn’t be confined to their peer groups. “People care about design, it really can improve their lives,” says Jan.

The post Tax Forms by
FormNation
appeared first on Dezeen.