Rhino Rig: A modular, shoulder-mounted system for mobile filming

Rhino Rig


As filmmaking becomes more accessible, the need for equally accessible and mobile professional quality equipment is evident. While there are shooting systems available, few seem as comprehensive and innovative as the Rhino Rig, a modular system…

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London Design Festival iPhone App

Weave your way through the fair with a handy tool that fits right in your back pocket

London Design Festival iPhone App

Like many of the world’s art and design fairs, when the London Design Festival began 10 years ago, the biggest challenge was actually navigating the event itself. Always teeming with a surplus of exciting offerings from across the creative disciplines, fairs present a vast array of work under one…

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Sticky Tiki

Removable fabric wall decals designed to help kids get crafty
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Kids are fickle. Keeping them entertained is a never-ending problem for parents. Enter Sticky Tiki, a creative solution in the form of reusable wall decals, originally hand-painted and printed by a crafty couple in Napier, New Zealand. Made from rip- and wrinkle-proof fabric, the graphics are backed with a low-tack adhesive for easy transfer— either to reconfigure the shape, apply them outdoors or to take them with you if you move.

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The printed fabric is also washable, so they not only encourage cognitive thinking through creative application, but allow for messy kids to go wild with them—perfect for interactive storytelling.

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Sticky Tiki wall graphics last three to five years, and have been tested for long-lasting strength after repositioning, which work up to around 140 moves. Leaving no marks on the walls when moved, if your little one outgrows the design, there is no need to repaint the room.

The decals come in a variety of styles and range in price, typically spanning $25-150. Pick them up online from the official website or Etsy shop, where you can also contact the makers about customization.


Editions for iPad

AOL’s personalized newspaper app

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To keep up with the fast-paced iPad app industry, AOL’s latest effort to up their relevance comes in the form of Editions, a magazine-esque daily news update specifically geared to the reader. After a test run, it rates surprisingly good—well worth the free download at least.

The aggregator aims to stand out by allowing for customization from preferred news sections all the way down to font size and banner cover. By syncing with AOL, Twitter and Facebook identities, it adapts to user preferences, providing only the news and information most important to them.

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Once you have a personalized profile, you can browse the app’s automatic suggestions or search for other sites to add. Messing around with tags and keywords provides more or less from any given source. These choices then roll into your profile, which updates for the following day’s issue, tailoring the content to your interests.

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Also of note, once you choose a news story from the in-app excerpts, the magazine redirects the user to actual news providers’ sites. This nice little ethical decision gives actual pageviews to the original publisher, giving credit where credit is due—an Internet-era practice we’ve always backed.

Look to the iTunes App Store where Editions is now available for free download.

via The Unofficial Apple Weblog


Paper Weaving Card Set

Stationery with a DIY twist for custom pixel graphics
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Sending someone special a card may seem gracious enough these days, but Present & Correct’s latest Paper Weaving Card Set really ups the charm with easy tools for constructing a personalized pattern in addition to undoubtedly endearing messages.

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The four-pack includes two “Happy Birthday” and one each of “Thank You” and “Congratulations” cards (all blank inside), as well as 40 paper weaving strips and envelopes. Wrapped in instructions, the handy guides show how to make more involved patterns, like an elephant or heart.

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THe 5″ x 7″ cards offer plenty of space to get crafty and sell online from Present & Correct for £10 each.


Sculpted Eers

Find the perfect fit with custom molded earbuds

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Custom-fitted to the unique shape of your ear in just four minutes, the Sculpted Eers earbuds from Montreal-based Sonomax deliver dynamic sound in an ultra-comfortable way. The DIY kit comes with easy instructions for achieving a perfect fit for either of their two models—a single speaker PCS-100 or superior dual driver PCS-200.

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The recently-launched earbuds will be available beginning spring 2011, and will sell for $200-300. To keep tabs on their arrival, follow Sculpted Eers on Twitter.


Zweed

A new line of customizable Swedish furniture designed to last
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If there’s any upside to the financial crisis, it’s the enduring emphasis on craft and artisanal production in the design industry. The “new austerity” has buyers looking to quality—of narrative in the design process, options and manufacture—as a selling point.

As companies continue to lure buyers with the added value of well-made products, there’s no better example of the way forward than Stockholm company Zweed. Founded this year by Håkan Johansson, Zweed’s ethos is simple: “To produce pieces of quality furniture locally with client’s inspiration and ideas taking a central part of the design process.” The designer stresses that the handcraft of each piece has to be of the highest possible quality—the idea being to create contemporary future classics which will grow with the user. In fact, he’s worked hard with his locally-based cabinet makers to ensure than every piece can withstand a good kicking, essential to the longevity of a product in this day and age, while reducing waste and protecting resources in the long term. Further good news for the environment is that Zweed produces each piece locally, meaning transportation’s footprint is kept low.

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As for the pieces themselves and how they fit into this new customer-focused method of design, Zweed’s outlook is very progressive. Take Moodi for example, a piece based on the classic ’50s sideboard. “Those seen in Scandinavia show just how this design has weathered the test of time and changes in tastes and, over half a century later, remains as relevant as ever,” notes Johansson. The Zweed twist gives the piece reversible sliding doors, which can be colored or finished using NCS Colours or natural woods, varnishes and oils. So, not only do you get to fit the colors to match your space but you can change them about as you see fit. If you get bored of the combinations, just give Zweed a ring and order more. The idea is both simple and individual, with more of an active story then something picked off the shelf.

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Zweed’s second product, Citti, is another piece which can be tailored to each client. Johansson explains that most coming to Zweed do so because they can’t find a design solution to fit their tastes and needs without having to compromise in size, shape or color. Citti is a storage system based on a simple modular format; “You choose the size, depth, number of modules, color or finish and decide if you need doors or internal compartments,” says Johansson. The beauty in the piece lies in the fact that by restraining the modular format, in terms of size of its constitute components, it can still be constructed by Zweed’s traditional cabinet makers, but keeps the costs of these bespoke pieces low. Again, as the colors are based on the NCS Colour System, the client has literally limitless options.

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Håkan’s studio is open to all visitors while overseas orders are happily taken, it’s simply a case of working out a budget, toying with colors and color combinations and then receiving a piece of pure quality that is personal to you and nobody else.
What can be better to restore your faith in the act of consuming than an investment portfolio of good, well-made design?


What Wood You Say

Custom wooden messages by Chicago artist Sighn
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As if his ambitious ITSOK project—hand-cutting one million wooden ornaments with the slogan “It’s OK”—wasn’t enough, the aptly-named artist Sighn is putting the creativity in your hands with his new project What Wood You Say. For a limited time, Sighn will carve out your favorite saying or wisdom-nugget for a tailormade art object or personalized gift.

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Sighn put it simply, recently explaining, “I’ve been getting requests for a long time, that I haven’t been able to make time for. This concept standardizes the production, making it easier for me to create custom pieces for people. I’ve also been doing some larger paragraph pieces for collectors, and have really gotten the font/way I make it down pat.”

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He will be accepting orders for his hand-crafted commissions through November and December 2010. Each signed and dated work sells for $5 a character (with a 50 character maximum) from Multi Polar Projects. To see some of Sighn’s more conceptual typographic works, check out his woodcuts at Allegoric Space.


Shortomatic Board Shorts

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Made in California, Shortomatic board shorts update the classic surf style with a host of patterns designed by both renowned and emerging artists like these pictured above by Brandi Milne and William Cawley respectively, or for a fully personalized pair you can customize your own by uploading an original image as shown below using some of my photos from Tokyo, shopable here.

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Shortomatic began as many passionate companies do, out of a frustration for lack of options. Feeling that board shorts all boasted the same graphics—usually of Hawaiian flowers or stripes—the team behind Shortomatic decided to challenge the stale market with a collection of bold and artistically driven patterns. Each pair is printed, cut and sewn in Los Angeles and made from a sturdy super suede polyester microfiber.

The shorts can all be designed and purchased online, each pair is $99 with a portion of proceeds benefiting the Global Green organization.


GelaSkins x National Geographic Covers

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Perpetually updating their line of removable adhesives for portable devices, GelaSkins adds the National Geographic to their list of intriguing collaborations. (Check out other CH favorites the Boombox series by Lyle Owerko and their recent DIY service, allowing you to upload and customize your own image.) Initially only available for iPhones and laptops, the National Geographic skins include a wide range of choices from their collection of riveting photographs.

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The skins range from $15-30 depending on size and are available online.