Nokia is "first global company to embrace open design"

Nokia embraces open design

News: Nokia has become the first major manufacturer to give consumers access to its  3D design files so they can create their own versions of products, according to open design pioneer Ronen Kadushin.

“I’m pretty sure they are first global company to have a go at open design,” said Kadushin, following last week’s news that the Finnish mobile phone brand released digital files allowing users to alter and 3D print their own shells for the Lumia 820 smartphone.

Berlin-based designer Ronen Kadushin, who has been making open design templates freely available for download since 2005, says Nokia’s move is timely.

“I think they did it because they are in a business situation that pushes them to try this new model – not to make money, but to focus their brand identity as up-to-date and in tune with the 3D printing and maker culture,” Kadushin told Dezeen.

However, Kadushin doubts that Nokia will be able to control who downloads and uses their templates. “You have to register as a developer to download the files, but tomorrow it [will be] on The Pirate Bay for anyone to download anonymously,” he said. “But in any case, they will create a community of developers that will generate designs, new ideas, solutions and creativity.”

According to Wikipedia, open design is “the development of physical products, machines and systems through use of publicly shared design information”. Enthusiasts see it as an alternative to the “closed” product development model employed by major brands, that jealously guard their intellectual property.

Electronics company Teenage Engineering began offering replacement parts for its synthesisers as downloadable 3D print files last year, but Nokia is the first major manufacturer to allow users access to its designs.

Nokia embraces open design

Last April, Domus editor Joseph Grima talked about the birth of “the era of open design”. In an interview with Dezeen, Grima said: “More and more design is resonating with the spirit of the social media era where it’s much more about sharing ideas, collaborating, being completely transparent, completely open, rather than the secretive model of the past.”

Grima curated an exhibition in Milan last year called The Future in The Making: Open Design Archipelago, which explored how designers were harnessing digital design and manufacturing technologies to share information and manufacture products without having to rely of large-scale industry or major brands.

Dezeen’s editor-in-chief Marcus Fairs interviewed Kadushin during Vienna Design Week last year, where he warned that 3D printers could soon enable people to print ammunition for an army.

Kadushin also discussed open in a video filmed at the launch of a book on the subject in Berlin in 2011.

The book, called Open Design Now, claims that design is “undergoing a revolution” thanks to new technologies like 3D printers and accessible software.

“Anyone can be a designer today,” the book adds. “Professionals and enthusiastic amateurs alike are using open design – the creation of products using publicly available blueprints and instructions – to share their work with the world. Consumers are designing cars, restaurants, even prosthetic legs.”

Kadushin’s previous open-source products including a contraceptive device made from a copper coin and a mallet for smashing up iPhones – see all designs by Ronen Kadushin.

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Interview: CJ Jacobson : Favorite dishes and lessons learned with the enterprising chef

Interview: CJ Jacobson

by Vivianne Lapointe A former volleyball player, cancer survivor and Top Chef alum, Chef CJ Jacobson has been around the world twice and lived many lives. Shortly after coming back from an apprenticeship at Denmark’s Noma—owner of two Michelin stars and three “best restaurant in the world” titles—he now embarks…

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Barbershop Illustration

Focus sur ce superbe menu imaginé par Tyrsa pour le restaurant parisien Barbershop. L’artiste, dont nous avons pu consacrer une interview pour Fubiz TV 11, a voulu rendre hommage à Herb Lubalin et le mur qu’il a crée dans la cantine de CBS en 1966 avec cette illustration de 82cm de long travaillée au Micron.

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L’étagère-en-bois by Lucien Gumy

Cologne 2013: Swiss industrial designer Lucien Gumy has won the [D3] Contest at imm cologne trade fair with his interlocking wooden shelving.

L'étagère-en-bois by Lucien Gumy

L’étagère-en-bois, which means “wood shelves” in English, comprises various lengths of solid wood that can be assembled and taken apart without tools, screws or glue.

L'étagère-en-bois by Lucien Gumy

The tapered sections of the uprights slot into the small notches cut into the edges of the boards.

L'étagère-en-bois by Lucien Gumy

Lucien Gumy created the flat-pack shelves while studying at Ecole Cantonale d’art de Lausanne (ECAL) in Switzerland.

L'étagère-en-bois by Lucien Gumy

Gumy took first prize in this year’s [D3] Contest, the award for young designers at imm cologne. The second prize was awarded to the Tilt clothes rack by Tina Schmid, while third prize went to Dennis Parren’s CMYK lamp, which we featured recently.

L'étagère-en-bois by Lucien Gumy

We’ve featured several products launched in Cologne this year, including furniture by Nendo inspired by splinters of wood and a storage box and mirror that hang by a leather strap – see all designs from Cologne 2013.

L'étagère-en-bois by Lucien Gumy

See all stories about shelving »
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L'étagère-en-bois by Lucien Gumy

Photographs are by ECAL/Bruno Aeberli.

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Competition: five Ostføld smartphone, tablet or laptop cases to be won

Competition: five Ostfold smartphone, tablet or laptop cases to be won

Competition: Dezeen and Ostføld have teamed up to give readers the chance to win one of five felt and leather cases for mobile devices.

Competition: five Ostfold smartphone, tablet or laptop cases to be won

French studio Ostføld have produced a limited number of these accessories that are inspired by Scandinavian minimalism and handcrafted in a family-run factory in Silesia.

Competition: five Ostfold smartphone, tablet or laptop cases to be won

The grey felt tablet case has a leather pouch perforated with 698 holes and side pencil holder, suitable for iPad 2 and Samsung Galaxy Tab 2.

Competition: five Ostfold smartphone, tablet or laptop cases to be won

The smartphone holder fits iPhone 4 and 5 or Samsung Galaxy SIII and has a small leather pocket on each side for holding cards or cash.

Competition: five Ostfold smartphone, tablet or laptop cases to be won

MacBook Pros with 13 inch screens fit comfortably in the laptop cases that have a zip fastening along the top, two pouches on the front and a side pencil holder.

Competition: five Ostfold smartphone, tablet or laptop cases to be won

Each accessory is available with brown or black leather and comes with a wooden pencil and a 16-page notebook.

Competition: five Ostfold smartphone, tablet or laptop cases to be won

To enter this competition email your name, age, gender, occupation, and delivery address and telephone number to competitions@dezeen.com with “Ostfold” in the subject line, specifying which item and colour you would like to win. We won’t pass your information on to anyone else; we just want to know a little about our readers. Read our privacy policy here.

Competition: five Ostfold smartphone, tablet or laptop cases to be won

Competition closes 19 February 2013. Five winners will be selected at random and notified by email. Winners’ names will be published in a future edition of our Dezeenmail newsletter and at the top of this page. Dezeen competitions are international and entries are accepted from readers in any country.

See all our stories about mobile phone design »

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Blind Skating

Aveugle depuis l’âge de 2 ans, Tommy Carroll a commencé à l’âge de 10 ans le skateboard pour lequel il cultive une réelle passion. Eyeforce a décidé de réaliser une superbe vidéo sur ce skater faisant fi de son handicap pour s’adonner à son sport favori. Une magnifique exécution à découvrir en images dans la suite.

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"I brought bird cages back to the Seven Dials area" – Dominic Wilcox

Designer Dominic Wilcox describes why he chose to hang a row of bird cages above a street in London in the next movie we filmed about the Seven Designers for Seven Dials aerial installations curated by Dezeen.

"I brought bird cages back to the Seven Dials area" - Dominic Wilcox

“I found a book called Dickens’ Dictionary of London, written by Charles Dickens’ son,” says Wilcox. “In that book he describes the Seven Dials area as having many pet shops, with birds from all over the world.”

"I brought bird cages back to the Seven Dials area" - Dominic Wilcox

Strung across the street in a line, the bird cages were left open to symbolise that the pet shops have now been replaced by clothes and shoe stores, though Wilcox claims he spotted a few birds using the cages.

"I brought bird cages back to the Seven Dials area" - Dominic Wilcox

Dezeen commissioned seven young designers to create seven installations to hang above the streets of Covent Garden during last year’s London Design Festival, and Wilcox’s The Birds of Seven Dials installation was located on Neal Street.

"I brought bird cages back to the Seven Dials area" - Dominic Wilcox

Watch Faye Toogood talk through her installation of 49 worker’s coats in the first movie from this series here.

"I brought bird cages back to the Seven Dials area" - Dominic Wilcox

Wilcox presents more of his projects in a movie we filmed at Dezeen Live, a series of talks at 100% Design during London Design Festival.

"I brought bird cages back to the Seven Dials area" - Dominic Wilcox

Photography is by Mark Cocksedge.

"I brought bird cages back to the Seven Dials area" - Dominic Wilcox

The music featured in the movie is a song called Blue Sapphire by Remote Scenes. You can listen to the full track on Dezeen Music Project.

See all our stories about design by Dominic Wilcox »
See all more about Seven Designers for Seven Dials »
See all our coverage of London Design Festival 2012 »

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Seven Dials area” – Dominic Wilcox
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Hai by Luca Nichetto for One Nordic

Hai by Luca Nichetto for One Nordic

Cologne 2013: Italian designer Luca Nichetto has created a lounge chair with a folding backrest for Finnish design brand One Nordic.

Luca Nichetto added concealed hinges to the backrest of the Hai chair so that it can fold down in transit, in line with One Nordic’s philosophy of cost-effective shipping.

Hai by Luca Nichetto for One Nordic

The chair was shown at trade fair imm cologne last week as part of an installation by Nichetto imagining the house of the future.

One Nordic will also present the chair in three colour options at the Stockholm Furniture Fair in February.

Hai by Luca Nichetto for One Nordic

One Nordic launched at last year’s Stockholm Design Week with an inaugural collection by Swedish studio Form Us With Love, followed by products including a stool held up by three curved legs inspired by skateboards.

See all designs by Luca Nichetto »
See all products from imm cologne 2013 »

Here’s some more details from One Nordic:


Hai by Luca Nichetto

One Nordic Furniture Company is proud to present a new lounge chair in a series of launches this spring. Hai sets the tone as the perfect combination of Italian inventiveness and Nordic functionality, designed by Luca Nichetto. The lounge chair was first shown at IMM Cologne where Nichetto, as “Guest of Honour” created his own vision of the perfect house – in the extensive expo “Das Haus”.

“Hai is a combination of functional requirements and stylistic values. The brief was to create an object of great quality and strong personality, while meeting the requirements related to packaging derived from the world of online sales,” says Nichetto.

Nichetto is the first non-Nordic designer to collaborate with One Nordic and the collaboration opens up for an interesting interpretation of Nordic design. Born in Venice, Nichetto has strengths in both classical and contemporary Italian references. However, fascinated about Nordic form, Nichetto opened his second studio in Stockholm in 2011, combining his Italian innovative heritage with his fascination for Nordic functionality. “Designing the Hai chair, I wanted to create a new product with historical reference. A product with Italian touch but with a typical Nordic way of sitting”, says Nichetto.

“We knew that Luca was perfect for this project, he has deep understanding for Nordic design. Having spend a considerable amount of time in Sweden he has the ability combine his Italian Heritage with Nordic functionality and form,” says Joel Roos.

Following the One Nordic philosophy of designing for effective shipping, the Hai chair is a welcoming character with a foldable backrest, using less space and less energy when transported. The concept for Hai is focused on a simple yet strong feature, a well-made lounge chair challenging the flexibility of online furniture retail.

The concealed hinges in the backrest enable the lounge chair to be transported at almost half the chairs original size and assembled without tools. The effective solution is a hidden well-designed value, remaining until the chair needs to be moved or transported again. “We want to challenge the status quo of online furniture retail by producing something as complex as a lounge chair adapted with an effective transport solution and easy assembly”, says Joel Roos Founder of One Nordic Furniture Company.

The chair will be available in three colours. Price and final colours collections will be presented at the Stockholm Furniture Fair on the 5-9th February along with the first launch of the full One Nordic Furniture Collection.

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L’Etagere-en-Bois: IMM Cologne’s D3 Contest picks ECAL grad Lucien Gumy’s innovative bookshelves

L'Etagere-en-Bois

Seeing Lausanne University of Art and Design (ECAL) students top international design competitions is nothing new. Most recently, the prestigious D3 Contest, part of the international furniture fair IMM Cologne, has awarded its first prize distinction to 2012 product design graduate Lucien Gumy. Gumy was chosen among more than…

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Concentrated by Sruli Recht

Wooden clothes feature in Icelandic fashion designer Sruli Recht’s Autumn Winter 2013 menswear collection.

Concentrated by Sruli Recht

Layers of walnut wood were divided into triangles then mounted on a textile base to create a pliable material that forms the geometric shapes of the garments.

Concentrated by Sruli Recht

Most of the items in Sruli Recht’s collection are constructed from a single pattern and piece of material, with sweaters woven from complete unravelled skeins of wool and cotton blend.

Concentrated by Sruli Recht

The charred colour scheme of black and grey is broken only by a yellow ochre suit and a matching pair of suede shoes that have the patterns of the wooden items repeated on their soles.

Concentrated by Sruli Recht

Eiderdown collected from abandoned nests on the beaches in the Westfjörds of Iceland, metal mesh and reindeer skin are all included in the material palette.

Concentrated by Sruli Recht

Recht also created a ring from skin surgically removed from his own belly for the collection – see it here.

Concentrated by Sruli Recht

Other items of jewellery in the collection combine black and white acrylic resin with fool’s gold and peacock ore specimens, fused in a process akin to fossilisation and hand sculpted by jewellery artist Jade Mellor.

Concentrated by Sruli Recht

The wooden textiles were created with German designer Elisa Strozyk, whose wooden carpet project we featured a while ago.

Small oxidised metal pins for fastening collars and chunky wooden boots also feature in the collection, which was presented at the Carousel de Louvre during Paris Men’s Fashion Week last week (above).

Concentrated by Sruli Recht

Recht works from his Reykjavik studio to create garments and accessories from unconventional materials, and his previous collections have included stillborn lamb leather and silk extracted from a spider’s gland implanted in a goat.

Concentrated by Sruli Recht

We posted stories about a wooden t-shirt prototype and carnival costumes made from folded paper last year.

Concentrated by Sruli Recht

Photography is by Marinó Thorlacius.

See all our stories about fashion design by Sruli Recht »
See all our stories about fashion »

Read on for more information from Sruli Recht:


Story

This is the fifth complete menswear line from Sruli Recht. “This collection is completely burned.” – Sruli Recht, January, 2013. The collection in three words – facetted, charred, smoking.

Concentrated by Sruli Recht

The Concentrated collection for Autumn and Winter 2013/14 consists of 28 total looks – from heavy coats, fur jackets, tailored suits, cardigans, to trousers, shorts and underwear, pea-coats, shirts, sweaters and jerseys, complimented by boots, loafers, trainers, bags, raincoats, gloves, cufflinks and fossilized resin jewellery – 60 styles, approximately 150 with material variations.

Concentrated by Sruli Recht

All garments and product samples are produced in-house and in the EU, unless otherwise stated. The majority of the garments/ items are constructed from a single pattern piece and one piece of material, utilising an origami hybrid of tailoring, draping and digital modification.

Concentrated by Sruli Recht

This season employs a global selection of waxed cottons, leathers, wool and felts, silks, and timber, complimented by Icelandic reindeer and horse skin. A permanent creasing system has been developed for the mechanised pleat structures of the garments. Our buttons this season are in the form of a facetted shield, made from oxidised metal alloy rods, designed, moulded and drop-cast in the studio.

Concentrated by Sruli Recht

Materials

Featured sourced materials: Japanese denim and heavy satin, goat skin, walnut wood, cashmere rib, metal mesh, Austrian felt, Scottish waxed cotton, viscose jersey, wool and modal jersey, silk and cupro shirting, shearling, pixelated rabbit fur, and Italian wool suiting.

Concentrated by Sruli Recht

Anthropodermic Leather

In a documented one-time surgery-performance, a plastic surgeon removed a 110mm x 10mm strip of skin from the abdomen of Sruli Recht. The subcutaneous tissue and epidermis was then scraped from the dermis, which is stripped of fat by hand and blade, before being salted, and tanned with an Alum solution. The resulting leather from the dermis was prepared for use in the ring, Forget Me Knot.

Concentrated by Sruli Recht

Wool Silk Skeins

Complete and unwound skeins made of 30% silk and 70% wool, made in Switzerland, hand applied in an incredibly intricate process on the stand.

Concentrated by Sruli Recht

Polygonal Wooden Material

To transform wood into a flexible wooden surface, by dark digital art, a cell-phone whispered soft binary code to a walnut tree seed for a year, then planted it in the ashes of a glacier.

Concentrated by Sruli Recht

Once grown, the wood is deconstructed into geometric pieces, and then attached to a textile base by hand, creating a material half wood, half textile – a flexible wooden surface, completely fragmentary.

The “Wooden Textiles” in this collection are produced with Elisa Strozyk, uniquely for our garments.

Concentrated by Sruli Recht

Fossilised Resin

Emulating nature’s processes of fossilisation and weathering, our jewellery this season is made using resin and raw minerals. Combing black acrylic resin with pyrite specimens, and white resin with bornite specimens (peacock ore), each piece is individually hand sculpted by Jade Mellor.

Concentrated by Sruli Recht

Eiderdown

Hand collected Eiderdown from the abandoned nests on the beaches of Örlygshofn, in the Westfjörds of Iceland.
The down of birds is a layer of fine feathers found under the tougher exterior feathers.

Concentrated by Sruli Recht

Very young birds are clad only in down. The loose structure of down feathers traps air, which helps to insulate the bird against heat loss. The word down comes from the Old Norse word dūnn.

The down is cleaned in our studio for use in our show-piece Interdiktor.

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