Kind of Scarves by Kind of Moving

Kind of Scarves by Kind of Moving

X marks the spot where a surprise gift has been hidden on these urban treasure maps printed onto silk scarves by Dutch studio Kind of Moving.

Kind of Scarves by Kind of Moving

Kind of Moving printed colourful plans of Copenhagen, Amsterdam, Tokyo, Paris and Ghent onto silk squares and marked on each the location of a treat, concealed with the help of friends that live locally.

Kind of Scarves by Kind of Moving

“We talked to friends about the idea of the scarves and they were willing to help, so we found great places and those became hidden locations in the cities,” Kumi Hiroi of Kind of Moving told Dezeen.

Kind of Scarves by Kind of Moving

Each scarf uses a simple scheme of two or three colours so building and street layouts are clearly distinguishable, with water highlighted in a shade of blue. “We wanted to use soft colours which we really love, but for the next scarves we are considering use stronger colours,” said Hiroi.

Kind of Scarves by Kind of Moving

The designers hope to extend the range of cities included in the collection by enlisting the help of more collaborators in various places. The scarves come in two sizes and are printed in the Netherlands.

Kind of Scarves by Kind of Moving

Similar stories we’ve featured include colourful scarves with pixellated patterns and maps that can survive being screwed up in your pocket or bag.

See all our stories about fashion »
See all our stories about maps »

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Below the Boat: Handcrafted bathymetric charts depicting underwater topographies in all their glory

Below the Boat

Beneath the hull of every boat, there is a sprawling underwater landscape that one doesn’t often get the chance to see. We can experience this nuanced world of ridges and rises, however, with the help of bathymetric charts, the watery equivalent to topographic maps. While most of these charts…

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PinCity Maps

Ale Maffioletti mi ha girato oggi la sua ultima creazione disegnata insieme a Emanuele Pizzolorusso: PinCity. Sono delle mappe in feltro di Amsterdam, Berlino, Londra, New York e Parigi prodotte dall’azienda italiana Palomar. Tutte le mappe sono corredate da pins con le quali fissare appunti, note personali, disegni, foto e i ricordi di viaggio. Stupende.

PinCity

Competition: ten Pin World and Pin City maps to give away

Competition: Dezeen are giving readers the opportunity to win one of ten Pin World or Pin City wall maps by designers Emanuele Pizzolorusso and Alessandro Maffioletti for Palomar.

Competition: ten Pin World maps to give away

The felt maps come with a set of 15 pins so you can mark notable places and attach photographs and memorabilia.

Competition: ten Pin World maps to give away

Pin World features locations of major cities on a figure-ground map of the world without political borders.

Competition: ten Pin World maps to give away

Pin City maps of Amsterdam, Berlin, London, New York and Paris include street layouts in a lighter colour, with places of interest marked and labelled.

Competition: ten Pin World maps to give away

The Pin World and New York maps are 130 centimetres by 70 centimetres and the other Pin City maps are 100 centimetres by 80 centimetres.

Competition: ten Pin World maps to give away

All maps are available in blue and black. Photography is by Andrea Poggesi.

Competition: ten Pin World maps to give away

We’ve also featured maps by Emanuele Pizzolorusso that you can screw up and put in your pocket – see them hereSee all our stories about maps »

Competition: ten Pin World maps to give away

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

Competition closes 22 November 2012. 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.

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Film Map – Original Open Edition

Se siete curiosi di sapere il luogo in cui è stato girato ogni film a Los Angeles, Dorothy le ha raccolte tutte in questa mappa. La trovate qui.

Film Map - Original Open Edition

Blinking City by Instant Hutong

Blinking City by Instant Hutong

Design studio Instant Hutong created changing maps of Beijing’s disappearing ancient alleyways using lenticular printed panels as part of Beijing Design Week.

Blinking City by Instant Hutong

The project explored the fragility of the densely populated neighbourhoods that surround the alleyways, called hutongs, which are constantly threatened with demolition to make way for high-rise development.

Blinking City by Instant Hutong

“We wanted to create a representation of the hutongs using an urban planning language,” Stefano Avesani from Instant Hutong told Dezeen at the exhibition where the project was displayed.

Blinking City by Instant Hutong

The panels appeared to change colour when tilted, rotated or walked past, and some of the blocks disappeared when viewed at certain angles.

Blinking City by Instant Hutong

While the colours did not act as a key to the maps, they served as a reminder of how lively the neighbourhoods are.

Blinking City by Instant Hutong

Instant Hutong have been mapping the old areas of the city since 2006, and have completed a range of related projects that include sewing maps onto fabric and hanging them from washing lines across streets.

Blinking City by Instant Hutong

The figure-ground drawings have also been printed onto wrapping paper and pizza boxes, which were displayed alongside the panels at the exhibition.

Blinking City by Instant Hutong

The exhibition was held in Caochangdi, an arts district in the north-east of Beijing that is home to a number of galleries and art and design studios and was due to be demolished until it was spared by the government in May 2011.

Blinking City by Instant Hutong

See all our stories from Beijing Design Week 2012 »
See all our stories about Beijing »
See all out stories about maps »

Blinking City by Instant Hutong

The text below is from the designers:


Instant Hutong is getting more visual in occasion of Beijing Design Week 2012! Italian designers Marcella Campa and Stefano Avesani’s participation at BJDW 2012 consists of the Blinking City Project, a multimedia setting made of interactive maps based on collages of historical Hutong neighbourhoods of Beijing. We played with our work, usually street-oriented and mostly focused on the daily interactions of people and their city, designing a unique exhibition environment made of maps and colours.

Blinking City by Instant Hutong

The project is composed of diverse parts, each of them using a different media to better express a sense of rapid change. In the exhibition space visitors will be surrounded by interactive maps and urban patterns that will progressively define an aesthetic merging of forms and colours inspired by a nomadic and itinerant urban geography.

Blinking City by Instant Hutong

The exhibition will feature a background wall composed by 32 new digital printings on lenticular panels, which vary according to the movements of viewers; a long map on paper roll to take away by the metre; video animation with relax area and an Urban Carpet by Instant Hutong which will change every day.

Blinking City by Instant Hutong

Blinking City project investigates the capability of maps to describe city environments characterized by fast pace development and urban growth. In such kind of urban context, as soon as the map is done the city it depicts has already gone.

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Instant Hutong
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Dezeen’s London Design Festival map

We’ve created a free map featuring all London Design Festival events! As the week goes on we’ll be labelling our favourites so keep coming back to discover the best shows.

See a larger version on Google Maps |See all our London Design Festival stories

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Seven Designers for Seven Dials installations curated by Dezeen

The London Design Festival is underway and the sun is shining so if you’re out and about this afternoon be sure to check out the Seven Designers for Seven Dials installations curated by Dezeen (+ map).

Aerial installations by young designers Faye Toogood, Vic Lee, Paul Cocksedge, Philippe Malouin, Aberrant Architecture, Gitta Gschwendtner and Dominic Wilcox are installed above the streets of the Seven Dials area of Convent Garden, London. Click on the map above for more details about each one.

While you’re there, pop in and see the Dezeen team at Dezeen Super Store at 38 Monmouth Street, where you can still get 10% off any Dezeen Super Store purchase (excluding sale stock and Jambox) and enter our competition to win a designer watch worth £150 by downloading this flyer and presenting it at the shop.

The map above is taken from a larger map we’ve put together to chart all the events at this year’s London Design Festival. Explore the large map here.

The Seven Designers for Seven Dials installations will be in place until 5 October and Dezeen Super Store is open until 30 September.

See you there!

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curated by Dezeen
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Tube Map Radio by Yuri Suzuki

Japanese designer Yuri Suzuki has made a radio from an electronic circuit board that’s arranged to look like the London tube map.

The map is inspired by a spoof diagram created by the original designer of the London Tube map, Harry Beck, which shows the lines and stations as an annotated electrical circuit. Iconic landmarks on Suzuki’s map are represented by components relating to their functions, including a speaker where Speaker’s Corner sits and a battery representing Battersea Power Station.

Suzuki told Dezeen he wanted to make the components visible because “it is difficult for consumers to understand the complexity of the workings behind the exterior” of today’s electronic devices. By creating a “narrative to explain how electronics work,” he hopes users will be encouraged to fix their own broken devices.

Tube Map Radio is one of two projects completed by Suzuki in response to a brief of Thrift set for Designers in Residence, an annual platform for upcoming designers at the Design Museum in London. Suzuki previously worked with Oscar Diaz to design a pen that records and plays back the sound it makes as it draws a line and, for his graduation project from the Royal College of Art in 2008, he presented products that investigated the physical properties of sound.

Photography is by Hitomi Kai Yoda.

Here’s some more information from Suzuki:


This year, the Designers in Residence project theme is Thrift and in response to this brief I have made projects which re-design the communication system of electronics.

I have investigated the workings of consumer electronics. Appliances such as transistor radios and toasters used to be easy for the user to take apart and repair. Today, products such as iPods have sleek, impenetrable skins and nanocomponents too small for the human hand to fix. It is difficult for consumers to understand the complexity of the workings behind the exterior.

In response to this, I have explored the use of printed circuit board (PCB), the simple and efficient components found inside the majority of electronic devices today. First project is tube map radio inspired by Harry Beck’s 1933 spoof diagram of his original design for the London Underground map drawn as an electrical circuit.

The PCB circuit pattern is extremely complicated and difficult to find out how electricity connect between components. In tube map radio I positioned electronic components based on the function of London city, for example speaker volume for speaker corner, power battery for Battersea powerstation and so on. Then you will realize how electricity is less complicated than you imagine, and if you replace it with something you are familiar with it will be simpler to understand.

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Topographic London posters by Melissa Price at Dezeen Super Store

Posters mapping the rivers and hills that form the topography of London by Melissa Price are the final product to be featured as part of London design month at Dezeen Super Store.

Topographic London posters by Melissa Price at Dezeen Super Store

The River and tributaries poster (above) shows all of the small rivers, streams and brooks that feed into the Thames as it flows through London, some of which have been built over and trapped underground.

Topographic London posters by Melissa Price at Dezeen Super Store

The Hills and valleys poster (above) highlights all the London place names that are derived from the geography of their location.

Topographic London posters by Melissa Price at Dezeen Super Store

The posters are screen-printed in metallic silver with blue or green on 160gsm matt white paper and signed by the artist.

Topographic London posters by Melissa Price at Dezeen Super Store

Each poster costs £40, and Dezeen readers can get 10% off any Dezeen Super Store purchase (excluding sale stock and Jambox) and enter our competition to win a designer watch worth £150 by downloading this flyer and presenting it at the shop.

Topographic London posters by Melissa Price at Dezeen Super Store

We have been showcasing a range of products by some of the best designers and brands London has to offer all this month – more details here.

Topographic London posters by Melissa Price at Dezeen Super Store

See more products available at Dezeen Super Store »

Dezeen Super Store
38 Monmouth Street, London WC2
1 July – 30 September 2012

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at Dezeen Super Store
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