Kai Hsing x John Cho Moore = "Beauty through Bamboo"

Filmmaker Kai Hsing recently posted this video about industrial designer John Cho Moore’s handmade bamboo, canvas and leather bags.

Besides the bag itself, everything from the materials and hardware to the production value and content are absolutely gorgeous. I’m not sure if it’s Hsing’s excellent filming and editing or Moore’s pristine workshop and meticulous technique, but it’s so composed as to seem staged. If only every ID process piece were produced this well…

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Backcountry Boiler Creator’s Counterpoint

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Yesterday’s post on Devin Montgomery’s (successfully*) Kickstarted Backcountry Boiler, and its seeming similarity to other chimney kettles, has kicked up the veritable shitstorm of comments, e-mails and debate on the nature of product evolution versus copying. Montgomery himself took severe issue with our wording, pointing out that our implication was that Kelly Kettles owns the chimney kettle idea (they do not) and that we accused him of unethical behavior, which he cheerfully debunked. Our apologies!

To set the record straight, Montgomery took the time to write in to Core77 and specifically describe what places his project in the evolutionary category:

[Yesterday’s post] suggests that the Backcountry Boiler is a modified Kelly Kettle, or worse a “copy,” and it simply is not. It is the state-of-the-art chimney kettle, an entire class of products of which the Kelly Kettle is only one (albeit the best marketed one).

Montgomery goes on to list a host of other chimney-kettle-producing companies, then gets down to the nitty gritty: What, exactly, his design brings to the table.

As to what the Backcountry Boiler does add to the state-of-the-art of chimney kettles, it is quite a lot. Before I first published pictures of the Backcountry Boiler (without the name) in an online forum in 2009, the state-of-the art weighed 21 oz, took up approx 251 ci of pack space, and could effectively boil 20 oz of water. The prototype I created weighed 6 oz, took up approx 90 ci of pack space, and could boil the same 20 oz of water. Even the production version, which was made easier to manufacture, weighs just 8 oz and can boil 16-18 oz. That kind of improvement (2-3 fold) is nearly unheard of.

What I did was create the first chimney kettle that one could practically carry around with them, and you can ask anyone who has used both the one of the first batch of the Backcountry Boilers and any other chimney kettle how immense the difference is. This improvement didn’t happen by accident. It happened by a lot of thoughtful design.

The story of the Backcountry Boiler isn’t one of the similarities it has to one brand of what had become essentially a commoditized product. It is about how a graduate student, working in his spare time, learned the fundamentals of both industrial design and a metal-working process called metal spinning to revolutionize a category of product that had been stalled for decades, making something that was not only marginally better than its predecessors, but such a leap forward that it opened it up to a whole new range of uses.

I encourage…further research [on] the history of the chimney kettle, and even better, to read my blog [which details] how I developed the Backcountry Boiler after the first prototype. If you do that, I think you will find that rather than “raising thorny questions” about what can be done on Kickstarter, it exemplifies the very best of what it can do.

*As of press time the pledging period has 22 days left and has garnered $38,608 versus a goal of $20,000.

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Dmitriy Yoav Reinshtein’s Work: Now This is How You Shoot Jewelry Design!

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We’ve stumbled across some astonishingly gorgeous jewelry photography by Tel-Aviv-based photographer Dmitriy Yoav Reinshtein.

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The provenance of all of the pieces is not clear, though at least a few are watermarked as having been designed by Michal Negrin, a jewelry designer with her own firm, also based in Tel Aviv.

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Guitarists: Need a Pick? Pack a Punch

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We’re digging the Pickmaster Plectrum Cutter, a simple metal punch that lets you turn any piece of sheet plastic, like your roommate’s ATM card, into a guitar pick. (Yep, “plectrum” is the dictionary name of those little rounded triangles.)

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The Kelly Kettle and the Kickstarted Backcountry Boiler: Valid Design Update or Copy?

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When we hear “Kickstarter” we think of wholly original product designs like Scott Wilson’s TikTok/LunaTik or Studio Neat’s Glif. Devin Montgomery’s Backcountry Boiler is the first project we’ve seen that takes a product already on the marketplace and tries to improve it without changing the overall design.

Remember the Kelly Kettle, the water-boiling camping thermos with a hollow conical fire chamber? Montgomery’s Backcountry Boiler is essentially the same design, albeit in a shorter and slimmer form factor and with a silicon stopper rather than a cork one. Given that the Kelly Kettle is currently being produced by the fourth generation of Kellys associated with the kettle’s design, we didn’t realize this was even legal.

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The Burning House Blog

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[all photos via Foster Huntington/The Burning House]

The latest “Objects laid out in photos” blog comes from New-York-based Foster Huntington, a man obsessed with “clothes, photography and American lifestyles.” Huntington’s Burning House blog asks creatives around the world, “If your house was burning, what would you take with you?”

The answers are a tad stilted, as most contain more than 15 items—that must be the slowest-burning fire ever—but interesting nonetheless, as it’s really a question of personal curation cloaked in a smokescreen of arson.

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Dave Johnson’s Buckyball-Moving Magnet Machine

Call me a hypocrite, but while I’m disdainful of Design for the Sake of Design, I’m all for Mechanical Engineering for the Sake of Mechanical Engineering. Dave Johnson’s self-built Magnet Machine sends Buckyballs on a little journey with no purpose, but does demonstrate some cool bits of electromagnetic science:

This machine manipulates small spherical rare earth magnets, slicing one at a time from the end of a long chain, moving it around a bit, then dropping it back to re-connect at the tail end of the chain.

It also demonstrates a little snippet of science called eddy currents. Watch how slowly the magnet falls through the aluminum tube compared to falling through air: the falling magnet generates an electrical current in the tube, and that current in turn generates a magnetic field that opposes the movement of the magnet, slowing it down dramatically.

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Wicked Work from Whipsaw

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California-based design firm Whipsaw has recently redone their website—with the help of Method, Inc., no less—and is now proudly displaying projects both new and not-so-new on the same page, something we dig in this era of if-it-ain’t-new-it’s-dead.

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Check out the evolution of their designs for Eton, which consist of alternative-energy-powered emergency portable radios, camping radio/flashlights and iPod stereos, dating back to 2007 and leading up to the latest, the 2011 TurboDyne Series designed for the Red Cross and featured up top.

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Woman on Airplane Twitpics Last Space Shuttle Launch

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Sports marketer Stefanie Gordon was lucky enough to score a row of three empty seats on a flight from NYC to Palm Beach, and even luckier to look out of the window at the captain’s prompting and capture the above photo. It’s the Space Shuttle Endeavor making its final launch.

The times being what they are, Gordon Tweeted the photo from the ground and is now getting her fifteen minutes. NASA and every news organization you can think of re-tweeted the photo and news show appearance requests have been pouring in. Gordon’s Twitter followers shot from roughly 1,800 to the 4,000 range, and she’s been quick to capitalize on the boost: “Anyone want to hire me???” Gordon tweeted, with the hashtag “#worldfamousiphonephotographer.” Jeez Louise.

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Woman on Airplane Twitpics Last Space Shuttle Endeavor Launch

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Sports marketer Stefanie Gordon was lucky enough to score a row of three empty seats on a flight from NYC to Palm Beach, and even luckier to look out of the window at the captain’s prompting and capture the above photo. It’s the Space Shuttle Endeavor making its final launch.

The times being what they are, Gordon Tweeted the photo from the ground and is now getting her fifteen minutes. NASA and every news organization you can think of re-tweeted the photo and news show appearance requests have been pouring in. Gordon’s Twitter followers shot from roughly 1,800 to the 4,000 range, and she’s been quick to capitalize on the boost: “Anyone want to hire me???” Gordon tweeted, with the hashtag “#worldfamousiphonephotographer.” Jeez Louise.

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