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Posted in: UncategorizedLight-extruding tech now available in app form
Posted in: UncategorizedOne of our most-Tweeted posts was the recent “How to extrude light,” which showed design consultancy Berg and Dentsu London’s innovative use of an iPad and long-shutter photography to produce images in space.
Unsurprisingly, the technology is now available in app form for both the iPad and iPhone with Garry Sommerville’s Holo-Paint–albeit currently for phrases only, so you’ll not be able to draw the cool cityscape above. It allows you to select the depth, angle, color, font, and various other settings, and thus far it’s ringing in at just 99 cents. (From some of the confused reviews, it’s apparently not clear that you also need an SLR. You do, in order to shoot your iDevice actually extruding the word.)
Nokia E-Cu by Patrick Hyland
Posted in: UncategorizedThis mobile phone concept by London designer Patrick Hyland can be charged by the heat in your pocket.
An integrated thermogenerator converts heat from any source into electrical energy to charge the phone, whether while being carried in your pocket or placed on top of a radiator.
The case of the phone is made of copper and features engraved heat-sinks in the shape of dried earth.
Here’s more from Hyland:
Nokia E-Cu (E for environment, Cu for Copper)
Heat-conductive charging system
Creating a charger-free cellphone future
Annually, unwanted phone chargers produce 51,000 tons of waste in addition to the greenhouse gases created by the production of the electricity needed to charge them.
The Nokia E-Cu is a mobile phone charged by sources of heat therefore eradicating the need for a charger. The phone has a thermogenerator integrated inside, which converts heat energy into electric potential energy.
It is surrounded by copper with engraved heatsinks in a dry earth pattern which represents the effect of heat on the natural environment. The phone can be charged by placing it on any source of heat e.g. a radiator, even inside a pocket.
See also:
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Eco-friendly phone for Nokia by Daizi Zheng | Etre Touchy by Etre | Punkt. DP 01 by Jasper Morrison |
Blair Kamin Talks ‘Terror and Wonder’
Posted in: UncategorizedIf it wasn’t made obvious by the near-weekly links we post to the writing of the Chicago Tribune‘s resident architecture critic, Blair Kamin, we’re big fans. While it’s always great to read his column and blog for the paper, it’s all the better when he has his own material to talk about and heads out on a press tour. His new book has just been released, Terror and Wonder: Architecture in the Tumultuous Age, which looks back at the business of building since 2001, ranging from terrorist attacks, an engineering disaster in the wake of a hurricane, and the booms and busts in construction and real estate. We’re eager to grab a copy and dig in. In the interim, he’s an interview with Kamin from the Tribune and here’s a bit from his appearance on Marketplace earlier this week:
…there were a lot of predictions made right after 9/11 that proved untrue. The skyscraper certainly didn’t succumb to the terrorist attacks. In fact, the world went on the greatest skyscraper building boom in its history — with more skyscrapers, with more formal invention being built than in any time in human history.
The larger point here is that this building boom in large cities gave us what I call “urbanization without urbanity.” Where there was an incredible surge of building, but there was also a cityscape that wasn’t necessarily humane.
New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.
Reax resuscitation device takes 3rd in Dyson Awards
Posted in: UncategorizedYears ago I drove an ambulance, and on my very first call I’d done chest compressions on a guy who was unfortunately too far gone to be saved. Afterwards the seasoned EMTs told me that CPR is a real Hail Mary that works less than 10% of the time, despite what you see in the movies. It’s a primitive way to try to pump blood to the brain, and they said that particularly on older patients, you could even accidentally crack their ribs while doing it.
Lars Imhof and Marc Binder, graduates from the University of Applied Sciences Northwestern in Switzerland, came up with the Reax concept as a more efficient, automated means of doing chest compressions.
“REAX” compresses the entire chest at regular intervals and forces the blood into the brain more efficiently and more evenly than with a manual cardiac massage. The flexible back panel can be installed quickly by a single person on the patient and adapts to the upper body. The paramedic is no longer carried out only deals with the heart massage but can take further action. Even during the transport to the operating room or in the CT continues the resuscitation.
The Reax took third prize in this year’s James Dyson Award. (First and Second prize, Samuel Adeloju’s Longreach Buoyancy Deployment System and Kimberley Hoffman’s Sea Kettle, respectively, have been getting plenty of blog love and we wanted to throw some spotlights on Imhof and Binder too.)
SuperDesign at Victoria House, London
Posted in: UncategorizedDezeen promotion: Dezeen is media partner for SuperDesign, an exhibition hosting international designers and galleries in London during the Frieze Art Fair next week from 14-17 October.
Top: Reverb Wire Chair by Brodie Neill for The Apartment Gallery. Above: Industry Table by Studio Job for Mitterrand+Cramer
The exhibition, which takes place at Victoria House on Bloomsbury Square, features work by designers including Tom Dixon, Michael Young and the Campana Brothers and galleries including The Apartment, Mitterand+Cramer and Vessel, plus our Dezeen Watch Store pop-up.
Above: Tom Dixon Cast Corti Candle Holder Rouge for Mitterrand+Cramer
The public view will take place from 10:00 to 20:00 on Friday 15 October, 10:00 to 18:00 on Saturday 16 October, and 10:00 to 16:00 on Sunday 17 October.
Here’s some text from SuperDesign:
SUPER DESIGN 2010
LONDON’S PREMIER DESIGN ART EXHIBITION RETURNS WITH A POWERFUL LINE-UP OF INTERNATIONAL GALLERIES HELD DURING THE FRIEZE ART FAIR
14 – 17 October 2010
Victoria House Bloomsbury Square London WC1 B4DA
Open daily: Free Entry
Now in its fourth year, Super Design has cemented its reputation as London’s most important and innovative exhibition of contemporary design art. Set within the imposing venue of Victoria House, the exhibition will bring together collections from leading international galleries and pioneering designers at a crucial time in the art calendar year.
Above: Issey Miyake Trapezoid watch at Dezeen Watch Store.
Spread over 1,500 sqm of exhibition space, Super Design will feature specially commissioned, unique and limited edition pieces from world-class international galleries including The Apartment, D&A-Lab, Quadrige, Mitterrand-Cramer, Tom Dixon, Herve Van Der Straeten and Vessel Gallery among others.
Above: Tom Dixon Flamecut series chaise
Devised by gallery owner Patrick Brillet, Super Design is a carefully curated event designed to showcase the ingenious capabilities of producers and designers and the inspiring collaborations that exist between the two.
At this year’s Super Design, The Apartment will be premiering two new chandeliers from the lighting series ‘Digit’, developed by Milan based designer Emmanuel Babled. Working with Murano glass and creating extremely dense and chaotic configurations of orbs, Babled breaks free from the conventions of the classic Venetian chandelier with his latest works ‘Digit Superball’ and ‘Digit Linear’.
Above: Philip Michael Wolfson Origami Chair for The Apartment Gallery
The Apartment will also be launching Michael Young’s new ‘Newspaper Shade’, inspired by his walks through Hong-Kong where he discovered an old paper folding technique which he developed and evolved to create stable forms and structures.
‘Newspaper Shade’ is made from around 10,000 bits of old Chinese newspaper and is the largest item produced using this technique. Also being debuted is Young’s ‘Carbonlite’ floor lamp, inspired by his love of Japanese hanging lights.
New work from Australian designer Brodie Neill will be presented by The Apartment including the seductive ‘Threefold’ light, a never ending aluminium surface in the form of a Mobius strip, radiating soft light from its striking sculptural centerpiece. A re-inter- pretation of Neill’s original solid surfaced ‘Reverb Chair’ will also be on display. This wire frame version, the ‘Reverb Wire Chair,’ amplifies the original’s vortex feel while mirror polished stainless steel rods map the expanding geometry of the overall conical form.
Above: Michael Young for The Apartment
The Apartment will showcase the Origami Mirror Chair (welded & folded mirror stain- less steel) by Philip Michael Wolfson in a new variation of his early works from the Origami series. Wolfson examines the abstraction of penetration, folding, layering and juxtaposition, creating a collision of static versus dynamic forces. The use of mirror finish steel multiplies the characteristics of the Origami Chair thru amplifying both the movement within the piece itself, as well as the surrounding environment.
The Apartment will debut Plug Light by Marcus Tremonto, inspired by French Pop comics of the 60’s. By manipulating and exaggerating size and form, the work forces the viewer to re-examine, question and consider the surroundings in which it exists, reminiscent of a cell in a comic or frame that tells a story.
Above: Maarteen Baas Secretaire Grey Derivations for Mitterrand Cramer
Geneva based gallery Mitterrand-Cramer, will be exhibiting new pieces from ‘Grey Derivations’, the latest furniture collection from rising global talent, Maarten Bass. Evincing the highest quality craftsmanship, the trademark of this Dutch designer, each piece is made of grey- and red-pigmented resin fixed on a steel frame.
Mitterand-Cramer will debut Paris designer Arik Levy’s luminous new ‘Facet Moon Table’ and pieces from his ‘Abstraction’ sculpture series and the startling ‘Wireflow’ black random light. Furniture from Rotterdam’s multi-disciplinary Studio Makkink and Bey including ‘Kade Chair 1’, ‘de Amersfoot’ chair and ‘Bonsai’ table will be exhibited. Swiss pop artist Sylvie Fleury’s series ‘Miniland-Untitled’ will also be showcased.
Above: Jonathan Monk for D&A Lab
Internationally renowned British designer Tom Dixon will present the Flamecut series, an installation of unfeasibly heavyweight furniture cut from 1inch thick steel using the traditional process of flame cutting. The Cast series, a collection of abstract forms made from aluminium sand casting, and finished with a bright enamel coating will also be shown.
Herve Van der Straeten will present a collection of one-off and limited edition pieces underlining the designer’s explorative approach. The Console collection (including pyschose, kasimir, piercing and cristalloide) a geometric explosion of overlapping cubes will form part of the display. The combination of balanced forms seemingly defies gravity creating the illusion of unattainable stability.
Creative pioneers D&A Lab, will be exhibiting ‘The Low Table 1984’, a new piece from British artist Jonathan Monk, part of its 2010 Designed by Artists Collection: Relative Objects, which challenges contemporary artists to translate their aesthetic vision into functional pieces of design.
Above: Jonathan Monk for D&A Lab (2)
Monk’s piece was inspired by renowned artist Donald Judd’s iconic metal ‘Bookshelf’ created in 1984. Monk’s reinterpretation was made by laying the bookshelf on the floor, rearranging the individual elements into a low table. The multi- coloured piece uses the same RAL colour palette in which the original bookshelf was made.
At Super Design Vessel Gallery will launch a series of lighting projects from both internationally acclaimed artists – Olgoj Chorchoj to new talents such as Marco Dessi. Each project is produced in a limited edition, focusing on the craftmanship and quality of the work.
In contrast to the lighting Vessel will also showcase a selection of artglass from the greatest artists collaborations they have shown in the last ten years, featuring artists such as Lena Begstrom, Baldwin and Guggisberg, Rony Plesl and Katy Holford.
Above: Esperancaby Campana Brothers for Vessel Gallery
Super Design seeks to emphasise the current synergy between design and the visual arts with innovative and ground breaking displays that present modern design in a fresh and invigorating light, in an inspiring location at the heart of the capital.
Visit www.superdesign-london.com for more information
Notes to editor
Patrick Brillet opened his first gallery in London, dedicated to post-war design, in the early eighties. Since then he has curated private and public museum collections throughout the world, acting as a design consultant to a number of major auction houses.
Above: 387 consolecristalloide by Herve Van Der Straeten
In recent years he has commissioned and produced studio pieces with both established and up-and-coming 21st century designers. In December 2005, he formed The Apart- ment gallery in partnership with Isabelle May. They now work with some of the world’s most renowned designers including Emmanuel Babled, Johanna Grawunder, Brodie Neil, Ross Lovegrove, Marcus Tremonto, Philip Michael Wolfson, Michael Young among others producing stunning and stimulating work and carries an extensive collec- tion of pieces by design luminaries including Ron Arad, Marc Newson, the Campana Brothers, Ettore Sottsass.
The Apartment Gallery Set within an intimate living space, The Apartment is a private gallery showcasing pieces by leading designers and select contemporary of both established and emerging talent, where collectors can buy quietly and privately in situ.
Above: 367 Consolekasimir Herve Van DerStraeten
Review: Essential Travel Jacket by Scottevest
Posted in: UncategorizedEver since airlines started adding extra surcharges for checked baggage, I’ve been working to perfect the art of jamming everything I’ll need when traveling into my carry-on bags. Unfortunately, overly-packed bags are difficult to access whenever I want to get at a personal item, like a book, while flying.
A few weeks ago, the folks at Scottevest sent me an Essential Travel Jacket with 19 pockets for us to review.
I’ve been wearing it since it arrived and I’ve taken it on a few trips during that time. It’s quite nice to be able to carry a book, my camera, an iPhone, my wallet, and sunglasses all close at hand.
I don’t have an iPad, but apparently you can even fit one of the front inside pocket, provided you wear a men’s medium or larger.
What impresses me the most about the jacket is that it is both fashionably simple and inconspicuous. Ordinarily, garments with an extreme number of pockets tend to make the wearer look like either Walter Sobchak or a pro bass fisherman. As you can see, this is not the case.
The garment seems very well made and my only real complaint is that it attracts and shows lint a little more than I would like. For that reason, you might prefer to opt for the red or beige version instead of buying it in black. I definitely recommend it.
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Lamborghini Sesto Elemento
Posted in: UncategorizedLe constructeur italien Lamborghini vient de présenter ce concept : la “Sesto Elemento”. Une superbe voiture entièrement construite à partir de fibre de carbone et de plastique renforcé. Un style angulaire et futuriste, à découvrir à travers plusieurs visuels dans la suite.