Your Abe Froman? The Sausage King of Chicago?

East Village Studio

Voici ce studio intitulé “East Village” et imaginé par le cabinet d’architecture Jordan Parnass Digital. Un effort particulier sur la rénovation de cet appartement avec des espaces multi-usages ainsi que de nombreuses quantités de stockage comme cet escalier-tiroir très original.



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Previously on Fubiz

Craig Skaggs’ fun footwear designs for kids

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pComing hot on the heels (pun intended) of our A HREF=”http://boards.core77.com/viewtopic.php?f=35t=22194″ One-hour Play-Doh Kicks design challenge:/A From A HREF=”http://www.coroflot.com/public/individual_file.asp?individual_id=329762portfolio_id=3790242″ Sponge-Bob slippers/A to A HREF=”http://www.coroflot.com/public/individual_file.asp?individual_id=329762portfolio_id=3803380″ Transformers kicks/A to A HREF=”http://www.coroflot.com/public/individual_file.asp?individual_id=329762portfolio_id=3791308″ Batman sandals/A, designer/illustrator A HREF=”http://www.coroflot.com/public/individual_profile.asp?individual_id=329762″ Craig Skaggs/A has got the goods when it comes to fun footwear for kids. br /
/pa href=”http://www.core77.com/blog/object_culture/craig_skaggs_fun_footwear_designs_for_kids_17214.asp”(more…)/a
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Apple’s desktop-to-touchscreen patent presents some industrial design challenges

pWhen I’m typing, I can’t physically touch my screen without leaning forward. Not exactly a layout conducive to touchscreen interfaces./p

pIf you were wondering how touchscreens could be ergonomically integrated into desktop machines, check out these patent drawings (filed by Apple in Europe and A HREF=”http://www.patentlyapple.com/patently-apple/2010/08/the-mother-lode-welcome-to-the-imac-touch.html” dug up by fansite Patently Apple/A) that show one possible design for a future iMac that could switch between keyboard and touchscreen modes./p

div style=”align: right;”img src=”http://s3files.core77.com/blog/images/2010/08/0applehinge001.jpg” width=”468″ height=”610″ alt=”0applehinge001.jpg”//diva href=”http://www.core77.com/blog/object_culture/apples_desktop-to-touchscreen_patent_presents_some_industrial_design_challenges_17224.asp”(more…)/a
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Xbox Halo: Reach advertising breaks

The advertising for the new Xbox Halo: Reach game is hotting up with a big integrated campaign launched this week by AgencyTwoFifteen and AKQA. The campaign includes new short films, as well as, excitingly, a giant robot arm that Halo fans can play with via the internet…

 

The campaign is created by the same team that were behind the hugely successful Halo: Believe work, which won countless awards and set a new benchmark for integrated advertising. The Believe work moved away from the usual context for gaming advertising, and instead of featuring game footage, the ads were shot in a huge diorama built especially for the campaign, which depicted an epic historical battle. It proved to be a huge success, leading to Halo 3 becoming the fastest pre-selling game in history.

 

All of this makes the new Halo campaign something to watch out for. Will the team be able to top what they achieved before? The new game will be released in mid-September and serves as a prequel to the first three Halo games. Advertising for it first appeared in May, with a film, Birth of a Spartan, showing a young man being transformed into a Spartan III super soldier. The new website for the game, rememberreach.com, now features more films that take us further into the world of Halo: Reach. A trailer for the films is shown above, but visit the site to watch them in full.

 

More intriguing though, and perhaps the diorama equivalent for this campaign, is a real life giant robot arm which visitors can interact with via the site. By logging in via Facebook, Halo fans can contribute to a virtual monument being created by the robot in tribute to the Noble team of warriors, who defended planet Reach. As in the Halo: Believe campaign, the idea here is one of remembrance toward war heroes, a concept of course familiar from the real world, rather than just a gaming notion.

 

The robot arm is being used to place points of light contributed by users onto the website, which will slowly build up to form a sculpture made of light. The image will be complete by the time the game launches on September 14. This video on YouTube from Wired shows how the technology behind the robot arm works (and is in many ways more revealing than the website itself). As well as the light sculpture, the website also gives info about some of the characters in the game (see detail below).

 

If the Halo: Believe campaign is anything to go by, this is probably just the beginning of what Xbox has in store for us in terms of Halo: Reach marketing, so interested fans should keep an eye on rememberreach.com for more developments.

 

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Inaugural collection by RVW

RVW by relay

New Swedish brand RVW will present their inaugural collection during the London Design Festival next month. 

RVW by relay

Above and top: The Flight series is a range that comprises a one, two and three-seat sofa. Flight is made with an ash frame, foam seat and is fully upholstered. The leg frame is lightly tapered and is made in ash to varying sizes depending upon the sofa frame. Flight is a large sofa; well crafted and built for comfort. It encourages the user to be at ease in various seating positions. The shape of the design juxtaposes sharp angles and soft curves, the result of which is a sense of timeless simplicity. The Flight sofa can sit comfortably, with no little modesty, in any room. Design: Artur & Jonas

Pieces on show will include Flight (above and below), a series of sofas and tables that appear to float on ash frames, and a series of modular shelving called Alog where T-shaped shelving elements are slotted into a diamond-patterned grid.

RVW by relay

Above: the Flight coffee table is made with an ash tabletop and massive ash in the leg frame. The Flight coffee table sits on the same frame as the sofa system; this features a lightly tapered leg detail that gives the design its lightness. The tabletop overhangs the base and is finished with a white pigmentation or a matte wooden finish. Like the sofa system, the coffee table extols the virtues of quality craftsmanship and straightforwardness. Design: Artur & Jonas

The company was founded by young designers Johannes Herbertsson and Jonas Nordgren, and uses both local and Danish manufacturers.

RVW by relay

Above: Don’t touch is a hand made vase that is available in either clear or coloured glass. This piece takes inspiration from the organic forms found in nature and plays with our perception of fragility. Unable to sit up straight, Don’t Touch invites you to play whilst holding a single flower with a sense of fun. Design: Jonas Nordgren

Based in Malmö, Sweden, the company’s name is derived from the word ‘review’.

RVW by relay

Above: Alog, a simple and fun modular shelving system, features a wall mounted modular block and easily detachable shelves that require no fittings. The nature of the design allows for various combinations and compositions of shelves (coloured or natural), allowing the user to create their own bespoke system. The design has strong roots in the language of grids and systems, functioning both as a shelving system and a visual wall display.

The Tramshed exhibition runs from 22 to 26 September in east London.

RVW by relay

Above: Haijk flowerpot. The glazed pot can be angled to follow the sun and each pine base is supplied with a small map showing where the tree was harvested and even which part of the tree was used.

Here’s some more from the designers:


Official UK launch of Swedish brand RVW at The Tramshed, part of the London Design Festival 2010.

RVW was founded by young designers Johannes Herbertsson and Jonas Nordgren in 2009. Based in the city of Malmö in Skåne, the southernmost region of Sweden, RVW employ the talents of local craftspeople and some from across the bridge in Denmark.

RVW by relay

Above: Mollis. Visually lightweight, this low-slung easy chair revels in its simplicity of form. The slender wooden seat is made from moulded veneer that curves around the body and is available in either stained or transparent lacquer finish, with upholstery in either fabric or leather. The chair sits upon a double cross steel leg frame, available in either powder coated or brushed finish. The Mollis is an easy chair that delivers comfort and elegance in equal measure.

Their name is derived from the word “Review”, illustrating their design practise of looking at objects again in order to find new and better ways for them to be made and enjoyed.

RVW by relay

Above: Appollo is an easy chair that exemplifies the notion of structural rigidity, it is compact, neat and has a reassuring sense of place. The seat shell is fully upholstered in fabric or leather. The chair sits upon a double cross steel leg frame, available in either powder coated or brushed finish. The Apollo clearly expresses a paired down aesthetic, yet with subtle detailing in the seat shell thus providing effortless comfort and visual clarity. Design: Artur & Jonas

Informed by their Scandinavian background, RVW represents consistency in creation, free from trends. Drawing on the wealth of knowledge, talent and skills of the region, they seek to create something new, something timeless.

RVW by relay

Above: The Spherique creates space for both contemplation and interaction. Inspired by the personality of the animated character with the same name it presents serenity in the urban web. Due to its asymmetric shape it both interacts with the room and creates a private space for thoughts. The shell is made out of 3D veneer and has a soft upholstered inner shell made out of different densities of foam. The Totoro shell is held by a double cross steel leg frame in brushed finish.

“We believe in preserving heritage as well as producing something specific and novel from the universal library of materials, ideas and geometries crafted over the centuries. We place great importance in maintaining the integrity of the slow art form of furniture design and in achieving a better understanding of the use of space, material and form. Our main focus is to produce tangible furniture without a time stamp, thus generating products that will last for decades to come. RVW seeks the refined solution and provides the work of art – we hope you will add the surrounding.”

RVW by relay

Above: Prosthesis. In medicine a prosthesis is an artificial extension that replaces a missing body part. In this coat hanger, the prosthesis unifies all its parts to a beautiful unit for storage of clothes. Design: Form Us With Love

The Tramshed, set to be the premier destination at this year’s London Design Festival, is delighted to announce the 25 exclusive international design brands exhibiting at this bold new venue.

RVW by relay

Initiated by De La Espada’s founding director Luis de Oliveira, and delivered by respected design-event experts Deborah Spencer and Alice Breed, this striking post-industrial venue will showcase the very best in high-end authentic design.


See also:

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Jens Risom
furniture
More previews of London Design Festival 2010More furniture
stories

Granimator talk at Regent Street Apple Store

Earlier in the year we blogged about Granimator – an iPad app that allows users to interact and play with visual assets created by a host of graphic designers, illustrators and artists.

Artists to contribute Granimator packs so far include the likes of Airside, James Joyce, Kate Moross, Buro Destruct, Yuko Kanatani and Pete Fowler – to name but a few – and now, Granimator developer, ustwo (who we profiled in our July issue) are set to host a free talk about the app and its development at London’s Regent Street Apple Store this Thursday, August 26…

As well as outlining the Granimator project, ustwo will be joined on Thursday by Airside, Kate Moross and Research Studios – who will all showcase their recently launched Granimator packs.

Creative Review will also be present and correct – to announce the imminent launch of a CR curated batch of Granimator artist packs, and to introduce artist David Henckel (one of the six CR pack artists) who will show his Granimator pack in action. More info about the CR Granimator project to follow in a subsequent post.

Join us at the Regent Street Apple Store in London this Thursday evening from 7pm-8pm

 

 

 

 

 

Rebuilding Construction Begins on OMAs Charred Mandarin Hotel in Beijing

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In October of last year, then-OMA employee Ole Scheeren said he believed that Beijing’s Mandarin Hotel/CCTV office, which he and Rem Koolhaas had designed but was severely damaged by a massive fire in early 2009 before it had even opened, was still salvageable. Turns out he might be right. Crews have begun working on the charred remains of the skyscraper, planning to remove most of the steel and decorative portions of the building and reconstructing it based on the original plans using its still-intact and relatively healthy concrete bones. No word yet on how long the rebuilding will take, but we’d guess that it might take nearly as long as it did to construct the original, given how much damage the exterior suffered (here’s our on the ground report from seeing the building up close when we were in Beijing shortly after the fire). Meanwhile, eight more defendants have recently been prosecuted for the fire, which started after fireworks shot from adjacent buildings landed inside the tower. These eight join 21 others who had previously been tried and convicted in relation to the incident.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Bad news–medication we take goes through our bodies and enters environment and other animals. Can wetlands help?

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p[image via A HREF=”http://geoscape.nrcan.gc.ca/h2o/bowen/factory_e.php” Natural Resources Canada/A]/p

pNowadays more people than ever seem to be on meds, which makes the following fact just so, so gross: Apparently when we take medication like mood stabilizers and beta-blockers, a fraction of it goes into our body, and the rest goes right through us into the toilet. Said medication then evades the normal wastewater filtration processes, and the resultant sewage goes out into the world. And then “even small amounts of these compounds can significantly affect the health of animals and ecosystems…. Unabsorbed hormones from birth-control pills and other drugs can make their way into rivers, where they can alter the reproductive patterns of fish.”/pa href=”http://www.core77.com/blog/technology/bad_news–medication_we_take_goes_through_our_bodies_and_enters_environment_and_other_animals_can_wetlands_help_17212.asp”(more…)/a
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Anne Ricketts

Mini anatomical sculptures from L.A.’s bronze addict
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L.A.-based sculptor Anne Ricketts creates miniature pieces of art for the body and home. Twenty years ago, she started her career with clay sculptures, but quickly transferred to sculpting in foam, wax and clay before casting her pieces in bronze. “Casting in bronze is addictive,” she says. “The tactile sense of the metal is amazing, it’s cold and hard, yet as smooth as skin.”

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A great deal of Ricketts’ work focuses on hearts, hands and feet, rendered in painstaking detail in sizes as small as one-inch high. The feet are arched or crossed, while the hands are clenched into fists, pointing or simply lying palm up. The impulse to pick up and and examine these minute masterpieces is irresistible, but Ricketts says that she started working in miniature as a cost-effective measure. “Bronze, especially with lost wax casting, is extremely labor-intensive and therefore expensive,” she says. “It was all I could afford to have cast.”

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Recently, Ricketts began creating equally small bud vases and jewelry, based on textile patterns from the ’50s. Her strong, distinctive earrings and rings fit in perfectly with her design aesthetic—expressive, sensual and inexpensive. “I like the challenge of working so small,” she says. “I also like the idea of making sculpture that people can hold, and of course afford to buy.”

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You can purchase Anne Ricketts tiny sculptures online from L.A.’s O.K. boutique or at Canoe in Portland, prices typically span $50-70.