Uncluttered baby: The EZ Bundle

This is an item I really wish would have existed a year ago when we were outfitting our home with baby gear:

The EZ Bundle 4-in-1 Baby System from Fisher-Price is an infant swing, high chair, newborn seat, and toddler seat all in one unit. You don’t need to buy four different items, just the one that transforms into the four different uses. Brilliant. And the suggested retail price is only $150.00 — which is less than many individual swings.

Like this site? Buy Erin Rooney Doland’s Unclutter Your Life in One Week from Amazon.com today.


Kwon Kyung Yup

Découverte de l’artiste peintre Kwon Kyung Yup, originaire de Corée. Une série et une sélection de portraits très réalistes entièrement conçue en peinture à huile. Cette jeune femme met l’accent sur l’émotion, et l’expression des visages. Plus d’images dans la suite.



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kwon-kyung-yup-bleached-memory

kwon-kyung-yup-cherish-the-memory

kwon-kyung-yup-mist

kwon-kyung-yup-adios

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daydream

mist

tearful













Previously on Fubiz

See you there!

David Zwirner to Launch Pop-Up Bookstore

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When the good people at David Zwirner [cue chorus of angels] e-mailed us with news that the gallery will soon launch its first annual summer pop-up bookstore, we briefly considered keeping the news to ourselves, so great is our obsession with admiration for many artists in the Zwirner stable (Luc Tuymans! Marlene Dumas! Lisa Yuskavage!). Somehow, we’ve managed to subvert our selfish impulses to let you know that for one week only—Monday, August 9 through Friday, August 13—Zwirner will offer up deals galore on a selection of rare and out-of-print books, signed artist catalogues, DVDs, and more. David Zwirner Pop-Up Bookstore will be open daily from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., and you know we’ll be there in the wee hours of Monday morning to make sure we get first dibs on anything and everything related to Neo Rauch. OK, and we’ll probably hoard all the Thomas Ruff stuff, too. Because all’s fair in love and pop-up bookstores.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

In Brief: News from SCAD, FIT, and Art Center

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  • Down at the Savannah College of Art and Design (SCAD), Heriberto J. Brito has been appointed dean of the School of Building Arts. Brito, who helms his own interior design firm, is returning to SCAD, where he taught from 1979-85 and developed the curricula for the architecture, historic preservation, and interior design programs. He went on to teach at Georgia State University and the Atlanta College of Art, among other institutions. Brito has also served as a studio director, preservation planner, and architectural historian with a variety of firms and agencies. Brito replaces Brian Wishne, who now serves as chair of SCAD’s urban design department.

  • Closer to home, the ever-more-fabulous Fashion Institute of Technology (FIT) has launched a masters of fine arts program in illustration. The three-year program, which will welcome its first cohort of students this fall, was developed in response to the growing demand for the highest levels of professional illustration excellence and expertise, particularly in the film and entertainment industries. The new MFA program “will prepare illustrators to be innovative visual communicators and fosters the entrepreneurial approach that professional illustrators need in order to find professional success,” according to FIT. Also helping to draw in busy would-be students? Evening and weekend courses, including “History of American Illustration” (yum!) and “Digital Boot Camp.”

    continued…

    New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

  • Mercedes Aircap and Airscarf

    New technology takes the turbulence out of driving with the top down
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    When Mercedes-Benz unveiled their brand-new Aircap technology in their 2011 E-Class Cabriolet at last February’s NYC Fashion Week, I knew I wanted to check it out for myself. As someone who always saw the appeal of convertibles as spoiled by hair whipping in my face, I was curious to see if it actually worked. I had the perfect opportunity when Mercedes lent me the E-Cab for a day trip to the
    Barnes Foundation
    (a spot I highly recommend visiting) outside of Philadelphia, PA.

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    Activated with just a push of a button in the center console, the Aircap technology makes the smooth and luxurious ride that you’d expect from the luxury car all the more so for all of its passengers. While the experience isn’t completely wind-free, the small windshield spoiler and rear screen creates a pleasantly breezy and more quiet interior for chatting, listening to music, talking on the phone over the built-in Bluetooth, or just communing with the open road.

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    The feeling of joy and freedom that comes with driving is what the device is really all about—cruising down the highway, with the wind licking at your hair (not blowing it in your face) and sunlight pouring in the car. For lead-foots like me, Aircap automatically adjusts according to speed, significantly decreasing the wind flowing through the cabin, even at speeds over 60 mph.

    With the new technology, you might be inclined to keep the top down all year long. Fortunately, Mercedes thought of that too. In cooler weather, Aircap also works to keep cold air out of the cabin, and combined with Airscarf, a heating system at the often-ignored neck level, you can still keep warm while getting all the benefits of owning a convertible.

    Available only from Mercedes-Benz, Aircap can be found in the new E-Class Cabriolet, with a sticker price of a little over $56,000 (give or take a few thousand for various customizations). Airscarf is also available in the E-Class as well as other models.


    Sysiphos

    The Sysiphos project is a modular kinetic object.The modules are interchangeable and can be connected in various combinations.Gear ratio transmitions ..

    Dezeen’s top ten: primitive designs

    There’s a bit of a primitive vibe going on at the moment so for this month’s top ten we’ve compiled our ten most-read stories about caves, rocks and sticks.

    1: in pole position is this holiday home in Spain that was cast in the ground and hollowed out by a cow, designed by Anton García-Abril of Ensamble Studio.

    2: in second place is this pavilion with a cave-like interior by Melbourne designer Callum Morton.

    3: there’s another cave-like interior in third place, this time an apartment in Paris by Paul Coudamy.

    espresso solo by shmuel linski

    4: next up is this concrete coffee-maker by Shmuel Linski.

    5: at number five, Boaz Cohen & Sayaka Yamamoto of BCXSY dress up as cave-folk to launch their Change! collection of furniture.

    6: sixth place goes to these ceramic kitchen knives inspired by Stone Age tools, designed by Matthias Kaeding.

    7: seventh most popular is Arik Levy’s Rock Series of furniture.

    8: this ring with three interchangeable rough diamonds by Sruli Recht is in eighth place.

    Bronze Age by Philippe-Albert Lefebvre

    9: these fire tools cast in bronze and iron from branches by Philippe-Albert Lefebvre are ninth most-popular.

    10: and in tenth place are these plastic vases inspired by archaeological finds, designed by Sjoerd Jonkers.

    That’s all for now – another top ten coming up next month.

    See also:

    Dezeen’s top ten: jewellery
    Dezeen’s top ten: food
    Dezeen’s top ten: shoes
    Dezeen’s top ten: churches
    Dezeen’s review of 2009
    Dezeen’s top ten: Dubai projects
    Dezeen’s top ten: lighting
    Dezeen’s top ten: watches and clocks
    Dezeen’s top ten: cardboard projects
    Dezeen’s top ten: shops
    Dezeen’s top ten: schools
    Dezeen’s top ten: pavilions
    Dezeen’s top ten: hotels
    Dezeen’s top ten: animals
    Dezeen’s 2008 review
    Dezeen’s top ten: glamorous girls
    Dezeen’s top ten: Japanese projects
    Dezeen’s top ten: student projects
    Dezeen’s top ten: interiors
    Dezeen’s top ten: stories with most comments
    Dezeen’s top ten: Milan 2008
    Dezeen’s top ten: houses
    Dezeen’s top ten: skyscrapers
    Top ten Dezeen stories from December 2007
    Most popular stories during our first twelve months

    Rapha x Paul Smith A/W 2010

    Cycling clothes get dandy in a collaboration joining two renowned British clothiers

    by Summer Seventysix

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    Yesterday we got a sneak peek at the latest from Rapha, the British makers high-end cycle clothing. It featured pieces from the upcoming AW10 range and a much anticipated collaboration with Paul Smith, on show at Rapha’s soon-to-close pop-up cafe in Clerkenwell. Our man on the ground picked his favourites.

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    Following the successful release of a line of accessories, the Paul Smith clothing tie-up is for the next two seasons, and the man’s signature color purple was very much in evidence combined with Rapha’s own pink flourishes, and a decent dose of black. The stand-out examples can be seen above: a mid-weight merino jersey, flamboyant polkadot silk scarf and a beautifully cut rain jacket, all designed to fit in with Rapha’s move to provide more options for the city cyclist.

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    With that in mind, the brand also unveiled its new jeans, which have been two years in the making. Made of a specially developed water-repellant, shape-maintaining, denim-style fabric, they include a place to hold your D-lock. Once turned-up, they also reveal a none-too-subtle Rapha logo, and reflective pink seam.

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    Our favourite piece from the new Autumn-Winter season, though, is the new merino cyclocross jersey. Rapha recently hooked up with bike brand Focus to sponsor a cyclocross team in the US, and this jersey features their signature candy-stripe color scheme on black background. Also available is a full bodysuit, for those feeling particularly brave.

    All the new gear is expected to start appearing on Rapha’s site from the start of September, as well as in selected stores.


    In Summer Fun Issue, Creative Review Plays Designer Dress-Up

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    Monsters and monkeys and paper dolls, oh my! The August issue of Creative Review includes all of these things and more, in what the magazine is billing as its “Summer Bumper Book o’ Fun.” The fun starts at the front cover, which features surfing monsters from the mind of Stefan Bucher. Inside, the designer chats about obsessional behavior, the magic of chance, and responsibility in design. The CR funsters are also hosting an online treasure hunt to find five of Bucher’s monsters secreted about their website. Back on the page, there are games and puzzles galore, including connect the dots, instructions for a round of design studio I-Spy, and the aforementioned sneaky simians hiding in one of Johanna Basford‘s impossibly intricate trees. Soak up the more serious stuff (including a photo essay on the wild wild Midwest and an interview with novelist Will Self) before cutting out the festive mask on the back cover and staging elaborate, design-based scenarios for the young creative couple of paper dolls (pictured) created by Elliot Thoburn of Peepshow. For those who definition of fun does not include defacing imported periodicals, the issue includes URLs for downloading and printing the interactive bits.

    New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.