Reebok is seeking a Sr. Apparel Designer in Canton, MA
Posted in: Uncategorizedpa href=”http://www.coroflot.com/public/jobs_browse.asp” border=”0″img alt=”coroflot-joboftheday.jpg” src=”http://s3files.core77.com/blog/images/coroflot-joboftheday.jpg” width=”468″ height=”68″ class=”mt-image-none” style=”” //a/p
pstronga href=”http://www.coroflot.com/public/job_details.asp?job_id=27266referral=C77blogpost”Sr. Designer – Men’s Sports Apparel/a
brReebok/strongbr /Canton, MA/p
pThe Reebok Design Department is looking for a Sr. Designer for Men’s Sport Apparel. Designing for Sport is our key initiative at Reebok. We are looking for a talented and innovative person to join us as we further evolve our Reebok Men’s Global Sport Team. This individual must be highly entrepreneurial while thriving in a diverse Global organization. They should be influenced by fashion and sport, and excited to join our team of designers as we create a unique assortment of sport-fusion training product.
/p
pa href=”http://www.coroflot.com/public/job_details.asp?job_id=27266referral=C77blogpost”raquo; view/a/p
pemThe best design jobs and portfolios hang out at a href=”http://coroflot.com”Coroflot/a./em/pa href=”http://www.core77.com/blog/featured_items/reebok_is_seeking_a_sr_apparel_designer_in_canton_ma__16945.asp”(more…)/a
pa href=”http://feedads.g.doubleclick.net/~a/ro01-OQx_2IT2Y8BpIBtdaz0D4Y/0/da”img src=”http://feedads.g.doubleclick.net/~a/ro01-OQx_2IT2Y8BpIBtdaz0D4Y/0/di” border=”0″ ismap=”true”/img/abr/
a href=”http://feedads.g.doubleclick.net/~a/ro01-OQx_2IT2Y8BpIBtdaz0D4Y/1/da”img src=”http://feedads.g.doubleclick.net/~a/ro01-OQx_2IT2Y8BpIBtdaz0D4Y/1/di” border=”0″ ismap=”true”/img/a/p
Featured category: pavilions
Posted in: UncategorizedFeatured category: for the summer season we’ve created a new architecture category, grouping together all our stories about pavilions, including last year’s Serpentine Gallery Pavilion by SANAA (above), photographed by Iwan Baan. Featured category: pavilions
The Tate Movie Project
Posted in: UncategorizedTate, Aardman Animations, Fallon, and the BBC have all joined forces on a new film project that they hope will involve the participation of one million UK school kids…
The aim of the Tate Movie Project is to create a 20-minute film, which is made up entirely of contributions from children, from the initial storyline ideas, to the characters featured, to the soundtrack. From today, the team is inviting contributions to the project from kids.
The funding for the project comes largely from The Legacy Trust, and the film will become part of the London 2012 Cultural Olympiad. The finished film will be broadcast on the BBC mid-next year, and throughout the coming year, the production team will be looking for contributions from children aged 5-13.
They have come up with a number of ways to facilitate this. At the project’s core is a website, tatemovie.co.uk, which is created by Aardman Animations. Here the children can upload their ideas, drawings, animations and even sound effects, as well as look at other kids’ work and interact with the production team for the film. A still of the site is shown above.
As you might imagine from Aardman, the site is totally charming, and features a set of characters (shown above) to represent the different members of the production team, including the director, writer, composer, art director and editor. “We quite quickly formed this idea of a virtual studio,” explains Dan Efergan, digital creative director at Aardman, “and within the studio is a set of characters that represent all the heads of department. We didn’t want to preach to the kids and say ‘this is how you make a film’, so we’ve got this flawed director who loves himself but isn’t actually that good, and this way everyone is going ‘please help us out’. So while we’re actually building a real film, we’ve also got this soap opera of chaos going on within the virtual film studio.”
The site will be constantly updated in order to try and keep the kids interested during the year-long production period. There will also be a truck, rigged up to look like the studio on the website, that will travel around schools and to festivals and other events to try and encourage children to get involved. One of the aims of the project is to get ‘hard-to-reach’ kids to take part, so the truck will hopefully be a way of speaking to kids who may not have easy access to the internet, plus there will be a freepost address to send physical work in to as well. Workshops have also already begun taking place at Tate – these will continue over the coming months, alongside workshops at a network of partner galleries across the UK. BBC’s Blue Peter will also be following the real-life production process and encouraging kids to get involved.
The kids on the workshops are given as little instruction as possible, in order to encourage them to use their imaginations. “We decided to input nothing adult, to impose nothing on them apart from an invisible story structure,” explains the director on the project, Sarah Cox. “I’ve worked very closely with a script editor, Lucy Murphy, who’s worked on a lot of children’s programmes, and we’ve built a question tree based on the classic structure of a narrative. It includes things like ‘who’s the hero?’, ‘where does the action happen?’, ‘who’s the villain?’ – it’s all the things that you need for a story, but apart from those questions, we’re not going to lead them.”
The team do have a loose structure for the film in mind though. “Because we know we want to have lots of crowd scenes, because we want to use as many assets as possible, and lots of different locations, it’s probably going to be some kind of journey, some kind of epic adventure, quest type thing,” says Cox. “We know we want to make it funny, because that’s what all kids will want to watch, and that’s what we do best. So things like that we know, but we don’t know where the journey will be, we don’t know whether it’s one hero, or a buddy movie with two heroes, or a gang of kids, or a gang of aliens, or it could be super dogs in space! We just don’t know.”
The final animation will be created by Aardman animators. “Very much the inspiration at the beginning was ‘let’s make a film that everyone is really proud of’,” says Heather Wright, executive producer on the project. “So take all the ideas, take all the assets and put a professional polish on it. We’ve got professionals as all the heads of the departments but we’ll be using all the assets that the children provide. We definitely didn’t want to make a piece of community art.”
The kids whose work is picked will be consulted throughout, and their initial drawings will be scanned in and used as the basis for the animated characters. And kids who don’t want to draw are encouraged to get involved in other ways, including suggesting character names and pieces of dialogue, or even just voting for their favourites on the site. Any child whose work is featured in the film will be listed in the film’s credits. “If there’s any place where you can go to get good imagination, it’s kids,” says Dan Efergan. “There’s bound to be a hell of a lot of good ideas in there.”
For more info on the Tate Movie Project, visit tatemovie.co.uk.
Subscribe online and save 29% | |
Subscribe to Creative Review to receive the magazine and Monograph each month plus access to the online archive and subscriber only content… |
Beauty: Alfresco Bug Repellant Moisturizer
Posted in: UncategorizedFinally! All the beauty required without any of the bites! Formulated by a British botanist who found herself being served up as a mosquito main course! Alfresco has a sweet, spicy fragrance that smells lovely to humans but is repugnant to insects. So why is Alfresco Natural Insect Repellent a choice beauty find? Simply because the ‘Beauty with out Bites’ lotion keeps annoying bugs at bay, with the added bonus over other repellents of moisturizing and conditioning the skin without adding toxic chemicals. It is DEET-free and uses the botanical extracts of 20 blended essential oils, including geranium, lavender, cinnamon, and melissa, to ward off pests. It is also recommended by the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, which put it through extensive testing. In fact, they have gone so far as to recommend the anti-bug lotion particularly for babies, children, and people with sensitive skin. |
Tree Hotel
Posted in: UncategorizedAprès l’excellent concept Tree House, voici cette nouvelle initiative intitulée “Tree Hotel” à Harads en Suède. Un projet très étonnant de chambres d’hôtel installées dans les arbres, par Kent et Britta Lindvall. Une découverte de 6 structures, conçues par 5 architectes différents.
Site officiel Tree Hotel
Previously on Fubiz
Vocia RED-1
Posted in: UncategorizedOtto by Paolo Cappello for Miniforms
Posted in: UncategorizedAn irregularly-shaped glass top is supported by a network of beech struts to form this table by Italian designer Paolo Cappello. (more…)
Andreas Preis
Posted in: UncategorizedL’illustrateur hollandais Andreas Preis nous montre toute l’étendue de son talent, stylo en main. Les oeuvres présentées sont uniquement en noir et blanc, dans un style très sobre et distinctif. Une sélection complète est à découvrir dans la suite de l’article.
Previously on Fubiz
First Lady to Welcome National Design Award Winners to White House
Posted in: UncategorizedThe winners and finalists of the 2010 National Design Awards will converge on our nation’s capital next Wednesday, July 21. They’ll participate in an education program for local high school students before attending a White House ceremony hosted by First Lady Michelle Obama. We heard from last year’s winners that the festive luncheon was notable not only for the presence (and inspiring remarks) of the First Lady, the honorary patron for the National Design Awards, but also for the whimsical table decorations: colorful toy robots that were swiftly swiped into service as White House souvenirs. Meanwhile, we’re hoping that Mrs. Obama seizes the sartorial moment and dons a look by Rodarte, this year’s winner in the fashion category. Perhaps Tim Gunn can make it work. The Project Runway star and Liz Claiborne chief creative officer will be on hand to give the keynote address at the Teen Design Fair, which will take place at the Smithsonian American Art Museum’s Renwick Gallery.
Previously on UnBeige:
New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.