ATT World Cup Augmented Reality Banner

HP – Hit print

Dans la lignée du projet HP Workstations Performance, voici une nouvelle utilisation des imprimantes HP Photosmart afin d’animer le papier en temps réel et de raconter une histoire. Un travail sur une durée d’une semaine, par Tom Wrigglesworth et Matt Robinson basé à Londres.



hpprint3

Previously on Fubiz

Albert Speer Jr. Responds to Nurembergs Push for UNESCO Status for the Nazi Rally Grounds Designed by His Father

0808speerjr.jpg

Albert Speer Jr., who has spent much of his architectural career being compared to his father, Adolph Hitler‘s favorite architect Albert Speer Sr., while also attempting to distance himself from him at the same time, is now in the middle of directly confronting his father’s work. The German municipality of Nuremberg is in the process of trying to get UNESCO recognition for the famous Nazi rally grounds there. The area’s master plan was designed by Speer Sr., as were many of the buildings that surround it. The municipality now wants to hand over the site to UNESCO because of the costs associated with its upkeep, but Speer Jr. doesn’t see this as the right move. He recently told the German magazine Focus that he finds the whole thing “a weird idea” and that it isn’t fitting with both the way UNESCO traditionally functions and the method is ” totally out of line with other nations’ ways of preserving a repugnant past.” However, he understands how difficult the situation is in a historical context and also doesn’t believe the solution is tearing down every single thing, like Italy did with most of the monuments to Benito Mussolini.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Houses by Peter Zumthor, MVRDV and others for Living Architecture

Secular Retreat by Peter Zumthor

Five holiday homes by architects Peter Zumthor (above), MVRDV, Nord Architecture (below), Hopkins Architects and Jarmund/Vigsnæs Architects are nearing completion in England as part of the Living Architecture project initiated by writer Alain de Botton. (more…)

The Helvetica killer

Bruno Maag is so enraged by Helvetica that he has designed a typeface aimed specifically at wiping it off the face of the planet. He explains his hatred in the latest of SEA’s Naturalis booklets

Helvetica may be the world’s most popular typeface but one man is having none of it. Type designer Bruno Maag of Dalton Maag, views Helvetica’s popularity with a mixture of bemusement and irritation. So he has decided to do something about it. With the Dalton Maag team, he has created Aktiv Grotesk, a typeface designed to provide an alternative (and, he hopes, improvement) to Helvetica.

Maag discussed the project and his feelings about Helvetica in a conversation with CR editor Patrick Burgoyne which is published in Naturalis x 7, the latest of GF Smith‘s promotional booklets for its Naturalis paper range, designed by SEA and set in Aktiv Grotesk (shown here). Here is what he had to say:

 

Patrick Burgoyne: Bruno, where does your deep-seated hatred of Helvetica come from? Isn’t hating Helvetica pointless? It’s like air or vanilla ice cream, it’s just there…

Bruno Maag: That’s the point, it is vanilla ice cream. In my whole career in typography, starting with my apprenticeship, I have never used Helvetica. Being a Swiss typographer, it’s always been Univers. Even in my apprenticeship we didn’t have Helvetica in the printshop. Then I went to Basel school of design and of course in Weingart’s workshop it was Univers, never Helvetica. Then I come to England and there’s all these designers using Helvetica! The Macintosh had just come out and Helvetica was on every single machine. Everyone was so fascinated with it … I never understood that.

PB: Do you think it was an outsider’s impression of the Swiss style? Almost in the way that a tourist forms an idea of a country that is different from reality?

BM: I think – that’s describing it quite nicely. My Swiss colleagues always thought of Univers as Swiss typography. It was the American advertisers of the 60s that we associated Helvetica with.

 

PB: But wasn’t its popularity in America due to the influence of European émigrés?

BM: The thing is that Univers was released in 1956 by Deberny & Peignot, a small French foundry. Helvetica was released a year later with the full might of the Linotype marketing machine behind it. Linotype stuck it on every single typesetting machine they could and took it round the market, particularly around the New York advertising scene. And there was little Deberny & Peignot with no marketing budget. It’s a fluke of marketing that Helvetica now is this incredibly popular typeface.

What galled me most in the movie [Gary Hustwit’s Helvetica] was when Massimo Vignelli said that Helvetica was a Modernist typeface – No! No! Helvetica is anything but Modernist, Clearly it has its roots in Akzidenz Grotesk and that was designed in 1899, which is Victorian as far as I am concerned. Akzidenz is a fantastic font but it’s not Modernist, it’s got a really antique feel about it, which again shows that Max Miedinger [Helvetica’s designer] didn’t have a clue about type design. He was the salesman at [foundry] Haas’sche Schriftgießerei for Christ’s sake.

And there are a lot of things wrong in the design of Helvetica once you start going in to the detail. I can appreciate why a lot of designers like Helvetica compared to Univers – Univers has a starkness about it, it’s cold. Maybe because of the antique-ness of Helvetica it has a certain charm that Univers lacks and at the same time has this neutrality, so I can see why people go for it, but if you start analysing it and going into the nitty gritty it is quite a horrendous font. It’s quite poorly crafted and has become completely overused. People go on about Arial and how awful it is, and Comic Sans, what an atrocity that is, why not the same about Helvetica? It’s often used wrongly too.

PB: How can you use it wrongly?

BM: I’ve seen it in books. It has no place there, it has no place in body copy, it is not a hardcore reading font. Being a grotesk font, inherently, it is not very legible. Going back to Vignelli and using it on the New York Subway – that goes against every principle of legibiltiy. For signage you want to have something condensed so that you can have a higher letter count and you want to have character forms that are not ambiguous. Some of the character forms in Helvetica are very ambiguous because they are so uniform. In the movie, [Erik] Spiekermann says it very well, that they are like soldiers on parade and that is detrimental to legibility. People just use Helvetica because they have heard of it, it’s on everyone’s computer and everyone else uses it.

 

PB: Is it almost a non-choice to use it?

BM: It’s very much like that, a bit like Julia Roberts – pretty enough but…

PB: So all this combines to deeply upset you about it?

BM: Yes and a certain amount of commercial jealousy! But I do find it an inferior typeface. I would choose Univers every time – it’s crafted better, the proportions are better, it is a modern typeface that doesn’t pretend to be something it isn’t which Helvetica does. What upsets me even more is the ignorance that people have in using it. Once I had a long debate with Hamish Muir on a round table discussion at the RCA. He said ‘I just use Helvetica for everything’. We were almost at each other’s throats over that. I said ‘How can you?’ He said ‘I’ve always used it, I’ve set up my core kerning pairs…’ Well, that’s not an argument! You use a typeface that is appropriate to the job. You don’t have to have 5000 fonts on your machine but you use the one that speaks in the right voice, that conveys the right functionality for the job.

PB: A lot of designers feel uncomfortable with showing expressing emotion in their work. Particularly in the UK there is this concensus over what ‘good’ design is –this watered down Swiss style, let’s not frighten anyone, let’s just tidy it all up. Keep it clean. Helvetica appeals to that…

BM: You’re right, it does fit into that grid thinking. A lot of graphic designers are really scared of the organic shape, the thing they can’t control – just let it go. And with Helvetica, because everyone else uses it you can justify it to your client.

PB: So let’s talk about Aktiv, Dalton Maag’s new Helvetica killer. Can you design a typeface in opposition to something? Is that what you set out to do or were you just trying to create as good a grotesk as you could for general use?

BM: It was two-pronged really. One was the fact that we were looking at our font library and felt that we were missing a pure grotesk in a Univers style, purely as a commercial entity. It has been at the back of our minds to do this for the last three or four years now. We wanted to have a grotesk font positioned somewhere between Helvetica and Univers – not as icy cold as Univers but devoid of all the quirks of Helvetica. To have a font that is beautifully crafted, spaced well, with not a chink in a curve or anything – perfectly drawn but hopefully with a bit of personality. We wanted to create something that could be used in a corporate environment but that has that bit of warmth that Univers doesn’t have.

Clearly, because we are competing aganst Univers, Akzidenz and Helvetica there are a lot of close similarities. The x height is fractionally higher than Helvetica but the rounds have a little bit of squareness about them that Helvetica’s don’t have. The differences are really subtle but give it just that bit of personality.

 

PB: Do you always need those idiosyncracies in typefaces?

BM: You do, otherwise what’s the point? Why use this or that? When people choose a typeface it’s not a rational decision, it’s completely emotional. They home in on details and say ‘I love that, that’s why I’m going to use it’. But then they want a rational explanation to tell their client. We’re hoping with this that people will react positively to it and that it can do everything that Helvetica isn’t doing … and in the process I get very very rich!

PB: So success for Aktiv would be to see Helvetica driven from the face of the earth?

BM: Yes! When I do lectures I always have a little rant about Helvetica and at the end I say if everyone in the world used Univers instead from now on I’d happily retire, but it ain’t going to happen.

PB: When this is out can you let Helvetica go? Have you exorcised the demon?

BM: Yes, it’s catharsis. It’s done now.

 

 

There will be a launch party for Naturalis x 7 at the SEA Gallery on Tuesady July 13. The booklet was printed by Fulmar Colour using a mixture of Hexachrome and special inks on Naturalis Smooth Absolute White paper. Designed by SEA Design and set in Aktiv Grotesk.

 

The Rural Design Vernacular: Objects that Expose Agency, by Gabriel Hargrove

div style=”align: right;”img src=”http://www.core77.com/blog/images/2010/07/hargrove-axes.jpg” width=”468″ height=”485″ alt=”hargrove-axes.jpg”//div

pemBest Made Company Axes./em/p

pThere is a unique borrowing from the rural by the urban in design, both past and the presentmdash;Castiglioni’s a href=”http://www.zanotta.it/Catalog/ShowMuseumItem.asp?Area=museoCatCodeName=MuseoCollectionID=19ProductID=221PageNumber=1MenuItemID=3″Mezzadro Chair/a for Zanotta and a href=”http://bestmadeco.com/”Best Made Company Axes/a exemplify this. At their roots, these projects exude a sense of self-sufficiency, informed by a romanticized sense of rural autonomy and resourcefulness. Still, objects that can provide the means to this self-reliance expose agencymdash;the ability to deliberately and directly affect one’s environment in an undisciplined, creative manner. /p

pEncouraging agency has a three-fold effect. First, increased resourcefulness and self-reliance may help drive the ideological change necessary for “green” design to have the most impact. Second, it may encourage a growth of individual entrepreneurship in our slow economy. Third, such an investigation will lead designers to look for inspiration and opportunities where self-reliance is (or was) highly valuedmdash;the rural United States, for examplemdash;and to produce work that enters into underexplored, unique corners of American culture./p

pimg alt=”milkstool.jpg” src=”http://www.core77.com/blog/images/milkstool.jpg” width=”468″ height=”541″ class=”mt-image-none” style=”” //p

div style=”align: right;”img src=”http://www.core77.com/blog/images/2010/07/hargrove-examples-rural.jpg” width=”468″ height=”257″ alt=”hargrove-examples-rural.jpg”//div

pemStaffan Holm Milk Stool, top. Patricia Urquiola Tub and Elizabeth Leriche Concept, bottom./em/p

pTrends derived from the rural vernacular perpetuate a romantic fascination with the self-sufficient lifestyle. Farm life, for example, implies such activities as milking cows, hunting fowl, and working in fields. As a response, designers have entertained fascinations with milking stools, shotguns, selvage denim, and rubber boots. These objects exude an air of autonomy; in the case of the Wellington-style boot: an image of the landed gentry. It is important to note that, unlike these projects, this is not a call for more “agrarian chic.” Instead, rural areas should be examined just as they are (for better or worse)./p

pIn an attempt to discover how rural habits of mind and making could inform a design practice, I’ve been investigating the qualities of agency in a project entitled emObjects of the Rural Vernacular/em./pa href=”http://www.core77.com/blog/featured_items/the_rural_design_vernacular_objects_that_expose_agency_by_gabriel_hargrove__16880.asp”(more…)/a
pa href=”http://feedads.g.doubleclick.net/~a/g9xVEnC4MMdik_Td6V4hrak052A/0/da”img src=”http://feedads.g.doubleclick.net/~a/g9xVEnC4MMdik_Td6V4hrak052A/0/di” border=”0″ ismap=”true”/img/abr/
a href=”http://feedads.g.doubleclick.net/~a/g9xVEnC4MMdik_Td6V4hrak052A/1/da”img src=”http://feedads.g.doubleclick.net/~a/g9xVEnC4MMdik_Td6V4hrak052A/1/di” border=”0″ ismap=”true”/img/a/p

Competition: five signed copies of Dedon Coming Home to be won

We’ve teamed up with luxury outdoor furniture brand Dedon to give away five signed copies of Dedon: Coming Home, a limited-edition collection of photographs by American photographer Bruce Weber. (more…)

Five simple uncluttering tasks

Returning to the office after a long holiday weekend can be rough and unproductive. Instead of staring off into space for 15 minutes, try these quick uncluttering techniques for your desk:

  1. Return it. Find all of the things in your office that don’t belong to you and go on a walkabout to return the items to your coworkers.
  2. Take it down. Collect all the sticky notes off your monitor and enter their data into a more appropriate and permanent storage location. Check bulletin boards and vertical spaces for out-dated calendars, memos, menus, and phone directories. Recycle or shred these unnecessary materials.
  3. Test it. Gather together all your writing utensils, throw out any pens and markers that don’t work, and sharpen all your pencils.
  4. Dust it. Give your desk and electronics a pass with a dust rag. Work from the top of your office downward so that you’re not brushing dust onto something you’ve already cleaned.
  5. Do it. Complete any task on your to-do list that should take fewer than three minutes to finish. Set a timer for 15 minutes and get five of these tasks done right now.

If you’re still feeling unmotivated after completing these tasks, do some filing. You’ll continue to be productive without having to exert too much mental energy.

I hope your re-entry into the professional world isn’t too difficult after the holiday. Look for more ideas for quick, uncluttering tasks in the comments (or add a few if you have already discovered some easy, yet productive, tasks).

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


Sparkle And Shine This Summer With Shimmer-Infused Beauty Products!

imageDepending where you are in the world, the summer temperature can vary, but most likely, it’s gonna be HOT. And the hotter the weather, the less clothes and more skin and since we’re already showing it off, why not take advantage of the sun and help yourself really sparkle for the summer? A light dusting of shimmery cosmetics over the body, or in small doses on the face catch the suns rays and adds a flirty, sexy appeal. I’m not talking about the body glitters that we applied so generously in our younger years that made us look like we tripped and fell into an elementary art project. Instead, think of a subtle shimmer in eye-shadows, lip glosses, blushes and bronzers. If applied correctly, a subtle shimmer helps slim and sculpt while adding a summer sparkle and is sure to catch attention. Ready to shine this summer? Click on the slideshow to check out some of my favorite shimmer-infused beauty products that are perfect for summer!

view slideshow

OR² by Orproject

London studio Orproject installed an undulating tree-like structure in the doorway of the Italian Cutural Institute in Belgrave Square for last month’s London Festival of Architecture. (more…)