How Our Laws Are Made

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Winner of the Sunlight Foundation‘s Design For America challenge, the colorful infographic “How Our Laws Are Made” offers clarity on the actions of the U.S. government. Using an enticing rainbow flow chart, the graphic simplifies the process while still showing the numerous steps (or missteps) for a bill to become a law. (Full size here.)

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One of the eight winners profiled online at Good Magazine, “How Our Laws Are Made” points out the importance of understanding the basic mechanics of government and the difficulty usually involved in doing so.


“Living With” product review: NatureMill’s Automatic Compost Bin is a miracle machine

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pFood is completely compostable, yet we throw it out all the time. That’s a damned shame because once it goes into landfill, it mixes with the other crap in there and turns into a toxic stew of cheese-topped keyboards and plastic bags filled with rotting meat./p

pThis is a huge problem. Food, along with paper, makes up about half of all landfill–New Yorkers alone throw out about two pounds of food per person per day, once you factor in all the restaurants–and food is the #1 least recycled material according to the EPA. /p

pTo do my part for the environment, last year I began looking into composting, which can be tough whether you live in the city or country; it requires a vermin-resistant facility of a certain temperature consistency, not to mention the discipline to regularly agitate the mix and/or maintain a worm population, if you go that route. In short, composting is not an easy option for the time-pressed./p

pSo I was very excited to review A HREF=”http://www.naturemill.com/products.html” NatureMill’s Automatic Compost Bin/A, which promises to turn food into dirt with very little hassle–indoors and in a space-considerate way, which is important to us urban dwellers with tight apartments. In the first few weeks I was surprised at how easy the process was; I then decided to do a long-term review, covering six months of usage, to see if it continued to be easy or if unanticipated problems would crop up. /pa href=”http://www.core77.com/blog/object_culture/living_with_product_review_naturemills_automatic_compost_bin_is_a_miracle_machine_16668.asp”(more…)/a
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Vincent Dixon

Vincent Dixon est un photographe irlandais spécialisé depuis plusieurs années dans les projets et campagnes publicitaires. Il travaille essentiellement avec le studio français de retouches numérique Kilato, pour des clients comme Nissan, Absolut Vodka, Pepsi ou Perrier.



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Previously on Fubiz

Love You Too

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A simplified color scheme only heightens the drama in Vanessa Prager‘s new collection of works, a series dubbed “Love You Too.” Using only red and blue ink, the L.A.-based artist draws on blank vintage sheet music, illustrating her penchant for both music and Bic Cristal ballpoint pens.

With “Love You Too,” Prager—who tends to bore easily with concepts she has already explored—manifests her personal challenge to create imagery that interests her while repeatedly using the same limited supply of materials.

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This unease with repetition also leads Prager to invent new ways of displaying her works. From placing her paintings in a fairytale outdoor terrarium to juxtaposing her works with digital artist Kathy Grayson in a traditional gallery setting, Prager’s creativity just doesn’t quit. Playing with the latent musical theme of “Love You Too,” Prager will debut the collection to a performance by reputed composer Ali Helnwein and The L.A. Contemporary Ensemble.

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While admitting to an earnest passion for music (“it’s right up there with painting for me”), her use of vintage music sheets as canvas stems more from “a serious dislike for most sketches” presented as finished items. She also favors the way the images appear visually, with the lines and notes throwing off the impact of the drawing without affecting it entirely.

“Love You Too” will show first in a private exhibit at the new SoHo House West Hollywood on 3 June 2010 and again in an exhibit open to the public on 10 June 2010 at Em & Co. Michael Pena hosts both shows and they will feature the L.A. Contemporary Ensemble.


Self Publish, Be Happy!

Taking place at the Photographers’ Gallery in London this weekend is Self Publish, Be Happy, a festival celebrating independent photography books…

 

The event is the brainchild of Bruno Ceschel, who has picked 60 of his favourite contemporary DIY photo books to exhibit for the event. Several of these will be on sale, and there will also be talks and signings throughout the weekend. Ceschel, who used to work for a book publisher, became interested in self-published books after becoming exasperated with the commercial aspects of publishing. “I got frustrated working for a publisher because the commercial side of it is quite painful,” he says. “There isn’t much money in it and the projects are a bit of a struggle.”

 

 

The recession has also affected the amount of books on photography being published, meaning that photographers and creatives are beginning to create their own publications instead. “Something is going on here,” continues Ceschel, “more and more people are publishing their own books. Technology allows you to do it more easily and cheaply now.”

 

 

Ceschel also has a blog celebrating self-published books, and will be creating a catalogue for the event at the Photographers’ Gallery. It features photos of all the books in the exhibition shot by Peter Haynes, Nik Adam and Åsa Johannesson, and as you can see from the photos above and below, it has something of a 1970s naturist vibe, but comes replete with useful information as well as nudey pics. “In the back it has technical information on how each book in the exhibition is made,” says Ceschel, “so hopefully it will further encourage people to do their own books.” The catalogue is designed by Glenn Howard at Untitled and supported and printed by ubyu.

 

 

The event will take place over Saturday and Sunday at the Photographers’ Gallery. For information on book signings and the books featured, visit the PG site, here.

Last day to submit to Change Connections

pA quick reminder that today is the last day to submit ideas to a href=”http://change-connections.com”Change Connections/a, a collaboration between Nokia and Feast about the future of communication technology and how it can benefit billions of people around the world, helping them live better lives. /p

blockquoteAn initiative by The Feast in collaboration with Nokia, Change Connections is a space for your ideas to collectively exchange, connect and collaborate for social good and to foster new thinking on groundbreaking social innovation.

pA website based in serious play around serious issues, opportunities for ideation are structured around five key themes — Livelihood, Learning, Health, Advocacy and Resilience — as well as insights from a variety of experts, from social entrepreneurs and field workers to technologists and policy makers. /blockquote/p

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BUILD: Coast Modern poster

Rock The Bleached Denim Look!

imageJean makers everywhere all seem to be catching on to the trend that, throughout the decades, always finds its way back to our wardrobe. The destroyed look, either due to good old wear ‘n tear, or distress treatments by denim labels, is one that could certainly fill a chapter in the denim encyclopedia. Back when I was a kid, mom’s bleach stains didn’t exactly brighten my day but nowadays, a little bleach is just what the doctor ordered to spruce up an old pair or jeans! For decades, jeans have been decorated in a multitude of ways, so good, others- not so, but rocking some bleach has stood the test of times for a few seasons. The contrast of washed out jeans works well with my summer tan and easily makes me stand out at every summer BBQ. The grunge look is back again, baby, so take a peak at these hot new bleached styles! It’s true that jeans go with everything and bleached jeans are just one more way to keep yourself looking stylish while feeling comfortable!

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Wiretap: Emily Pilloton and Matt Miller of Project H Debrief on the Design Revolution Road Show

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pemEmily Pilloton and Matt Miller of Project H Design, with road dog Junebug/em/p

pSome called us crazy. Others called us traveling trailer trash, visionaries, or just designers with A.D.D. who don’t know how to sit still. But when my a href=”http://www.projecthdesign.org/”Project H/a partner-in-crime Matt Miller and I hit the road in a pink-stripe-clad Airstream trailer on February 1, leaving my home town of San Francisco for the 75-day, 36-stop a href=”http://designrevolutionroadshow.com/”Design Revolution Road Show,/a we set out with one thing in mind: to bring design that makes a difference to the doorsteps of average citizens and students. We wanted to inspire change, prove what is possible, and hopefully not kill each other along the way. Yes, the idea came about as a sort of renegade book tour for my then-recently-published ema href=”http://designrevolutionroadshow.com/book/”Design Revolution: 100 Products that Empower People/a/em, but amidst our shoestring planning, our ambitions got the best of us, transforming the tour into a roving exhibition of products, a lecture and workshop series, and general rabble-rousing escapade./p

pWhat follows is a conversation between me and Matt, now a full month after the road show’s completion, after 25,000 people set foot in our Airstream, and roughly 9,500 miles covered. Our adventure was a hard one, trying and absolutely frustrating, but ultimately a ton of fun and one of the most enlightening experiences we could have embarked on as both designers and individuals. Note: Forgive our language, our swear words, and our rants: this conversation was a form of therapeutic closure, not a highly polished reflection. /p

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pE: Let’s start with general stuff: what it was like being on the road, what we learned, what drove us nuts. /p

pM: Well, we learned never to trust Google Maps, only the coffee-stained paper atlas. We learned that having a dog makes everything better, and hairiermdash;that picking up Junebug in West Texas as an impulse buy on a Saturday afternoon was the best and craziest thing we’ve done in a while./p

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pemJunebug the border collie, who we spontaneously adopted in Harper, Texas./em/p

pE: Everyone needs a canine copilot. And we learned that living in a travel trailer out of three milk crates with your significant other/business partner for 75 days, without a bathroom or kitchen, is totally reality-TV-show-worthy. /p

pM: Yeah, the Airstream is 27 feet long, and we had 6 of those 27 as living space. Thirty square feet of mattress and “his and hers closet space.” There wasn’t a lot of glamour to it. /p

pE: People didn’t realize that I would show up to lectures just having washed my hair in a sink./p

pM: Or that I wore the same shirt for three months. /p

pE: Yeah, and I just rotated three of the same “Get Excited and Make Things” shirts. But when you have a milk crate as a closet, it’s all we could do. We’d get asked “Oh, so where are you guys staying?” And I would say, “See where the pink stripe starts? On the rear end of the trailer? From there to the bumper. That’s our apartment.”/pa href=”http://www.core77.com/blog/featured_items/wiretap_emily_pilloton_and_matt_miller_of_project_h_debrief_on_the_design_revolution_road_show__16661.asp”(more…)/a
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Hot In The Hive: Scott Barnes Body Bling Lotion

imageNow you really can glow like J. Lo! Celebrity makeup artist Scott Barnes, whose clientele includes the likes of Kim Kardashian, Mariska Hargitay, and of course Jennifer Lopez, is all about enhancing skin tone to create radiant, glowing skin as a foundation for his countless makeup looks. He recently published a book, titled About Face, which provides the lowdown on how he’s created some of his most successful red carpet looks. It also highlights his best-selling product, Body Bling Lotion, which is my new favorite beauty product for summer! It comes in both Original and Platinum shades (the latter is for fair-skinned girls who prefer radiance over color), and adds the perfect dose of moisture and golden shimmer for the ideal summer glow. And unlike risky self-tanners that can leave you orange-y for weeks to come, Body Bling easily rinses off in the shower, so you won’t end up with weird patches or uneven color! Photo Credit: PR Photos

Price: $38
Who Found It: xgalexy was the first to add Scott Barnes Body Bling to the Hive.