Fubiz Broadcast #53

Un nouveau mix exclusif, cette fois-ci de la part du groupe français Fortune, pour ce 53ème numéro du Fubiz Broadcast. Sobrement intitulé “Dancing In The Rain”, le podcast, la playlist intégrale et son téléchargement sont disponible dans la suite.



Playlist FB53A emporter ici

  • Wendy Carlos – Country Lane (intro edit)
  • Acid Washed – General Motors, Detroit, Americar
  • Aufgang – Channel 7 (John Talabot’s You and Me Edit Remix)
  • Pierre Édouard – A Mon Age Déjà Fatigué (Julien 2000 Edit)
  • Poni Hoax – We Are The Bankers (Original Version)
  • Fortune – Under The Sun (Yelle DJs Remix)
  • Suzy Q – Get on Up And Do It Again
  • Babytalk – Chance
  • In Flagranti – Brash & Vulgar

fortune-cover

Sélectionné par Fortune. Durée Totale : 32:49
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Previously on Fubiz

Required Reading: The Subtle Technology of Indian Artisanship

pOver at a href=”http://www.designobserver.com”DesignObserver/a, Ken Botnick and Ira Raja have a wonderful piece on design thinking, craft, and process. You gotta read the whole thing, but here’s a nice taste:/p

pSince raw material is usually expensive, the craftsman must know how to make the most of what he’s got. This often brings to the fore his economical genius for gathering, managing and storing materials. It is only through working the material repeatedly that the craftsman becomes familiar with its properties well enough to coax it into shape. But while we see the craftsman’s contribution as his genius for forming material, we rarely give him credit for more abstract design thinking about the broad implications of his creation. /p

pOne striking example of this is found in the unstitched garments of India, the sari and lunghi. The genius of these garments is in their simplicity; rectangles that wrap the body in a variety of ways, saris and lunghis defy changes in size and body shape. Because they are not elaborately shaped as western apparel is, they are endlessly adaptable, and certain classic textiles remain in style year after year. The simplicity of the sari’s shape also gives rise to a spectacular variety in designs of the textile itself, inviting infinite elaboration of color and pattern as invented by the textile weavers, printers and dyers. The rectangle further invites adaptive reuse once it is too threadbare to be worn as a sari any longer. Across India, old saris find new lives as pillows, pouches, ropes, lightweight blankets, hammocks for babies and more. They are even used as fences in Rajasthan. Such applications would be impossible if the original design were not so ingeniously simple, so functionally pure. A new sari would hold the wind too well to be a useful fence, and if its shape were more complex, its afterlife would be limited to ragstock. The sari, therefore, in its simplicity represents a mode of design thinking grounded in adaptability, innovation and sustainability based in craft that is distinctively Indian./p

pRead entire article a href=”http://changeobserver.designobserver.com/entry.html?entry=13748″here/a./pa href=”http://www.core77.com/blog/business/required_reading_the_subtle_technology_of_indian_artisanship_16649.asp”(more…)/a
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Label Love: Simply Chic For Summer With Erica Tanov

imageWe in San Francisco love our local designers, so it’s no surprise that when we saw Erica Tanov’s newest S/S 2010 collection of luxuriously laid back, charming knits and dresses, we had to share it with everyone. Hailing from Berkley, Erica Tanov’s simplistic and chic designs have a tinge of bohemian style and an earthy vibe, making it a local favorite that has spread all the way to the East Coast with stores in New York as well. Sweetly feminine, comfortably chic and casually sensual, Erica Tanov’s newest collection has you dreaming of hazy afternoons with a loved one and a purely content state of mind. Featuring long knit tops and linen pieces that skim the body plus comfy looking pieces that make you look your ready for a romantic moonlit dinner and then curling up with a loved one, Erica Tanov’s designs are perfect for a summer look of laid back luxury.Click on the slideshow to see some of my favorite Erica Tanov S/S 2010 designs, plus find some of your own!

view slideshow

Toilets of the World

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The new book “Toilets of the World” examines the various approaches that different cultures take for relieving themselves. Authors Mona E. Gregory and Sian James write, “Toilets are bay windows with a view on to a given population.”

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They begin with a brief history of the toilet, from Middle Ages chamber pots to the invention of the flush toilet—it originated in (where else) Greece, and Queen Elizabeth I’s godson created one of the first modern equivalents as a gift for her. The monograph uses a anthropological lens to examine the evolution and current incarnations of the toilet, in the hope that it “provides a cultural and sociological analysis of the people who occupy different regions throughout the world.”

Divided by continent and country, the book highlights the varying degrees of creativity and technology of the WC. Toilets of the World sells from Amazon or check out the book’s website for international sellers.

See more images in the gallery below.


100 11th Avenue by Jean Nouvel

Photographer Philippe Ruault has sent us his photographs of the newly-completed 100 11th Avenue by French architect Jean Nouvel, an apartment block in Chelsea, New York, with every glass panel of the curtain wall tilted at a different angle. (more…)

78 pairs of Nikes, reconfigured

div style=”align: right;”img src=”http://www.core77.com/blog/images/2010/05/nike-mask.jpg” width=”468″ height=”460″ alt=”nike-mask.jpg”//div

pPaul Jenkins, a graphic designer in the UK, has initiated Nike78 for this year’s upcoming London Design Festival. In honor of the the Nike name’s1978 birthday, 78 pairs of shoes have been given to 78 creatives to be reconfigured based on “sport.” The outcomes and processes of each project will be posted to a href=”http://www.nike78.co.uk/”nike78.co.uk/a on Sunday, May 30th. /p

pDetails are still scant, but we have a few previews. Above, see Ritta Ikonen and Ian Wright’s masks (fencing?) made from Nikes. Below, Container Plus tells a sport-inspired story with a pair of shoes and Simon Wild has created an illustrative photograph about “intergalactic sporting.”/p

div style=”align: right;”img src=”http://www.core77.com/blog/images/2010/05/nike-containerplus.jpg” width=”468″ height=”369″ alt=”nike-containerplus.jpg”//div
div style=”align: right;”img src=”http://www.core77.com/blog/images/2010/05/nike-wild.jpg” width=”468″ height=”626″ alt=”nike-wild.jpg”//diva href=”http://www.core77.com/blog/object_culture/78_pairs_of_nikes_reconfigured__16645.asp”(more…)/a
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Urbancase’s Ledge: Floating shelf with a little something extra

div style=”align: right;”img src=”http://www.core77.com/blog/images/2010/05/0urbancaseledge01.jpg” width=”468″ height=”669″ alt=”0urbancaseledge01.jpg”//div

pWe’re digging Seattle-based Urbancase’s A HREF=”http://urbancase.com/pages/walnutledge.html” Ledge/A, a minimalist wall-mounted piece of furniture that’s…well, whatever you want it to be: A shelf, a pull-out laptop desk, a media center, or just plain ol’ storage drawers. The red version’s made out of MDF, but for those who prefer to go Iau naturel/I there’s the walnut version up top./p

div style=”align: right;”img src=”http://www.core77.com/blog/images/2010/05/0urbancaseledge02.jpg” width=”468″ height=”647″ alt=”0urbancaseledge02.jpg”//diva href=”http://www.core77.com/blog/object_culture/urbancases_ledge_floating_shelf_with_a_little_something_extra_16644.asp”(more…)/a
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Sweat Shop

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Joining the growing spate of yarn stores pulling double duty as coffee shops, Paris’ Sweat Shop provides a social environment where sewing enthusiasts can fuel up on caffeine while also toiling away on their latest craft projects.

Located in the increasingly chic 10th arrondissement, a neighborhood near Canal Saint-Martin, the cafe-slash-workshop houses a large communal table and 10 Singer sewing machines where craftsters can rent out the machines on an hourly (€6/hour) and daily (€25, with tea and coffee included) basis. Thanks to kooky decor and a menu of organic muffins and vegan nibbles provided by the nearby eatery Bob’s Juice Bar (owned by Steven Alan’s brother), Sweat Shop has already become a decidedly hip hangout for sewers and non-sewers alike.

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Those looking to hone in on their craft can also sign up for one-day workshops with various experts and designers including Marie-Claire Idees’ Celine Dupuy aka “Mlle Kou,” a designer for the magazine’s home and decorating-focused blog. Sweat Shop also offers knitting workshops, in addition to sewing seminars that double as English conversation sessions (cheekily titled, “Patch Up Your English”).

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Taking the concept of “café couture” even further by selling DIY sewing packets, the space has a lot in common with Wool and the Gang and their popular knitting kits, supplying everything you need to create your own unique item of clothing.


Hide your iPad in plain sight: Tobias Wong and Chelsea Briganti’s camoflauged iPad case

div style=”align: right;”img src=”http://s3files.core77.com/blog/images/2010/05/tobias-ipad2.jpg” width=”468″ height=”624″ alt=”tobias-ipad2.jpg”//div

div style=”align: right;”img src=”http://s3files.core77.com/blog/images/2010/05/tobias-ipad3.jpg” width=”468″ height=”351″ alt=”tobias-ipad3.jpg”//div

pThis past March, we wrote about the funny subtleties of a href=”http://www.core77.com/blog/object_culture/home_and_housewares_show_2010_hide_your_valuables_in_plain_sight_16194.asp”safes disguised as household objects/a like rocks, flower pots, cd cases and cans, designed and manufactured by Southwest Specialty Products./p

pa href=”http://www.brokenoff.com/”Tobias Wong/a and Chelsea Briganti are now (tongue-in-cheek) trying to get their share of the market, introducing an iPad case disguised as a used document envelope, complete with an interdepartmental mail background for the home screen. This is probably less to hide your iPad from thieves, and more to keep yourself from being identified as one of those ‘annoying early adopters’ while playing “Plants vs. Zombies” or “Harbormaster” in public. /p

pInstead, you’ll just seem crazy as you poke and swipe the surface of what looks to be some kind of unopened letter./p

p(For those of you who are actually considering whether or not this will provide any protection: yes, it will. There’s a hard case inside.)/p

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Incompleted Cube

Incompleted project.< part, entirety, incomplete >Design is completed by the mutual communication. A part becomes the entirety.This is a complet..