UK’s new lightweight wine bottle turns saved grams into saved ton(ne)s

pGlassRite Wine is a four-year initiative stared in 2006 by the UK’s Waste Resources Action Programme (WRAP), in order to “identify opportunities for the wine sector to make environmental and commercial savings.” Now comes their crowning achievement, in the form of a humble CAD file:/p

pimg alt=”0wrapbottle.jpg” src=”http://s3files.core77.com/blog/images/0wrapbottle.jpg” width=”468″ height=”705″ class=”mt-image-none” style=”” //p

pThat may not look like much, but that’s kind of the point–that’s A HREF=”http://www.greenwisebusiness.co.uk/news/lightweight-bottle-helps-wine-industry-cut-co2-and-waste-1453.aspx” a wine bottle that weighs in at just 300 grams/A, 188 grams lighter than the average and 40 grams lighter than its lightest antecedent. /p

p”If adopted for all wine sold in the UK it would generate an annual glass saving of 153,000 tonnes – equivalent to the weight of more than 460 jumbo jets – and cut CO2 emissions by 119,000 tonnes,” said WRAP’s Nicola Jenkin. The design is available for free download on WRAP’s website A HREF=”http://www.wrap.org.uk/retail/materials/300g_lightweight.html?utm_source=pressreleaseutm_medium=pressreleaseutm_campaign=300g” here/A.br /
/pa href=”http://www.core77.com/blog/object_culture/uks_new_lightweight_wine_bottle_turns_saved_grams_into_saved_tonnes_16632.asp”(more…)/a
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Puma Love Equals Football

Voici la campagne mondiale de Puma Football à l’occasion de la Coupe du Monde 2010. Un positionnement et travail réussi de l’agence Syrup avec ce slogan efficace, décliné sous la forme de symboles. Il est donc compréhensible par n’importe quelle culture et pays dans le monde.



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Previously on Fubiz

Japanse Winkeltje by Nezu Aymo Architects

Amsterdam studio Nezu Aymo Architects have completed the interiors for a Japanese shop in Amsterdam with strips of bamboo hanging from the ceiling. (more…)

Label Love: Minimalism Done Right By Polish Designer Ania Kuczynska

imageOne of my favorite guilty pleasures is watching nature documentaries like “Planet Earth” because you can learn so much about the world without ever leaving your living room! I got the chance to learn about snow leopards which are notoriously hard to track down. It’s no wonder that Polish designer Ania Kuczynska took inspiration from the fierce feline with her latest collection entitled “At the Top of the Mountain We Are All Snow Leopards.” Ania first studied fashion design in Rome, then Paris, eventually launching her own line in Warsaw, Poland. Her collection can be described as a sensual minimalism with ruffled trims and open backed dresses. There are no prints, just red silks, mint and black cotton jerseys fit for any occasion from work to a night out. Take a look at the slideshow to see more from Ania’s spring/summer 2010 collection.

view slideshow

Unanswered Lost Questions

Ai Weiweis New Yorker Profile and Upcoming Documentary

If you happened to miss it, one of our favorite people to talk about because he’s so often stirring up trouble, the artist Ai Weiwei, was profiled by Evan Osnos in a piece for the New Yorker. It’s a great read, chronicling his entire career up until the precarious position(s) he’s found himself in most recently with the Chinese government. Unfortunately, the magazine currently just has the abstract for the piece up now, which you’ll need a subscription to read, but for those without (and even with), the bonus was the magazine putting up a small clip of a feature-length documentary being made about Weiwei by filmmaker Alison Klayman:

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Meredith Dittmar

MDittmar-7.jpgArtist Meredith Dittmar uses polymer clay and wire to deconstruct the human experience in colorful bas relief. Starting with mostly historic and scientific inspirations—The Hadron Collider, Aztec architecture, pixelation and integral theory among them—the Portland, OR-based sculptor creates mounted 3-D scenes of strange animals and otherworldly landscapes. Besides a variety of clays, Dittmar works with plexiglass, spray paint and resins, using fiberglass for larger pieces.

In an interview with Fecal Face (which also has some great images of her studio and process), Dittmar said of her work, “Typically I collect images, diagrams, math and words and surround myself with them before I begin a set of pieces—though once I start working, I only refer to them rarely. I throw it all into the brain blender and see what comes out.”

Often featuring long, giraffe-like animals, seals, otters and other transported animals, the creatures cuddle, smile and nuzzle. Grown-up versions tend to be darker, but retain a signature soft warmth, like in the piece (pictured below) depicting a female animal pierced by an abstract force of industry.

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Sometimes cut open or dismembered to reveal some deeper, unfathomable anatomy, Dittmar bypasses the gore, leaving out blood, painful gashes or any other explicit violence. Even these sadly languid creatures emanate a peaceful quiet that, along with the painstaking symmetry so prevalent in the work, make her worlds comforting even when they’re painful.

Her choice of material also contributes to this comforting aspect of her work. Polymer’s puffy look and lack of sharp edges help Dittmar transport us, pushing the medium beyond traditional uses (made famous by Wallace and Gromit). This is, perhaps, the pervading theme of Dittmar’s work. Even as the clay bends into fantastical, extreme creatures and scenes, the emotions they uncover are delicate, subtle and intangible.

Dittmar also makes two- to three-inch creatures called “My Guys” that she sells (starting at $16) on her site. Offering multiples, as well as one-of-a-kind figures, Dittmar clearly has built up a following—all her recent originals are sold out, and collectors pay over $100 for the mini sculptures on Ebay. The Lilliputian works were even included in the book “
Dot Dot Dash
.”

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Her multi-pronged approach to art has also led to several film and advertorial projects. An ad for Converse featured her work in the background, but several short animations for animation studio Fashion Buddha that will be played at Umpqua Bank are the real triumph. Aaron Sturgeon, a 3-D artist, copied Dittmar’s creatures, right down to the fingerprints, to recreate as much of the original spirit as possible into the digitized version.

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Dittmar’s work also attracted the eye of Brit lingerie line Freya, who commissioned her to create backdrops. FiftyFiveDSL got in on the action too and invited her to design a limited edition T-Shirt for their Spring/Summer 2009 Black Series.

Beside her mounted Polymer pieces, Dittmar created elaborate, light-up scenes that turn the already supernatural work atmospheric. (Pictured above.) These, made in collaboration with artists Emily Gobeille and Theodore Watson, were part of an interactive installation Biome at The Riviera gallery in Brooklyn.

Other exhibitions span the globe, including The Meta Perspective in Mexico City, The Evolution of Psychepolymereganics in Portland and Istanbul’s Grey Area. She will have two new shows later this year. First, in August Dittmar will show at Alphonse Berber Gallery in Berkeley. In December, the SF MoMA gallery in Fort Mason will exhibit her work.

Selected works sell from NYC’s Jonathan Levine gallery, and you can check out larger images after the jump and see more in the gallery below.

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Arm-chair

Inspiration is traditional turkish way of using doily above furniture.The idea occurs as integrating the lace cover with the upholstery of the armchai..

Pac-Man singlehandedly destroys US economy (how’s that for sensationalist)

pimg alt=”0pac-manecon.jpg” src=”http://s3files.core77.com/blog/images/0pac-manecon.jpg” width=”468″ height=”223″ class=”mt-image-none” style=”” //p

pLike many other websites, we posted a link to Google’s homepage last Friday when, for one day only, they had a free Pac-Man applet at the top of the page. It has since become so popular that Google is offering it full-time A HREF=”http://www.google.com/pacman/” here/A./p

pNow, party-pooping analysts and software at A HREF=”http://www.wolframalpha.com/input/?i=google+traffic” Wolfram Alpha/A and A HREF=”http://blog.rescuetime.com/2010/05/24/the-tragic-cost-of-google-pac-man-4-82-million-hours/” RescueTime/A are claiming the one day of fun had a negative impact on the freaking U.S. economy. Here’s what they’re saying: /p

blockquote- The average user spent 36 seconds MORE on Google.com on Friday.br- Google Pac-Man consumed 4,819,352 hours of timebr- $120,483,800 is the dollar tally, if the average Google user has a COST of $25/hr/blockquote

pThey have statistics and charts to back all this up, but we’re a little disappointed they didn’t list the stats we’re really interested in: How many dots, total, did Pac-Man consume? How many times did Inky, Pinky, Blinky Clyde get eaten? Where is Ms. Pac-Man in all of this, and why is she “Ms,” are they not married?/pa href=”http://www.core77.com/blog/business/pac-man_singlehandedly_destroys_us_economy_hows_that_for_sensationalist_16631.asp”(more…)/a
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The Big Caption

Original image, here

Noted on kottke.org, The Big Caption is an irreverent companion to The Boston Globe’s Big Picture website. Essentially, it takes some often fairly serious news photography and slaps some comedic type right over the top…

Seemingly the brainchild of one Ian Collins, The Big Caption is updated sporadically with an array of stories and an equally wide range of fontage. Here are some recent posts, with the ongoing blog at thebigcaption.com.

Original image, here

Original image, here

Original image, here