Core-Toon: Design Tribbles

pimg alt=”Tribbles_468.jpg” src=”http://www.core77.com/blog/images/Tribbles_468.jpg” width=”468″ height=”665″ class=”mt-image-none” style=”” //p

pArtist: a href=”http://www.flickr.com/photos/lunchbreath/”lunchbreath/abr /
More: a href=”http://www.core77.com/blog/cartoons/default.asp”View all cartoons/a/pa href=”http://www.core77.com/blog/cartoons/core-toon_design_tribbles_16561.asp”(more…)/a
pa href=”http://feedads.g.doubleclick.net/~a/KtQiTKkJiRScgUQfgjijlQHkfMw/0/da”img src=”http://feedads.g.doubleclick.net/~a/KtQiTKkJiRScgUQfgjijlQHkfMw/0/di” border=”0″ ismap=”true”/img/abr/
a href=”http://feedads.g.doubleclick.net/~a/KtQiTKkJiRScgUQfgjijlQHkfMw/1/da”img src=”http://feedads.g.doubleclick.net/~a/KtQiTKkJiRScgUQfgjijlQHkfMw/1/di” border=”0″ ismap=”true”/img/a/p

Mechatronik by Caramel Architekten

Austrian studio Caramel Architekten have completed the first of five buildings for a science park in Linz, Austria, which is bent in the middle and cantilevered at one end. (more…)

Jane Mount at The Curiosity Shoppe


This Friday is the opening of “Ideal Bookshelves” at The Curiosity Shoppe in San Francisco. It features paintings, prints, and postcards by Jane Mount. (what a diverse and creative portfolio!)

“Many of the pieces in the show represent Ideal Bookshelves submitted by friends, both from San Francisco and around the country. It’s an amazing and beautiful collection, and it’s been endlessly fascinating to check out all the great books people are into these days.”

Quote of Note | Raf Simons

jil_ss10.jpg
Looks from Jil Sander’s spring 2010 collection and creative director Raf Simons

“I know what it is to go somewhere where you haven’t been, and a whole arena is sitting there with lions waiting for the meat to come in. I know exactly the feeling I had when I had to go to Jil Sander and I had never done womenswear. It’s a challenge, but it’s fantastic. I like the idea of constantly changing, like a chameleon. But it’s complicated. Fashion, just like music, deals so intensely with new generations of people who come in and really appreciate change. But in music, even if you’ve been in the business for 50 years, you stand on the stage, and you do that song from 50 years ago, and the audience will love that same song—they will respect it and respect you for it. In fashion, it’s not like that. I cannot go onstage and bring out the same collection from 10 years ago. That wouldn’t work. I would be dead.”

Raf Simons, creative director of Jil Sander

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Clever Job Hunter Used Google Search Results to Target Potential Employers

this is kinda of brilliant. When top advertising creative directors searched for their own names on Google they saw an Google AdWord ad by Alec Brownstein asking them for a job. It lead to interviews with four of the people he targeted and two of them offered him a job.

Where cursors come from.

[via BB]

Supreme

SupremeBookCover.jpg SupremeBookKermit-1.jpg

Famed skate store and cult brand Supreme has been the subject of many a skater’s wet, sneaker-fueled dreams since James Jebbia founded it in 1994. What first began as an ode to the laid-back urban sport’s apathetic but angry crowd has spawned artist-designed boards, videos directed by the likes of Damien Hirst and advertising campaigns featuring Kermit the Frog, Mike Tyson, among other unlikely collaborations.

SupremeBookShirt-1.jpg

The eponymous new book “Supreme” pays homage to the brand’s forward-thinking invention and seamless representation of skate culture. Full-bleed photos catalog the posters, from Lou Reed in classic “fuck you” mode (he’s rumored to have been paid a pretty penny for it) to the pin-up calendar from 2005 and an enviable layout of inventory, including sneakers and t-shirts, from the various collections.

As Glenn O’Brien writes in his introduction, “Supreme spreads style, but it also spreads thought and information. Culture is its business.”

SupremeBookAd-1.jpg SupremeBookBoard-2.jpg

The book includes an interview between Jebbia and artist Kaws, with a preface by former Supreme employee Aaron Bondaroff, who since has gone on to start his own successful brands.

Spreads of the limited edition boards feature color palettes comically reinvented by Ryan McGinness, Kaws’ red-and-black transmogrifications and Andrei Molodkin‘s classic “Fuck Bush”—which quickly became a catch-all slogan for Supreme’s hardscrabble perspective.

SupremeBookShirt-2.jpg SupremeBookBoards-1.jpg

“Supreme” also features the fruits of collaborations with Damien Hirst, Richard Prince, Jeff Koons, Public Enemy, The Clash and Budweiser.

Work by Takashi Murakami and Mr. boards reflects the brand’s ascension in Japan, while the Sean Cliver painted versions recreate fifties illustrations with a sick twist. A major part of Supreme’s business is nurturing these creations and simultaneously offering them at moderate prices, keeping in mind their street clientele.

SupremeBookShoe-1.jpg

Supreme’s unapologetic style, often brassy and harsh, and its well-made, affordable clothes sparked an explosive combination. The reams of iconic shoe and shirt designs get full display, which include brand collaborations too with the likes of Nike, Timberland and Vans.

“Supreme” sells from Amazon. See more images in the gallery below.


Cooper-Hewitts Design Triennial Is Here!

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

The Most Prescribed Psychiatric Drugs

MostPharmaGood-1.jpg

Rx nation that we are, Good presents an infographic (click for full size) featuring how many and what kind of prescribed meds were downed in 2009 in the U.S. (Click image for detail.)

Depression, anxiety and panic round out the dark side of modern life for Americans. Xanax gets the gold with 44 million prescribed users, all for anxiety. Zoloft, Prozac and Valium all get face time, too.


Peter Buchanan-Smiths Best Made Co. Parlays Colorful Axe into Luminous Stacks

best made lamp.jpg“If used safely, responsibly, and with utmost care—for yourself, your fellow man, and the environment—an axe will be your best friend,” particularly if the axe happens to be a beautiful object designed by Peter Buchanan-Smith. The Grammy award-winning graphic designer and author teamed with his old camp buddy, Graeme Cameron, an outdoorsman and environmental entrepreneur, to found Best Made Company, a New York City- and Toronto-based enterprise that is doing a brisk business in made-to-order axes. Even those averse to chopping will be seduced by the sturdy tools, which feature Tennessee hickory handles hand-painted in your choice of vibrant patterns—we favor the white, red, and black combo with the rather ominous name of “Hush Now.” The distinctive axes cleared the way for the company’s foray into lighting design for Roll & Hill, the bright new lighting company founded by designer Jason Miller. Debuting at the International Contemporary Furniture Fair, the Stacks Lamp (above) is inspired by the stacks of flagging tape—used by arborists and loggers to mark trees—strewn about the Best Made workshop. It consists of a stack of wood rings painted with bold patterns. Fancy a different configuration? Users can stack and re-stack the removable rings as they see fit. Yelling “Timmmmmmmmmmmber!” before a redesign is optional.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.