Killer new production method: Metal origami

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pFounded in 2002 by manufacturing designer Max Durney and now gaining traction, A HREF=”http://www.industrialorigami.com/home.cfm” Industrial Origami/A has come up with a strong, simple, brilliant, and relatively inexpensive way to build things: By precision folding sheets of aluminum and steel./p

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pAs A HREF=”http://www.energydigital.com/industry-focus/manufacturing/above-fold” reported by Barbara Taormina in IEnergy Digital/I,/A/p

blockquote An Industrial Origami designed product starts as a sheet of metal that has been pre-shaped and perforated along the folds with the company’s signature smile cuts. Those sheets are sent to shop floors where assemblers fold them into the working forms. Industrial Origami’s fold-and-build method eliminates the measuring, cutting and welding and bolting that usually goes into producing parts.

pThe company says it can save manufacturers anywhere from 20 to 50 percent on materials, and 25 to 45 percent on labor. And, because parts travel as flat sheets, they are easier to handle and cheaper to ship. Prepping parts with a coat of paint before they are folded is also much faster and easier than painting built or assembled components./p

p”Industrial Origami profoundly changes the way products are designed and manufactured,” said Patrick Sheehan, a partner at the London-based Environmental Technologies Fund, one of the first groups to invest in the company. Industrial Origami has raised $32 million in venture funding and it is hoping to convince investors to put another $20 million more into the company this year./blockquote/p

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pThe technique provides parts with surprising strength, in addition to the benefits listed above. Industrial Origami has already lined up big-name clients like Bentley Motors and Whirlpool and has some 254 patents to date. Production method geeks can read more about the process, which is also applicable to certain plastics and composites, A HREF=”http://www.industrialorigami.com/technology/overview.cfm” here/A./pa href=”http://www.core77.com/blog/materials/killer_new_production_method_metal_origami_16549.asp”(more…)/a
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U900 = Awesome

Hiding in Triangles by Philip Modest Schambelan and Anton Fromm

Here’s another triangulated outcrop: Technische Universität Dresden students Philip Modest Schambelan and Anton Fromm have designed a hotel for mountain bikers for the edge of a cliff in Pregasina, Italy. (more…)

Retrospective of SNL Photographer Mary Ellen Matthews Launches at John Varvatos

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It’s a shame that one of only things reliably worth watching Saturday Night Live for lasts less than a minute in the show’s hour and half runtime. They’re the title/photo cards used between commercials, shot by the show’s staff photographer, Mary Ellen Matthews. After 10 years with the program, her great work, both shooting straight shots of the host and musical guests, as well as the more setup intensive, is finally getting its due with a retrospective at John Varvatos‘ Bowery-based shoe store/former CBGB location (which seems like a certain heightening of irony there when considering SNL and lost cultural edges), with the exhibition “Live from New York: A Decade of Portraits,” which is set to run until early-August. The opening for the show was Monday night and you can check out all the celebrity photos here. For further reading, we recommend this interview with Matthews from a little while back (complete with accompanying photos and comments about each) over at Spinner.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Berg Frei! by Nicole Losos

German design student Nicole Losos has created a concept for a triangulated wall-mounted structure that you can sit, sleep, read, eat and keep things on. (more…)

Hot In The Hive: Daria: The Complete Animated Series

image“La la la la la… You’re standing on my neck.” If that little tune rings a bell, raise your hand. One of my favorite shows from the 90s, “Daria” was a total hit with everyone I recommended it to. Daria started off as a character from Beavis and Butt-head but her smart, sarcastic and misanthropic character landed her own show for five seasons on MTV. (You know, way back before MTV started airing shows like “My Super Sweet 16.”) Anyway, since it’s last season aired in 2000, I’ve been eagerly awaiting the DVD set so I can relive Lawndale High, Jane Lane, and of course, the Fashion Club. Luckily the wait is over because all five seasons, both movies, and special features are in stores now. So put on your favorite green jacket, pleated skirt, and knee high Doc Martens to remember why high school sucked and wallow in teenage angst.

Price: $46.99
Who Found It: xgalexy was the first to add the Daria: The Complete Animated Series to the Hive.

OH!-CAMP Art & Design Camp

Art and Design Camp for future talents in design and architecture University of the Arts in Karlsruhe. About 100 high school students will have the op..

Pantone Plus Series launches

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Pantone, the company that sets the world’s standards on colour, has relaunched its Pantone Matching System as The Plus Series. As part of the launch of The Plus Series, the company has released this mini documentary giving an insight into the way it works…

 

Base Design in New York has designed the new identity, packaging and promotional series for The Plus Series (images from the website showing elements of this are below), and also encouraged the name change. According to Base’s press info, the name was chosen in order “to emphasise the added benefits of the upgraded product line – 566 new colours, a revised chromatic colour flow, and a set of digital tools”.

Base also produced the film, which features contributions from John Maeda and Doug Jaeger amongst others, in conjunction with director Greg Mitnick and Cool Hunting producer Ami Kealoha. While a touch corporate, the film takes viewers behind the scenes at the company, and shows the making of some of those lovely colours.

Warren Nick’s new UNKLE video

Last week we posted up images of UNKLE’s new album, Where Did The Night Fall which features artwork created by Warren Du Preez and Nick Thornton Jones. The duo have just finished (yesterday!) work directing the stunning video for the album’s first single, Follow Me Down, which stars supermodel Liberty Ross and which sees Du Preez and Thornton Jones explore further the world they created photographically as album artwork.

Please be advised that the above video contains nudity

Follow Me Down credits:

Production company: Rokkit
Directors: Warren du Preez, Nick Thornton Jones (Warren&Nick)
Executive producer: Luke Jacobs
Producer: Mikey Lavelle, Lindsy Thurlow
DoP: Daniel Landin
Art directors: Helen Macintyre, Marcus Sharp
Costume design: Zowie Broach and Brian Kirkby c/o Boudicca
Choreography: Russell Maliphant
Make up artist: Alex Box
Hair artist: Raphaël Salley
Editor: Christophe Williams, Will Judge @ The White House
Post production: Warren&Nick / Flame by Stephane Allender @ No
Science / After effects by Kevin Lamb & Luke Bellis
Models: Liberty Ross, Sophie Willing (Storm Models); Shannon Tillery (Union Models)

wnstudio.tv

wheredidthenightfall.com

 

Poetic License at Moss

An exhibition of work by designers including Oskar Zieta (above), the Campana brothers, and Michele De Lucchi opens at New York gallery Moss next week. (more…)