| March 9, 2009 |
A Place
Where Color and Ideas Converge
from The New York Times
From a
rectangular footprint that had the elevators at its core, Charles Patten, an
architect with Spacesmith, designed a space that puts visitors into the action
the moment they enter the 45-foot-long reception area. Banquette seating with
bright, striped cushions is used in a pit configuration that is created by the
two-foot elevation of raised flooring that was added to accommodate wiring. In
front of the banquettes, metal stools in white, red, yellow and turquoise, and
bright, tulip-shaped canvas wing chairs provide a foil to the concrete floor,
white walls and wood particle board on the exterior walls of the conference
room. More
Nosign of the Times
from Metropolis Magazine
In the last
year the designer who calls himself 'Nosigner' has debuted diverse and original
products and installations while exhibiting at nearly every major design show
around the globe including Tokyo, London, Seoul ,and Sydney. The 28-year-old
furniture and product designer says he always wanted to be an architect (he
trained as an architect and his student work in 2004 was a finalist for the best
architecture diploma project in Japan,) but a look through his portfolio proves
his high-concept works are outside a traditional architectural practice. More
Tropical Transplant
from Architectural Digest
If it were
not overlooking a coconut-palm-fringed canal, the lavish if modestly scaled
pleasure palace that New York designer Todd Black created as Veronica Webb’s
family retreat in Key West would surely be taken at first glance for a royal
pavilion in Marrakech or Taroudannt in Morocco. More
Would You Live In A Shipping Container?
from Fast Company
Adam Kalkin isn't the
only architect to make homes out of shipping containers. A handful of
architects, including Jennifer Siegal and Lot-Ek, began using them 10 years ago
as a gritty reaction against the tidy white surfaces of modernism. But nobody
has employed shipping containers more inventively than Kalkin, a New Jersey
architect and artist who has used them to design luxurious homes, museum
additions and refugee housing. In architectural circles, Kalkin is regarded as
something of an oddball. More
Fur,
Rich Colors Mark 2009 Ebony Fashion Fair
from the Northeast Mississippi Daily
Journal
Hundreds cheered for sleek suits, flashy furs and a
plus-sized model at the 2008-2009 Ebony Fashion Fair. This year's fair,
sponsored by Alpha Kappa Alpha, Inc., took place recently at the Tupelo
Furniture Market. The theme for this year was "The Runway Report," with special
scenes dedicated to the most fashionable styles, colors and fabrics. More
The
Best New Designers in America: 2009
from GQ magazine
Meet the guys who are
redefining men’s style with their leather jackets, silk-screened T-shirts, and
cashmere cardigans. In GQ’s third annual search for the most ascendant talents
in men’s fashion, we reached from the shores of Maine to the streets of Atlanta,
assembling a class of designers whose vision is as broad and diverse as the
country itself. More
True
Religion Apparel Enters Eyewear Deal
from The Associated Press via
Forbes
True Religion Apparel Inc., best known for jeans, said
it entered a licensing deal for Revolution Eyewear Inc. to make and distribute
eyewear under the True Religion brand. The eyewear, to be available in June,
will be sold at more than 3,000 specialty stores such as Sunglass Hut, True
Religion's namesake stores and department stores including Neiman Marcus, Saks
Fifth Avenue, Nordstrom, Bloomingdale's and Barneys New York. More
Channeling the Ideal of Modern Beauty
from The Washington Post
The most
valuable currency in the fashion industry is beauty. It's like a natural
resource: exploited, manipulated, celebrated and often taken for granted until
it's close to disappearing. When we talk about classic good looks, we still use
a Western standard. It's the beauty so often described in Shakespearean
literature: ivory skin, rosebud lips, flaxen hair. But as our demographics
continue to shift, the standard of beauty in the future is likely to be more Eva
Longoria than Donna Reed. More
Catching Up with...Watchmen Illustrator Dave
Gibbons
from Paste Magazine
There's a tiny
detail in one of the scenes from "Watchmen″ that's indicative of the graphic
novel's larger complexity and the play between word and image within it. A
locksmith with "Gordian Knot Lock, Co." on his back arrives to replace a door
lock that has been broken several times, each replacement more elaborate than
the last. That a graphic novel makes a reference to the Gordian Knot is in
itself mind-blowing, but then consider that ultimately this minor reference
becomes a metaphor for the entire conflict in Watchmen. More
EazyDraw 3.0
from Macworld
If you liked MacDraw—the
vector drawing program that shipped with the Mac way back when—you’ll love its
conceptual successor, EazyDraw 3. EazyDraw gives non-professionals a painless
way to create illustrations, logos, floor plans, technical diagrams, flowcharts,
maps, and Web graphics that can be copied and pasted into other applications,
such as Microsoft Word or PowerPoint, or Adobe Illustrator. More
Down Argentine Way
from PRINT Magazine
There’s a comics
revolution going on in Buenos Aires, and at the very center is a man who draws
himself with the head of a rabbit. "I saw a really bad knockoff of one of my
characters painted on a kiosk, and I felt like 'Yes! I’ve finally made it!' "
says Argentina's Ricardo Siri Liniers, known by his nom de comics, Liniers.
More
Blackmagic Design Updates Software
with Support for Adobe Creative Suite 4
from Computer Graphics World
Blackmagic
Design Inc. released a new Windows-based software update of its video editing
products, including all Multibridge, DeckLink, and Intensity models. This new
Blackmagic Design Version 7.0 software update, now available at no charge on the
Blackmagic Design Web site, adds support for Adobe Creative Suite 4. More
i4 Product Design Strengthens Team with New Marketing
Manager
from TCT Magazine
i4 Product Design, a
leading product development company, based in Edinburgh has appointed Sandrine
Sienche, as its new marketing manager. Sienche is an addition to the six-strong
team and her role will focus on strengthening i4 Product Design’s marketing and
business development activities. More
Palm Treo Pro (Sprint) Smart Phone
from Interior Design
Applauded as an
"innovative use of technology, material, and organic spherical shape as
paramount to Bernini’s boat fountain in Rome" by European design curator, Dr.
Kathryn Hiesinger, the museum welcomes Matteo Thun’s Lavasca tub to its
permanent contemporary design collection. Completed in 2001 for Milan-based K/B
manufacturer Rapsel, Lavasca is touted as the world’s lightest bathtub. More
Matteo
Thun Collaborates with Rapsel, Applauded by Art Museum
from Core77
Half technical, half
intuitive, the design process is tough to explain. But that’s my job—I’m a
design writer. I write so you don’t have to, putting into words the work that
you’d rather do than write about. But write you must—Web site copy, proposals,
captions, emails to clients—and though the worse designers are at it, the more
work I get, in the spirit of collaboration I’m going to share my secrets. So
what if it puts me out of a job. More
Microsoft in 2019: Where's Windows?
from PC World
Microsoft's 2019 is the
latest entry in the genre of future product dramatization videos. There's a
five-minute version, but also a tightly-edited two minute excerpt. The
super-slim and easy-to-use handheld gadgets and wall-sized transparent displays
handled by the video's shoppers, students and office workers make Tom Cruise's
setup in Minority Report seem obsolete. More important than whizzy interfaces,
the videos promise much more extensive collaboration, instant information
retrieval, and multimedia communication. More