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Posted by Coroflot  |  23 May 2013

Work for Hulu!



wants a Senior UX Designer
in Seattle, Washington

If you're an interaction designer with strong organizational skills who does not believe in the conventional constraints of print vs. web vs. video and thrives on variety and challenge, Hulu wants you to be their next Senior UX Designer.

The ideal candidate combines a world-class design sensibility and skills; a desire to make a huge impact in the new and rapidly growing online distribution channel for premium video and a passion for working in a fast-paced, chaotic environment with intense, demanding, but fun-loving co-workers.

Does that sound like you? Apply Now

Posted by Ray  |  23 May 2013  |  Comments (0)

HomeintheWoods-exterior.jpgStokkeAustad - "The Woods"; Image courtesy of Maria Larsson / Home in the Woods

It's always nice to be pleasantly surprised by a serendipitous visit to a strong exhibition, especially during a week when there happen to be dozens of events to visit. (With the launch of NYCxDesign, New York's annual design week was as supersaturated as ever, what with the ICFF expanding into Javits North and Wanted Design nearly overflowing with exhibitors.) As with Field and Various Projects' Here & There, an unassuming exhibition was well worth the visit, and even though most of last weekend exhibitions have been broken down, packed and shipped by now, Home in the Woods will remain on view at 29 Mercer St in Soho (albeit by appointment only).

However, unlike Jonah Takagi's effort, Maria Larsson's exhibition is brimming with New Nordic and Swedish Modern quality, including vintage pieces by Bruno Mathsson and Sven Markelius along with works of art and design. As the sole organizer of the exhibition, Larsson readily admits that her role went far beyond simply curating the exhibition: an architect by training, she oversaw the buildout of the gallery space, as well as the PR and marketing.

HomeintheWoods-EldFire.jpgVintage table and chairs by Bruno Mathsson; leather goods by Tigerklo; stool by Lith Lith Lundin

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Posted by hipstomp / Rain Noe  |  22 May 2013  |  Comments (0)

chillsner-01.jpg

Summer's nearly upon us, and we here at Core77 will shortly spend a weekend at a cabin rental where we can sit outside and drink nice, frosty beer in between spirited bouts of wrestling. But there's a design problem: While we can wrestle out in the woods as good as we can in the office, having cold beer outside means hauling up a cooler, keeping that cooler well-stocked with ice, and downing the beer faster than we'd like so it doesn't go warm—and that accelerated boozing sometimes impacts the wrestling results. There's gotta be a better way!

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Posted by Ray  |  22 May 2013  |  Comments (0)

HereThere-wide-4.jpg

We've seen plenty of excellent work by Washington, D.C.-based Jonah Takagi here and there at various exhibitions and venues over the years, but we finally crossed paths during NY Design Week at a pop-up shop/exhibition for his new-ish retail venture Field. Although he launched the company with childhood friend Daniel Thomas last year, Here & There marked first major event in New York, a collaboration between the D.C.-and-Chicago-based brand and NYC's Various Projects, who stock some of the carefully curated goods at their flagship store in the Lower East Side, Project No. 8.

Billed simply as "an exhibition featuring an array of artists and designers invited to create objects on the theme of travel," the exhibition was a highlight of this year's design festivities.

HereThere-TimothyColmant-More.jpgPosters by Timothy Colmant

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Posted by hipstomp / Rain Noe  |  22 May 2013  |  Comments (0)

proppowerrugged-01.jpg

Those with dedicated workshops of their own design have the luxury of placing their own power outlets. Bur for DIY'ers making do in mixed-use spaces, or tradespeople on jobsites, the chaos that is extension cords is a built-in part of any project: You need to keep the tool connection out of the sawdust pile, and arrange the cords in such a way that you and others won't trip over them.

proppowerrugged-02.jpg

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Posted by Ray  |  22 May 2013  |  Comments (0)

ICFF-Lighting-RichBrilliantWilling-Monocle-2.jpgRich Brilliant Willing's "Monocle" wall sconce

Although the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center is notorious for its rather unflattering industrial lighting fixtures, many of the exhibitors at the ICFF happen to design lamps and lighting for the appreciably more intimate settings of the home or office, where (thankfully) we spend most of our time. Here's a selection of some of our favs, including several new offerings from our friends at Rich Brilliant Willing, Brendan Ravenhill and Patrick Townsend.

ICFF-Lighting-RichBrilliantWilling-GalaChandelier.jpgThe Gala Chandelier comes in a variety of configurations

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Posted by hipstomp / Rain Noe  |  22 May 2013  |  Comments (0)

US-Shipwrecks-880.jpg

This is crazy—see those yellow dots on the map? Those are the locations of some 20,000 known shipwrecks off the coast of America, all mapped by the National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration as part of their Remediation of Underwater Legacy Environmental Threats (RULET) project. Many of those yellow dots are older sailing ships or coal-fired vessels, and it's no big deal if those sit on the bottom of the ocean; others, however, are World-War-II-era oil tankers torpedoed by the freaking Nazis.

shipwreck-oil-02.jpg

Those tankers, and some other non-wartime wrecks carrying large volumes of oil, are a problem. It's only a matter of time before corrosion starts to release thousands of tons of oil from those ships into the ocean. Some 87 wrecks have been added to a national risk assessment report, with 36 of them deemed "high priority for a Worst Case Discharge." And these are just the boats that NOAA knows about; they estimate "it is likely that local knowledge will bring forward other vessels that [also] meet the criteria...."

shipwreck-oil-03.jpg

If these ships start to leak, it is not just the poor Gulf states that dealt with the Deepwater Horizon disaster that will be affected:

The majority of the 36 higher risk wrecks identified in RULET are located off the North Carolina and Florida coasts. They reflect the intensity of World War II casualties in the Battle of the Atlantic. For the 6 Most Probable Discharge (10%) scenario, the high priority wrecks are located off of New England and Florida.

As this report was just released two days ago, any potential solutions have yet to surface.

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Posted by Coroflot  |  22 May 2013

Work for Goodbaby!



wants a Product Designer
in Boston, Massachusetts

Goodbaby, the #1 juvenile products manufacturer in the World, servicing customer brands throughout North America, Europe, and Asia, wants you to contribute contribute to their process with your own personality and unique skill set.

You'll be working in an open studio in Boston's South End with a relaxed atmosphere and a multidisciplinary environment where people are expected to take ownership of their projects with minimal management. You'll need to bring 5-7 years professional experience, preferably with experience in juvenile or automotive products and a great, easy going attitude and personality.

Apply Now

Posted by Ray  |  22 May 2013  |  Comments (0)

Mataerial-2.jpg

Earlier this year, we came across the 3Doodler, a pen that allows the user to sketch far beyond the bounds a material substrate, namely paper. (Boston's WobbleWorks had more than quadrupled their $30,000 funding goal when we posted about the product at launch; by the time the campaign wrapped up a month later, they'd raised a whopping $2.3m)

Mataerial-1.jpg

Led by Petr Novikov and Saša Jokić, a team of researchers from the Institute for Advanced Architecture of Catalonia (IAAC) and Joris Laarman Studio in Amsterdam have developed a new, patent-pending additive manufacturing technology, known as MATAERIAL. (Pun lover though I may be, it took me a moment to get the name.) The machine is essentially an articulating arm that can create three-dimensional objects on any surface, independently of a build platform.
By using innovative extrusion technology we are now able to neutralize the effect of gravity during the course of the printing process. This method gives us a flexibility to create truly natural objects by making 3D curves instead of 2D layers. Unlike 2D layers that are ignorant to the structure of the object, the 3D curves can follow exact stress lines of a custom shape. Finally, our new out of the box printing method can help manufacture structures of almost any size and shape.

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Posted by shaggy  |  21 May 2013

math880.jpg

Hello Design Fans - Here is a wide image to kick off our new jumbo-tron Core77 format. Math is important, make it work for you, stay in school. Check, check. Keep your head down. Just a taste for now. - Edit: For those of you who are interested, the image is from Pratt's 1967 yearbook - a fair spell before Core77 was there - but still a favorite - Math: it's fundamental. Found here- p.s. if you have one of these we would love to buy it from you. Edit 2, : "The Fibonacci Sequence/ Reservoir Dogs Poster You Never Knew You Needed" Until Now.

 

FEATURED EVENTSSee All Events

Electrolux Design Lab 2013Deadline: Mar. 14

Design for Manufacturing Summit #3March 21
Brooklyn, New York

Cooper UX Boot Camp: Fair Trade USAMarch 25–28
Petaluma, California

Designing the Next EconomyApril 23–25
Madrid, Spain

Braun Product Histories. In recognition of Braun's long history of and dedication to good design, Core77 presents this archive of product histories, photos and more to highlight Braun's success in creating meaningful products that people enjoy using.
Brand New IDEO

"Brand New IDEO" centers on a
24-hour global Make-a-Thon taking place Monday, March 25th in IDEO's eleven offices around the world,
starting in Tokyo and ending in San Francisco.

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