Monday, September 06, 2010

RSS Feed

The Core77 Design Blog

send us your tips get the RSS feed
 
Posted by hipstomp |  6 Sep 2010  |  Comments (0)
0bumblewhite001.jpg

[photo credit: Evan R. Wexler]

Of all the possible reasons a pair of Brits visiting NYC could get arrested, illegally building a huge, mythical wooden bird-monster overlooking a Brooklyn street has got to be the most interesting.

UK-based artists operating under the noms de guerre Jimmy Bumble and Leonard White built the Brooklyn Griffin, a nine-foot sculpture made from shipping pallets and skateboards, atop an industrial building on Brooklyn's Billyburg-Bushwick border (without permission); the infuriated building manager subsequently had the pair arrested and the sculpture smashed to bits.

continued...

Posted by hipstomp |  6 Sep 2010  |  Comments (0)

0jstephmcm96.jpg

Thanks to both Jeffrey Stephenson and you, our Core77 readership! Back in July we posted some shots-in-progress of Stephenson's Mid-Century Modern PC tower design, seeking your input on some of his design queries; just this morning he's e-mailed us shots of the finished product. Looks pretty sweet, and he's even integrated dual cooling fans into the bottom of the housing.

Hit the jump to read some of Stephenson's thoughts on the project, or check out more shots on Stephenson's website.

continued...

Posted by hipstomp |  6 Sep 2010  |  Comments (0)
0dbuildorg001.jpg

Check out the Marketplace at D-Build.org, a sort of Etsy for designers and consumers interested in reclaimed materials. In the Products section they sell finished products like Arbor & Taylor's Lincoln series of furniture (above), all made from reclaimed lumber; those looking to do their own projects should check out the Materials section, where you can buy random hunks of old floor beams, planks, boards, framing, and even entire ripped-out walls. Design something up, build it, and sell it; do it right and you'll make your money back, and then some.

0dbuildorg002.jpg
Posted by Aart van Bezooyen |  5 Sep 2010  |  Comments (0)

avb_repair_saturday_01.jpg

YOU ARE HERE is one of the most important signs at this year's Ars Electronica Festival. The former tobacco factory is a great event venue but due to the big amount of spaces, stairways and events it's easy to get lost. So far, we didn't see any breadcrumb trails but visitors need to keep track not to miss out one of the many highlights.


avb_repair_saturday_02.jpg.jpg

One of this year's highlights is ROBOT-ISM, an exhibition with selected content from the yearly Japan Media Arts Festival. If you love animations such as Fujiyama vs. Knight Cobra and know what "Gundam" means then this is the place to be.


avb_repair_saturday_03.jpg.jpg

At the Pixelspaces Conference Anthony Dunne (Head of the Design Interactions Department at the RCA) lectures about the robots from the Technological Dreams Series and questions which roles robots will have in our lives and which kind of (distant? intimate?) relationships could develop between man and machine.

See more robots after the jump.

continued...

Posted by Aart van Bezooyen |  4 Sep 2010  |  Comments (0)

avb_repair_friday_01.jpg

Several signs are needed to guide all visitors towards the main entrance of the Tabakfabrik Linz, a former tobacco processing plant which is the main event area for this year's Ars Electronica Festival.


avb_repair_friday_02.jpg

Arriving at the main square we walk into a performance by soft bodies who are using the central square as their stage, or better playground, to interact with their audience. This nude performer needed nothing more than a single rock to capture the attention of dozens of visitors.


avb_repair_friday_03.jpg

The Cyberarts exhibition is where we find Zimoun's sound installation. The Swiss artist created a structure of 216 dc-motors rotating wires that all together surprise our ears with unusual and complex sounds. Hard to explain but great to hear.

See more photos after the jump.

continued...

Posted by Lisa Smith |  3 Sep 2010  |  Comments (0)

Helmut Smit is our new favorite artist/designer, even if FLAMMA was the only project he'd ever done (it isn't, by the way, and they are all stellar). This brilliant Ikea Hack "harks back to one of humanity's basic needs: making fire." As Ikea does not sell matches or lighters, Smits has taken cues from the wartime necessity of burning furniture to keep warm, and created a fire from an Ikea rope, hanger, wine rack, egg cup, napkins, and floral embellishments.

The video above is worth every minute, not to mention a good lesson in building fires, an art lost on most of us.

Visit Smit's site here.

flamma.jpg

Posted by Lisa Smith |  3 Sep 2010  |  Comments (0)
narud.jpg

Oscar Magnus Narud's Keel collection: tables in rough wood and iron.

Running from September 15th through November 14th, Make-Me is an upcoming exhibition at Moss that brings together a set of artists and designers producing what Moss has coined "Butch-Craft." Maybe there is no better way to describe this than the words they use themselves: "a cerebral yet virile narrative applied to rough work crafted in wood, iron, steel, marble, rush, paint, boiled leather, clay, baked agricultural waste, plant-life, gypsum drywall, and blood, sweat and tears."

continued...

Posted by core jr |  3 Sep 2010  |  Comments (0)

coroflot-joboftheday.jpg

Honda R&D
Automotive Designer

Torrance, CA

You will work independently on the development of original designs or adaptations requiring very specialized design skills and abilities. The Designer employs the best combination of preliminary information and contributing data to develop final designs (2D/3D) and basic concepts; selects technique best suited to represent project including graphics and technology; conducts product research to determine styling trends and consumer preferences; produces sketches, renderings and computer graphic illustrations, ideas and materials for presentation and helps develop strong brand specific ideas for building identity.

» view

The best design jobs and portfolios hang out at Coroflot.

Posted by Sara Jacobson |  3 Sep 2010  |  Comments (0)

LDF.jpg

Ah, the wonderful dilemma with design festivals: too much to do, too little time. The London Design Festival is making that problem even worse, announcing that it's sweep of the city is broadening with three new design districts, each with its own character and events. In addition to Brompton and the Shoreditch Design Triangle, the Covent Garden, Fitzrovia Creative, and Clerkenwell districts will help to further inundate London with design September 18-26. Various events, exhibitions, and installations are scheduled in each of the districts. For more information, download the London Design Festival Guide here.

continued...

Posted by hipstomp |  3 Sep 2010  |  Comments (2)

Here's a couple of interesting videos done by Austin-based design studio Zoticus Design, displaying computing-of-the-future concepts that demonstrate client Freescale's networking prowess. In the second video, I dig the way the woman sends info to her tablet around 1:15; the first video is otherwise the more interesting one, but I kept thinking "Why in God's name is that little girl wearing so much makeup?"

Freescale - Consumer from Zoticus Design on Vimeo.

Freescale - Industrial from Zoticus Design on Vimeo.


 
Get Our Newsletter
Submit

Sign-up for your monthly fix of design news, reviews and stuff to make you smarter.

Follow Core77
Twitter Facebook RSS

1 HR DESIGN CHALLENGE

See Last 1HDC

FEATURED EVENTSSee All Events

Playsam T-Shirt Design Contest Deadline: September 30

London Design Festival September 18-26
London, UK

Rome Prize 2010 Deadline: November 15

Index: Design Challenge: Designing for Education Deadline: November 26

CORE-TOONSSee All ‘Toons



Discussion Threads