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Tuesday, March 13, 2012

The Core77 Design Blog

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Posted by Core77 Design Awards | 13 Mar 2012  |  Comments (0)
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Today—Tuesday, March 13—is the last day for you to submit and pay for your Core77 2012 Design Awards entries to get the Earlybird pricing. That's 20% off the regular price. Register here if you haven't already (we'll send you a limited-edition poster designed by Studio Lin) and if you have registered then login here to complete your entry and payment. The Earlybird discount is available until 11:59PM Pacific Time tonight so check what that means in your timezone!

Head over to core77designawards.com for more info.

Posted by Ray | 13 Mar 2012  |  Comments (0)

As ever, 3D printing is at the threshold of cultural consciousness, almost-but-not-quite the next major innovation in consumer technology. While hardware remains a bit too niche for the average user, plenty of brilliant DIYers and hackers have been developing new tools and applications for 3D printing technology, typically with the goal of making bigger, more colorful tchotchkes.

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TUVienna-3DPrinter-Racecar2.jpg1 μm (micrometer) = 1,000 nm = 0.001 mm

A team at the Vienna University of Technology is taking the Wayne Szalinski approach, not in terms of scaling-down the hardware but the actual output, fine-tuning the motion of the lasers and mirrors for a process called 'Two-Photon Lithography.' The technical details escape me, but their breakthrough involves an innovation that is more about a 100,000-fold (!) improvement in speed as opposed to nanometric scale: their 3D printer can produce "100 layers, consisting of approximately 200 single lines each, in four minutes."

The 3D printer uses a liquid resin, which is hardened at precisely the correct spots by a focused laser beam. The focal point of the laser beam is guided through the resin by movable mirrors and leaves behind a polymerized line of solid polymer, just a few hundred nanometers wide. This high resolution enables the creation of intricately structured sculptures as tiny as a grain of sand. "Until now, this technique used to be quite slow", says Professor Jürgen Stampfl from the Institute of Materials Science and Technology at the TU Vienna. "The printing speed used to be measured in millimeters per second—our device can do five meters in one second." In two-photon lithography, this is a world record.

This amazing progress was made possible by combining several new ideas. "It was crucial to improve the control mechanism of the mirrors", says Jan Torgersen (TU Vienna). The mirrors are continuously in motion during the printing process. The acceleration and deceleration-periods have to be tuned very precisely to achieve high-resolution results at a record-breaking speed.

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Posted by Ray | 13 Mar 2012  |  Comments (0)

Sparkling or tap? Gas or no gas? Fizzy or flat? It's one of those broadly European trends that ’muricans might regard as a bit too, well, posh for their tastes: the option of sparkling water at just about every Trattoria and Rathskeller on a certain side of the Chunnel. (Which is not to say that it hasn't caught on here in New York City; all else equal, a friend once picked a restaurant because they had free sparkling water.)

Meanwhile, sugary-sweet sodas are a uniquely American phenomenon, and if I come from the last generation of kids whose parents condoned the occasional jolt of HFCS —even my most health-conscious friends admit to craving a can of Coke every now and then—there's no denying that the magic of carbonation works wonders for otherwise unremarkable beverages.

Whatever your taste, those of you who can't get enough of that tingly sensation have several new options to choose from.

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SodaStream's household carbonators date back to the turn of the century, but they've experienced a recent resurgence as of the late aughts with their tap-like, non-electrical countertop appliance that carbonates run-of-the-mill tap water with the push of a button (or three). It's another take on the Gillette model: the CO2 cartridges can be refilled at various locations, but the money is in their flavor offerings.

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Indeed, the past few years have seen strong growth in the home carbonation market: the company had one of the more elaborate booths in the show, featuring a 3D in a custom viewing station, as well as a 're-cyclist' circling McCormick place in a pedicab retrofitted with a cage full of recycled bottles, a smaller scale version of the one at their booth. SodaStream's latest offering is their first fully automated (electric) soda machine, boasting three levels of carbonation.

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OBH Nordica is entering the carbonation game with a pair of curvier home soda makers, boasting "elegant Scandinavian design." For now, the devices are expressly meant to make soda water—no flavor syrup to speak of—but given its European appeal, the lack of extraneous offerings is entirely in keeping with OBH Nordica's roots.

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The SodaMaster Freestyle (above right) joins the Gazelle (above left) in their 2012 product lineup.

If the tap-like form factor of Sodastream and OBH Nordica's offerings, ISI's wand-like carbonator is a worthy new contendor in the home soda category. Don't be fooled by its potentially cringeworthy (albeit accurate) name: the "Twist 'n Sparkle" uses an entirely different carbonation mechanism, where the handheld device is attached ('twist') to the top of a special bottle; once it forms an airtight seal, the wand carbonate ('sparkle') to the liquid within. In addition to its versatility in terms of size and storage, the "Twist 'n Sparkle" can be used with any liquid—not just plain ol' H2O—from orange juice and coffee (yes, it's a real thing) in the morning to wine and spirits at night, transforming a mundane potable into a fizzy potion.

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Posted by hipstomp | 13 Mar 2012  |  Comments (1)

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Remember the big deal over the statistic that half of the world's population now lives in cities? That's nothing compared to projections for the year 2050, which say two-thirds of Earthlings will live in urban areas. Our planet is practically going to start looking like the entirely urban Star Wars planet of Coruscant.

That being the case, traffic is going to be bad, making the current Los Angeles rush hour look like frickin' Nurburgring. Cars are not going to cut it. To address this, forward-thinking, global transportation company Bombardier is sponsoring the YouCity Innovation Competition, seeking design concepts for "the future of urban mobility."

The competition will be divided into two tasks:

Task 1: The candidates will start by drawing an overview of the current and upcoming issues and bottlenecks of their target city's urban mobility, and provide a more detailed analysis of the most important one(s). They will then have to come up with a solution to the challenge(s) analyzed earlier. The candidates will present a concept that will solve or significantly improve the current situation, or that will prevent a future issue. The most important is to be concrete and specific!

Task 2: The second task is about a fully comprehensive and holistic approach. How does the proposal fit in the global picture for that city? This final proposal should combine all of the 3 aspects: Engineering, Business and Urban planning. Therefore, the candidates are strongly invited to collaborate and enrich their concept with ideas from other work streams than their own!

Registration's open now, and the competition officially beings on April 16th. Click here for more info.

Posted by Perrin Drumm | 13 Mar 2012  |  Comments (0)

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For designers, more than any other profession, a website isn't just an online portfolio, it's a distillation of who you are creatively, professionally and even personally. Are you serious, academic or more laid back? Are you more digital or handmade DIY? The stakes are high, but rightfully so. Color, text, typeface—these are the tools of the trade as well as the means of conveying what a designer can do with them.

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So what does French designer Fanette Mellier's website say about her? She has one of those user friendly/unfriendly sites, the kind that seem intuitive but make you work a little harder to access the information therein, because first you have to figure out the site itself. There are no instructions, no "my name is Fanette, I'm a designer and here is my work." It's more like a friendly game of cat and mouse. Click on a link and you're rewarded with a pop-up window. Click on the image in the window and you get a new image (no arrows to guide you forward and backwards) as well as text (in French) detailing each project.

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Posted by Core77 Design Awards | 13 Mar 2012  |  Comments (0)

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It's the moment you've all been waiting for: our next 5 Jury Teams are in for the Core77 Design Awards! We are proud to count these design superstars as part of our jury constellation in the most inclusive and celebratory design awards program of the digital age. These illustrious Jury Teams represent five more categories: Equipment (Changsha City), Speculative (TBD), Packaging (Paris), Interiors & Exhibitions (Brasilia) and Strategy & Research (Rochester). So prepare your projects; today is our EARLYBIRD DEADLINE (at 11.59pm Pacific Time)!

EQUIPMENT
Judging location: Changsha City, Hunan Province, China

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» Renke He, Jury Captain
Dean and Professor at School of Design at Hunan University

Team Members

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» Cathy Huang
President of CBi China Bridge

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» Jianghong Zhao
Professor at State Key Laboratory of Advanced Design and Manufacturing for Vehicle Body & School of Design, Hunan University


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» William Wu
General Manger of Innovation Design Center at Haier Group

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» Jing Ping Liu
Dr. and Professor at College of Mechanical Engineering and Transportation, Hunan University

View the team here.

SPECULATIVE
Judging location: TBD

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» Bruce Sterling, Jury Captain
Author of "Beyond the Beyond" at Wired

Team Members

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» Maria Bezaitis
Director of People and Practices Research Group at Intel Research and Senior Research Scientist of Interactions and Experience Research at Intel Labs

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» Irina Kharseeva
PR Manager at AR Door

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» Bernardo Fernandez
Science Fiction Writer, Professor of Graphic Design, CENTRO

View the team here.

PACKAGING
Judging location: Paris, France

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» Laurent Hainaut, Jury Captain
Co-Founder and Partner of Raison Pure Design Group
Founder, President and CEO of Raison Pure NYC

Team Members

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» Patricia Tranvouëz
Managing Director KENZO Parfums

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» Francois Brument
Designer

» Joel Caussimon
Art Director of Pixelis

View the team here.

INTERIORS & EXHIBITIONS
Judging location: Brasilia, Brazil

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» Nicola Goretti, Jury Captain
Director of Grupo AG

Team Members

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» Fernanda Bocorny Messias
Manager of the Programa Brasileiro de Design - PBD (Brazilian Design Program)

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» Lígia de Medeiros
Designer

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» Daniel Mangabeira da Vinha
Architect and urbanist and Partner at DOMO Architects

View the team here.

STRATEGY & RESEARCH
Judging location: Rochester, NY, USA

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» Lorraine Justice, Jury Captain
Dean of the College of Imaging Arts and Sciences at Rochester Institute of Technology

Team Members

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» Tim Fletcher
Business Development Manager, Daedalus

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» Donald Carr
Professor and Senior COLAB Fellow at Syracuse University Department of Design

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» Katherine Bennett
Associate Professor of Industrial Design, Humanities and Design Science at the Art Center College of Design

View the team here.

Our Earlybird deadline ends tonight, March 13 at 11:59pm Pacific Time. But don't fret. You still have until our regular deadline on April 10. Register now and we will send you one of our Limited Edition Design Awards posters. Stay tuned for the announcement of our Transportation Jury Team, led by John B. Rogers of Local Motors.

Core77 2012 Design Awards Jury Announcements:
» Jury team announcement #1: Consumer Products, Visual Communication, Food Design, Writing & Commentary, Educational Initiatives and DIY
» Jury team announcement #2: Interaction, Service, Social Impact, Soft Goods and Furniture & Lighting
» Jury team announcement #3: Equipment, Speculative, Packaging, Interiors & Exhibitions and Strategy & Research

Visit Core77 2012 Design Awards for full details.

 
Posted by Coroflot | 13 Mar 2012  |  Comments (0)

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Senior Visual Designer - UX/UI
Phunware

Austin, Texas

Phunware is seeking a talented Senior Visual Designer to join their creative team in Austin, TX. Candidates are self-motivated and eager to learn and produce inside a super fast-paced environment. Our ideal candidate has a stunning portfolio of varied work, with an emphasis on graphic, web, and UI/UX design. You'll be able to show a passion for attention to detail, versatility and beautiful user experiences.

» view

The best design jobs and portfolios hang out at Coroflot.

Posted by Ray | 13 Mar 2012  |  Comments (0)

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While neither member has a formal background in art or design, Drzach & Suchy collaborate on projects that lie at the intersection of both fields. The message of their latest project, "Nature Calling," is even more shamelessly optimistic than that of, say, the Holstee Manifesto, but it's worth a closer look (literally and figuratively).

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Similarly, I felt that the soundtrack to the video was a bit cheesy at first, but it's since grown on me. If the title of the post didn't give it away, check it out:

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Posted by Ray | 13 Mar 2012  |  Comments (1)

Noma Bar's exemplary vector design work is invariably on point, whether he's working on posters, portraiture or book covers. The London-based Israeli designer was recently commissioned to create eight limited-edition covers for Wallpaper's latest issue, which was released last week. In keeping with the editorial theme of Global Design, each one takes on a different country or region.

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Ever the innovator, Bar took the opportunity to make his first foray into the third dimension: each illustration is actually a carefully-staged interior, "painted in a three-dimensional studio and enhanced with actual products from each of the territories":

To capture a 'cultural moment in time,' Bar has turned Jean Nouvel's chairs into eyes for the French cover, while an ink box by Babaghuri becomes the lips for Japan, and Andreas Engesvik's candleholder gives bite to Scandinavia's polar bear.

"My images should not be immediately obvious to my readers," says Bar. "Most of them will require a second reading, or take a minute to interpret."

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This is precisely the beauty of his work: by flattening the space into an image, the artist preserves his signature style even as he incorporates sculpture, photography and interior design into the illustration.

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See the rest in full after the jump...

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Posted by hipstomp | 12 Mar 2012  |  Comments (5)

0cherubimbi10.jpgPhotos via urban velo

The confines of designing a bicycle seem pretty tight, but custom bike builder Shinichi Konno breaks out of them admirably. Shown here is his Silver Flyer track bike, which recently won both Best in Show and the President's Choice award at the North American Handmade Bicycle Show.

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At last year's NAHBS, Konno pulled the sheet off of the equally-striking Air Line Bike, a very different take on fluidity that still manages to break new aesthetic ground while fulfilling its mechanical duties.

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FEATURED EVENTSSee All Events

Objeto Brasil presents IDEA/Brasil Deadline: March 2, 2012

GRAVITY FREE 2012 Multidisciplinary Design ConferenceMay 1–2, 2012
Chicago, Illinois

Born Digital: Exploring the Digital Culture & Interactivity Through April 30, 2012
CAM Raleigh, North Carolina

Instructables "Make It Real" Challenge Deadline: April 30, 2012


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