Category Archives: DESIGN
Eco-Resort Pedras Salgadas by Luis Rebelo de Andrade & Diogo Aguiar
The new eco-resort of Parque de Pedras Salgadas, Portugal, consists of a set of seven small houses in perfect harmony with the surrounding outstanding nature.
Designed in a modular prefabrication system but flexible to adapt to the specific places within the park, these houses result in several different combinations of the same three modules (entrance/bathing – living – sleeping) creating different morphologies and different dialogues with the surrounding nature, wisely occupying the empty spaces between the trunksof large trees and, at the same time, allowing each home to be unique, special and worth visiting.
The pitched roofs that caracterize the intervention redefine the contours of the park boundary and result, within the housesin comfortable but dynamic spaces.
The vain corner contradicts the structural logic of the house but creates the ilusion that the park is inside the house framing living nature pictures. The outer coating in slate tile reffers to the local contruction traditions and the slatted wood used when there is a balcony creates the perfect resting spaces.
NIGO Discusses Coca-Cola x HUMAN MADE Collection and Plays with Coke Cans
In this video, NIGO® constructs an over-sized version of the Human Made logo using Coca-Cola, Coca-Cola Zero, and Mello Yellow cans. Mannequins wearing the new collection turn into real people and assist NIGO® in building his Human Made logo in Beams’ Warehouse.
In this video, NIGO® speaks with Beams Men’s Creative Director, Hiroshi Kubo , about the inspiration for the collection and their mutual love for iconic Coca-Cola memorabilia.
Google Glass
Google launched an official site for their newest hardware project: Google Glass. The project has been around for about a year now but now it seems like Google is actively trying to get the product into the hands of real consumers. On the site you can apply to become a “Glass Explorer” by simply telling the company over Google+ or Twitter #ifihadglass what you would do with them. Oh and you have to pony up $1500. No big deal.
Projects like Glass, I suppose I should really start calling it a product, get me excited because it proves we’re ready to move past the idea of data only coming to us through a phone shape. Google has chosen the face as the best place to receive and send information, while supposedly Apple will be bringing computing to the wrist. I’m not certain if either of these locations are any good for giving us large amounts of data, it’s still uncharted territory. I wouldn’t dismiss anything until we can try these devices for ourselves.
Meet MYO, the Wearable Gesture Controller
It seems like every few days another product promising the future comes across our desk only to never be heard of again. Here’s hoping that isn’t the case with MYO, a wearable gesture controller from Thalmic Labs that looks to deliver everything you’ve ever loved about sci-fi movies like the ability to move objects with your mind. Perhaps that’s a bit of an exaggeration but it’s not so far from the truth. The device uses the electrical activity from your muscles to wirelessly control all of your electronic devices including your computer and phone.
The device will be compatible with Mac, Windows, iOS, and Android and is expected to ship by the end of this year.
Paris New York Burger Restaurant by CUT architectures
The Paris New York restaurant specializing in burgers offer a place combining Parisian spirit and mind New Yorkers without falling into the cliches of the genre. A black ceiling, dressed bulbs Broadway recalling dialogue with floor tile cements geometric patterns. The provision mirrors facilitates dialogue between the patina of the walls and the fuselage of the bar and the staircase leading to the upstairs room.Dressed in riveted aluminum, the bar is monolithic telescope of the staircase whose aesthetic is reminiscent of the U.S. Air Stream. The steel structure of the staircase is visible from inside kept reminding workshop bays and structures Eiffel.
Photos by David Foessel
Fashion Experts Sound Off on Kanye West’s Paris Performance
By Tim Blanks. Photographs by Tommy Ton.
Kanye West insisted that he gets a bigger kick out of his bad reviews than his good ones. In which case, he should look away now, because I’m all about the shock and awe after his performance at Le Zénith in Paris last night. West has been doing a few of these surprise club dates around Europe, but nothing about the ninety-minute show felt like it was on the fly. In fact, it played like a piece of musical theater as tightly conceptualized as Bowie’s Isolar tours, with West solo against a huge screen and his musicians tucked to the side, anonymity guaranteed by mummy-like wrapping. The screens played images of nature at its most elemental: boiling clouds, raging blizzards, titanic waves, frozen wastelands. When West was poised at the pinnacle of the canted stage, nature surging all around him, it was like he, too, had become a force of nature. And that sure was the way his relentlessly intense performance played.
But it’s always been part of West’s irresistibly twisted allure that the peaks of public triumphalism have been balanced by depths of private anguish. The balance clearly shifts. King Crimson already sang about a “21st Century Schizoid Man.” All West had to do was lift the sample. He performed last night in a straitjacket, and sang “Say You Will,” the most agonized song from 808s & Heartbreak, with arms bound and head encased in a beaked mask of white feathers. The outfit could have been West’s comment on the inescapable lunacy of fame, though he is, of course, a perfectly willing participant. But when “snow” fell from Le Zénith’s ceiling, heavy enough to blanket the audience, there was a moment when they looked like refugees. And that mask made West look more sacrifice than bird of prey.
The show revolved around his long, free-form verbal riffing. He’d bring the music down to a drumbeat or a piano chord while he fixated on a phrase or a train of thought, lost in a tortured internal dialogue. “Hendrix, Morrison, James Brown,” West named his improvisational influences later. “Nothing recent.” During a long vamp through “Clique,” he reeled off some other names by way of context: Picasso, Michelangelo, Basquiat, Walt Disney, Steve Jobs: fiercely original thinkers all, and none of them particularly troubled by conventional mores. If that’s the company West feels he’ll keep for posterity, I certainly wouldn’t contradict him. Genius smooths the rough edges of ego.
West’s foray into fashion was always colored for me by the thought that it might distract him from making music (and if he had designed clothes as well as he does that, it probably would have). “Fashion” reared its head twice last night, in the forms of a crystal Margiela mask (the covered face as an ongoing motif in West’s life and art is yet one more thing that demands obsessive analysis) and what I think was a shout-out against designers who won’t lend clothes to his girlfriend. (You’d imagine she might have enough money to buy them by this point. I’ll never quite grasp why the people who can most afford everything seem to be the ones who most want stuff for free.) But on another level, the entire evening was as designed and immaculately realized as a great fashion collection and/or show. So in the end, Kanye actually realized his ambitions. And his focus is firmly back on music, specifically on the album he has been recording in Paris. Though he concedes two new preoccupations: “furniture and pornography.” Two more designs for living that offer endless possibilities to enthrall and appall.
Deer Antler Handlebar by Taylor Simpson
This hand crafted genuine deer antler handlebar by Taylor Simpson is probably the coolest handlebar you can get for your bicycle!
Simpson originally came up with the concept of Moniker while participating in the World’s Longest Yard Sale on Route 127 in 2010. While traveling the sale he found a pair of genuine deer antlers a local man was selling somewhere in Kentucky. As a cyclist he thought it would be clever to create bicycle handlebars made of animal horns and antlers.
The final product was eventually put to life as a Package Design assignment for his Fall 2012 Senior Project class with Michael Gerbino at Pratt Institute.
All images © Taylor Simpson – Website
Invader in Paris
After filling the Jonathan LeVine booth (covered) with his tiled works during Basel Week Miami, Invader has returned to the streets in his home city of Paris recently with this new piece. Again taking elements of pop culture that interest him, the French street artist has created a mosaic featuring the Pink Panther.
Contemporary Cape Town First Crescent Bay Home
South Africa comes with some of the most beautiful, untouched land– and when you’re living amongst it all, there’s no way that you can’t take advantage of the views. This completely glazed home by Saota Architects sits along the edge of the Crescent Bay.
The overall layout of this home is quite open with plenty of secluded areas created within each space. The master suite is a sensual space, complete with a bed centered in the room and the bathroom just beyond, with a glass enclosure shower. The space remains quite linear within the natural setting, keeping the focus on the almost 360 degree views.
TPB AFK: The Pirate Bay Away From Keyboard Documentary
Makers of “TPB AFK” or “The Pirate Bay Away From Keyboard” the documentary film that looks into the lives of the men who started the most infamous file-sharing site in the entire world, have just announced its release date.
The documentary that was directed by Simon Klose will be free to download on February 8th at the same time that it is premiered at the Berlinale – Berlin’s international film festival.
Klose said that this is the first time ever that a film is being put online at exactly the same time as its Berlinale screening and hopes that this unusual release method embodies the principles explored by the film’s subject matter.
A press release about the release of “TPB AFK” stated:
“By sharing this film under a Creative Commons license, we hope to contribute to a serious debate about the social and economic benefits of sharing. We also hope to prove that sharing can be a realistic business model.”
The documentary was partially funded by a Kickstarter project that was launched more than 2 years ago, however production was delayed because of Swedish Supreme Court’s decision on the fate of Pirate Bay founders Fredrik Neij, Gottfrid Svartholm Warg and Peter Sunde.
Nike Air Max 95 EM “Honolulu”
Nike produces a special limited edition drop for NONFUTURE, called the Nike Air Max 95 EM “Honolulu.” An update of the Air Max 95 silhouette that influenced Japanese street fashion with its popularity, the EM stands for engineered mesh, alluding to the construction of the tonal green or black upper the shoe comes in. Designed by Sergio Lozano, inspiration was drawn from the human body, expressing the ‘back bone’ through the hard molded shape of the outsole while the ‘muscles’ are displayed through the textured upper layered on top. Certainly a very organic looking shoe, the pair also features a reinforced heel panel and thick rope laces. The runners appropriately derive their name from the Honolulu marathon held every year in Hawaii.
Hood By Air 2013 Fall/Winter “Boychild” Runway Show feat. A$AP Rocky
New York’s Hood By Air celebrated their 6th year of existence with an inspired runway show at Milk Studios with an assist from notable performance artist Boychild as well as Harlem emcee A$AP Rocky – marking the brands first ever participation at Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week. Following the show, GQ managed to catch up with Rocky to discuss his future plans in fashion – and whether he had the desire to become a designer – with the rapper commenting, ” Nah, I’m not a fashion designer. I’ll do collabs, but that’s the most. I’ve already did collabs with a few streetwear brands, but that’s on the high end. I’ll do a collab, but I’m not fashion designer and I have no intention of going and doing that anytime soon.”
God of War: Ascension Trailer
Nearly eight years after the release of the first installment, Santa Monica Studio and Sony Computer Entertainment intend to follow up their highly successful God of War series with a seventh installment –God of War: Ascension. This preliminary trailer for the game lays the premise for the March 12 North American release. The trailer plays on the main character, Kronos, who loses his family some ten years before the occurrences in the original God of War. Set against an emotionally-charged song, Kronos’ insatiable feeling of remorse is aptly depicted, and does well to set the tone for the highly anticipated game.
Jae Lee Comic Book Artwork
One of my favorite artist Jae Lee has a unique approach to his artwork of comic book characters almost showing a darker more vulnerable side to superheros. HUGE FAN!
Food Collages by Julie Lee
These Food Collages by Julie Lee look like wallpapers, but they’re actually gorgeous well organized food collages that she posts on Instagram.
Vibrant, spare, and beautifully arranged, she shoots them after visits to various farmers markets in Los Angeles or before tackling a recipe.
All images & video © Julie Lee – Instagram
A Conversation with Woodkid
Yoann Lemoine is a musician and video artist from Paris. His skills as a producer and videographer have been demanded by many big names in the music industry; Lemoine produced Katy Perry’s music video Teenage Dream as well as the videos for Lana Del Rey’s Blue Jeans and Born To Die. The list of his clients continues with Rihanna, Drake, Taylor Swift, Mystery Jets and so on. It is obvious that Lemoine is gifted catching dreams and visions to transform them on to celluloid. The most impressive is Yoann Lemoine’s own musical project that goes by the name WOODKID. The tracks are epic and monumental using the imposing effects of orchestral instruments such as string players, trumpets and horns, an abundance of drums and the significance of an organ. The conceptual full length album ‘The Golden Age’ will be released on the 15th of March 2013. The concept of the album builds up around the story of a boy who leaves the era of childhood and dies, only to be reborn within growing up. This story is told through WOODKID’s music videos, full of mystic images and extensive special effects. The first released video was ‘Iron’ followed by ‘Run Boy Run’ and the very recently released ‘I Love You’. As I was told in the interview there is more to come, more from Woodkid and more from Yoann Lemoine…we can’t wait.
Watch the video interview and find out what Woodkid has to say about budgets of music videos, questions without answers and that it is ok to make mistakes even if they involve a grizzly bear.
Videography and Production: Superiest www.superiest.net // Interview and Editorial: Georgia Reeve for Highsnobiety TV
A Look Inside The Loft Apartment of Supreme’s James Jebbia
James Jebbia the founder of Supreme, as well as Union New York and Stussy New York.
Italian interior magazine Case Da Abitare had the rare opportunity of visiting his Greenwich Village loft in New York City. The rather attention shy man rarely gives a look behind the scenes, which makes this tour of his apartment so much more special. Just like us, I am sure many of you would have expected something else from him, but there is not a single hint of Supreme or any of his other involvements to be found in the very minimalist space. A beautiful apartment for him and his family, far away from the bold streetwear that his Supreme brand presents season after season.