Category Archives: DESIGN

High Tech Transformers Ride at Universal Studios


Fans of the Transformers film series will be happy to know that director Michael Bay worked closely with Universal in designing the ride. As the director of all three Transformers films, no one is more knowledgeable about the intricate details and nuances of the robotic superheroes than Bay. Thus Universal was guaranteed a ride that is true to the films and that will appease the most exacting Transformers fans. When Bay signed on as creative consultant, he demanded that Universal hire the visual effects company of his choosing, and not the one they already had lined up. Bay felt that only Industrial Light and Magic(ILM), a division of Lucasfilm LTD, could handle the “characters made up of 25,000 parts.”

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Sushi Time: Sushi Slicers (Episode 3)


StomachLife.com/ is an exploration of creativity through food. “Food inspires Creativity” StomachLife Los Angeles Presents “Sushi Time”: Sushi Slicers, Last Episode of a 3 part series with Chef Sam Sugimoto of CHAYA in Downtown Los Angeles. In this episode Chef Sam gives us insight on sushi knives and shows us how to cut sushi with a Nakiri-Bocho, slice sushi with a Yanagi-Bocho and chop sushi with a Deba-Bocho. He also gives us the scoop of how he orders his knives, which are made from a samurai sword company and can cost thousands off dollars.

Produced by
StomachLife Los Angeles:
MJ Glover 
Daniela Ruelas

Shot and Cut by
Mycole-Jerred Glover
Marat Shaya

**Special Thanks to
CHAYA Downtown &
Chef Osamu Sugimoto
Vanessa Kanegai at Wagstaff Worlwide

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retaW MOOD* Denim Fragrance Liquid

Anyone that know’s denim jeans, know’s you don’t wash them. Or if you do, it’s once every blue moon. So obviously after a few spilt jagers and that strange smell coming from the backside after sitting in that dodgy stairwell. It surprises me why no one’s thought of this before. The MOOD* Denim Fragrance Liquid has hints of mint.

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Nike Air Yeezy 2

The Nike Air Yeezy II in both Platinum and Black editions will release June 9 in limited numbers, at select global retailers. Start calling all your hook ups in the sneaker world to secure you pair.

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ERIC CLAPTON X FERRARI SP12 EC

Eric Clapton is enough of a Ferrari enthusiast that the Italian automaker’s Special Projects Program in Maranello, in collaboration with Italian coachbuilder Pininfarina, designed and built the special SP12 EC one-off for the living guitar legend. The vehicle is inspired by the original 458 Italia, with body panels inspired by the 1980s V12-powered 512 BB, a model with which Clapton was so enamored he purchased three of them over the years. Estimates put the value of the SP12 EC at around $5 million. Slowhand likened his participation in the project as “being in front of a gigantic blank canvas that had to be painted on,” adding that the process was “an incredible experience, one of the most satisfying things I’ve ever done.”

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Words of wisdom.

The Japanese live by this.

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The Telegraph: Interview with Apple’s Jonathan Ive

Apple’s design guru Jonathan Ive, who receives a knighthood today for creating products such as the iPad, tells Shane Richmond why this country’s industrial heritage lies behind his succes.

Just one person looks twice at Jonathan Ive as we walk through the Apple store in London’s Covent Garden and that’s a member of staff. The customers are oblivious to the presence of the man responsible for the design of the computers, iPads, iPhones and iPods that they are admiring, tapping and caressing throughout the shop.

Ive, a softly spoken, thoughtful Brit, has worked at Apple in California since 1992, and since 1997 has been in charge of its designs. This may well make him the most influential designer in the world. In creating the iPod he unleashed a product that profoundly altered the music industry, while the iPhone is doing the same to the mobile phone industry. The most recent product from his team, the iPad, is setting the standard for an entirely new category of computer.

His incredible run of success has made him revered in the design community and helped him to amass a fortune in excess of £80 million. Even so, he says, he isn’t recognised all that often. “People’s interest is in the product, not in its authorship,” he says.

Considerably more people will know Ive’s face after today, when he is to be knighted for services to design and enterprise. The honour, he says, is “incredibly humbling”.

“All I’ve ever wanted to do is design and make; it’s what I love doing. It’s great if you can find what you love to do. Finding it is one thing but then to be able to practise that and be preoccupied with that is another,” he says. “I’m very aware of an incredible tradition in the UK of designing and making, and so to be recognised in this way is really wonderful.”

Ive was born in 1967 in Chingford, Essex, but raised in Staffordshire, where he went to Walton High School, a large comprehensive in Stafford. He says his father, a teacher, was a significant influence on his decision to pursue design. “My father was a very good craftsman. He made furniture, he made silverware and he had an incredible gift in terms of how you can make something yourself.”

Ive talks about Apple’s attention to detail in its products – details that often won’t be seen by consumers at all – as a desire to “finish the back of the drawer”. “We do it because we think it’s right,” he says. The seed of that idea was planted while watching his father work. “Growing up, I enjoyed drawing but it was always in the service of an idea. I drew all the time and I enjoyed making.”

He studied design at Newcastle Polytechnic, now Northumbria University, where he still returns frequently to give guest lectures. “One of the things that was interesting about my time at the school of art and design is that you were in very close proximity to graphic designers, fashion designers and fine art students. That’s one of the things that really characterised my time at college and I think it characterises a lot of the energy and vitality in London, this density of such creative diversity.”

It was while he was at university that Ive first encountered an Apple Mac. Having considered himself to be technically inept, he was amazed to find a computer that he could use. “I suddenly realised that it wasn’t me at all. The computers that I had been expected to use were absolutely dreadful.”

That experience made Ive curious about Apple and the people behind it. Later, at Tangerine, the design agency he co-founded, he worked for Apple as a consultant. Twenty years ago, he moved to California to join the company full time. Despite that, he says, he is “definitely the product of a very British design education”.

“Even in high school I was keenly aware of this remarkable tradition that the UK had of designing and making. It’s important to remember that Britain was the first country to industrialise, so I think there’s a strong argument to say this is where my profession was founded.”

Ive’s design studio, on Apple’s Cupertino campus, a short drive from the San Francisco home where he lives with his British wife, Heather, and two children, is shrouded in secrecy. Only select employees are even allowed inside the office, which has tinted windows and is filled with machines for designing and prototyping Apple’s various products.

The sight of the shaven-headed, muscular designer might lead you to expect a brusque, tough character. Apple has a reputation as a challenging company to work for, an image illustrated in Walter Isaacson’s biography of Steve Jobs, the late co-founder, which told of employees reduced to tears in bitter rows.

And yet Ive appears to be quite a gentle person. There are long pauses after each of my questions as he considers his answer and orders his thoughts. When he talks about his work with Apple, he almost always talks about “we”, rather than “I”. Everything he says emphasises the teamwork involved in producing products such as the iMac, the candy-coloured computer that relaunched Apple on the path to success, or the iPad, the tablet that has redefined the way people use computers. Certain words come up time and again, particularly “simplicity” and “focus”.

“We try to develop products that seem somehow inevitable. That leave you with the sense that that’s the only possible solution that makes sense,” he explains. “Our products are tools and we don’t want design to get in the way. We’re trying to bring simplicity and clarity, we’re trying to order the products.

“I think subconsciously people are remarkably discerning. I think that they can sense care.”

The care that goes into Apple’s products is something that Ive speaks about earnestly. It’s a principle that he traces back to the industrial revolution. “One of the concerns was that there would somehow be, inherent with mass production and industrialisation, a godlessness and a lack of care.

“I think it’s a wonderful view that care was important – but I think you can make a one-off and not care and you can make a million of something and care. Whether you really care or not is not driven by how many of the products you’re going to make.”

“We’re keenly aware that when we develop and make something and bring it to market that it really does speak to a set of values. And what preoccupies us is that sense of care, and what our products will not speak to is a schedule, what our products will not speak to is trying to respond to some corporate or competitive agenda. We’re very genuinely designing the best products that we can for people.”

In black and white, those sentiments sound idealistic, the kind of thing about which it is easy to be cynical. Like every other electronics manufacturer, Apple has faced questions in recent months over the working conditions in the Far East factories where its products are assembled.

Apple has attempted to show that it cares for its workers just as it cares for its customers and products. A detailed series of audits has, Apple says, led to improved standards in the factories it uses and the company argues that it monitors its suppliers more openly and more thoroughly than the competition.

Ive and his team don’t just design the products that Apple makes. The ideas are often so new that frequently they have to design the entire production process that the factories will use to make them.

Ive has achieved an awful lot and still has a long career ahead of him. Even so, a knighthood is a good time to take stock. If he was to be remembered for just one of his Apple designs, I ask, which one would he pick?

There is the long pause. “It’s a really tough one. A lot does seem to come back to the fact that what we’re working on now feels like the most important and the best work we’ve done, and so it would be what we’re working on right now, which of course I can’t tell you about.”

Apple is famous for its secrecy about future products. I ask what will happen if the Queen asks about the new iPhone today. Will he have to say, “I’m sorry Your Majesty, we don’t comment on forthcoming products”?

“That would be funny,” he laughs.

But I notice he doesn’t say no.

By 

READ PART TWO OF HIS INTERVIEW HERE

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Supreme ‘Alton’ Sunglasses Spring ’12 Collection

Four styles of hand-crafted Italy sunglasses as part of Supreme Spring 2012 Collection and features tortoise shell, green, yellow and black frames with Barberini anti-reflective glass lenses.

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Introducing the LEAP: An entirely new way to interact with your computer


Leap represents an entirely new way to interact with your computers. It’s more accurate than a mouse, as reliable as a keyboard and more sensitive than a touchscreen. For the first time, you can control a computer in three dimensions with your natural hand and finger movements.

To learn more, pre-order, or apply for an SDK, please visit http://www.leapmotion.com.

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Pharrell Williams Presents: i am OTHER

Pharrell Williams introduces i am OTHER and talks about his vision behind the brand.

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mastermind JAPAN x Mercedes-Benz G 55 AMG Limited Edition

First previewed during Fashion Week Tokyo Spring/Summer 2012, the mastermind JAPAN x Mercedes-Benz G55 AMG has been released in Japan at authorized Mercedes dealers. Limited to only 5 cars, the custom version of the G 55 AMG has been hand crafted at AMG headquarters in Germany. The skull and bones trademark logo of mastermind JAPAN can be found throughout the vehicle, including the exterior and the interior as well. The off-roader is priced at 250′000 USD.

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McDonalds Fries Art by Ben Frost

Ben Frost is a visual artist whose work seeks to challenge contemporary norms and values of Western culture and society. Frost’s visual work places common iconic images from advertising, entertainment, and politics into startling juxtapositions that are often confrontational and controversial.

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Disassembled. Because everyone has a bad day now and then.


I decided to make this short animation after drawing some Marvel characters in a cartoony style:imajunationblog.blogspot.com/2012/03/after-seeing-new-avengers-trailer-i.html

Credits

A short by: JUNAID CHUNDRIGAR
Music by: JORIS HERMY
Sound design by: ERIK GRIEKSPOOR
Hulk explosion: THIJS VIEGERS

This animation was not made in collaboration with Marvel
All character are © Marvel Comics

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House in Kitasando with Built-In Skate Bowl

Check this cleverly designed home in the neighborhood of Shibuya, Tokyo. Particularly with this built-in skate bowl on the ground floor. The house has been designed by Level Architects. Only in Japan!

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Stussy Guest Artist Series: Adrian Johnson


For our Summer 2012 collection, we worked with British illustrator Adrian Johnson. We met up with Adrian at his studio in Lewes.

Over the years, Liverpool born Adrian Johnson has developed a unique and strongly identifiable body of work. His trademark economical, highly crafted, graphic work is constantly evolving, whilst always maintaining a healthy distance from current trends and passing fashions. Adrian’s work has already led to a prolific working career and a client list which includes Paul Smith, Adidas, Monocle, The New York Times and Unicef. He also has exhibited work in London, New York, Los Angeles and Tokyo. Attention to detail, humor and a simple timeless sophistication mark him out as one of the leading illustrators currently practicing.

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Woodkid: Run Boy Run


One of the coolest music videos. I love these guys music and video style.

Woodkid first album “The Golden Age” coming fall 2012
Video directed by Yoann Lemoine / Iconoclast
Post production by onemore production

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Nike Foot Stickers, a wearable tread that protects your feet when running

It’s no secret that Nike has been trying to get its wearer’s as close to barefoot as possible. With all of the weight reducing and flexibility enhancing materials that they are developing its actually fairly obvious. They even have sneakers like the Nike Free line that are said to mimic the feel of being barefoot.

Their newest conceptualized technology would be the Nike Foot Sticker. It’s somewhere between a shoe and a wearable tread that literally sticks directly to the foot to protect you from the dangers of barefoot running. These are obviously not a fashion item but purely for performance and based on having names like Woman Yoga, Woman Combat Cardio and Woman Dance they are specialized for individual activities. No real release information has been given about the Foot Stickers but if these hit shelves would you be interested?

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mastermind JAPAN x Herman Miller: Eames Furniture Series

Limited to 120 pieces each, the chair and table will go on sale on May 26th at Isetan department stores in Japan.

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FEZ by Disasterpeace

This album was created for a the 2D game FEZ. You play as Gomez, a 2D creature living in what he believes is a 2D world, until a strange and powerful sentient artifact reveals to him the existence of a mysterious third dimension!

Tracklist –

01 – Adventure
02 – Puzzle
03 – Beyond
04 – Progress
05 – Beacon
06 – Flow
07 – Formations
08 – Legend
09 – Compass
10 – Forgotten
11 – Sync
12 – Glitch
13 – Fear
14 – Spirit
15 – Nature
16 – Knowledge
17 – Death
18 – Memory
19 – Pressure
20 – Nocturne
21 – Age
22 – Majesty
23 – Continuum
24 – Home
25 – Reflection
26 – Love

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Vans Authentic Cork Bi-Fold Wallet

The piece can be picked up now fromConcepts for $18 USD.

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