Monday, May 10, 2010

Stefan Sagmeister

Stefan Sagmeister

Born in 1962, Stefan Sagmeister has become a world-renowned graphic designer and typographer through his fresh, timeless, and of-the-moment designs. Sagmeister is a Bregenz, Austria native who began his design career at the early age of 15 when he worked for “Alphorn,” a popular Austrian youth magazine. Only a few short years later, Sagmeister studied graphic design at Vienna’s University of Applied Arts. Due to his outstanding work, Sagmeister then received a Fulbright Scholarship to study at the Pratt Institute in New York. Finally, his formal schooling behind him, Sagmeister tried his luck in Hong Kong with advertising executive Leo Burnett’s Hong Kong Design Group in 1991, but he returned to New York after only two years. In New York Sagmeister teamed up with M&Co Design under Tibor Kalman, an influential American graphic designer of Hungarian descent. Unfortunately, as with when Sagmeister was in Hong Kong, his stay at M&Co Design was short-lived thanks to Kalman’s departure to be the editor-in-chief for Colors Magazine. In the same year (1993), Sagmeister established his own eponymous company, named Sagmeister, Inc. (Heller, 2009). The company’s website explains:

Sagmeister, Inc. is a graphic design company in New York City. We design all things printed, from posters, brochures, books and annual reports to identity systems, perfume packaging and CD covers. We love our jobs. (Sagmeister, Inc., 2010)

With this simple and unassuming statement, Sagmeister began making a name for himself.

Stefan Sagmeister’s philosophy on design is that “design should touch viewers’ hearts.” It is a simple yet powerful message, just as The Beatles wrote “All You Need is Love” and meant it. Sagmeister explains that too often these days, people see beautiful design all around them—design that is clean and visually pleasing, professionally designed posters and photographs—yet it all continues to leave the audience cold and without much emotion towards the piece. Sagmeister refers to it as fluff (Sagmeister Interview, 2007). The design looks great, but does it make you feel something deep down? Does it make you stare at it or continually return to it? Does it say something more than a superficial and easily forgotten message? Again, Sagmeister tries to design with viewers’ hearts in mind, not just their eyes.

In order to achieve and follow this philosophy, Sagmeister creates not only eye-catching designs, but also designs that are timeless and of the moment. He accomplishes this by pouring his own heart into the design and paying extreme attention to detail so that the viewer can find something new in the design every time they return to look upon it. Sagmeister’s designs often show threads of humor, but are always made with completely serious intent (Stefan Sagmeister—TED, 2004). Sagmeister’s design challenges viewers to think about the design and also about what it means in their own lives. His design is raw, original, handwritten, from heart to pen to paper with no intermediaries.

One testament to his philosophy on designing to create deeply felt emotion was when Sagmeister harmed his owned body for the sake of his craft by creating the AIGA Detroit poster. Without directly confronting the issue, Sagmeister poses a question to designers about the loss of art in the new digital design age where programs and computers produce art much quicker and without much thought. The dialogue for the poster is carved into Sagmeister’s naked torso (Sagmeister Interview, 2007). The image is thought provoking and subtly sarcastic. It shows the pain of design in a very literal sense and encourages designers to remember how to create from the soul (not just a computer) and to use that art to inspire. He truly touches the viewer’s heart.

Sagmeister does not restrict himself to a certain style, although he states that his “style” makes subtle appearances here and there (Sagmeister Interview, 2007). He also does not restrict his design to specifically styled projects. He creates posters, album art, packaging, typographic designs, etc. and accepts these projects as they come. One of his main philosophies on life is to do work that makes you happy. Another personal philosophy on working is to take one-year sabbaticals consistently. Every few years, Sagmeister retreats to a location outside of New York (often to Bali) to refresh himself, to experiment with design, and to remember why he does what he does. He does not take any work from clients during these specific years, no matter how tempting the project (he apparently turned down the opportunity to design for one of President Obama’s campaigns). Sagmeister believes that rest from client work is crucial in staying happy while maintaining a fresh outlook on design (Heller, 2009).

Along with his design philosophy, Sagmeister is not shy about his personal life philosophies. He wrote a life lessons book with 20 maxims titled, “Things I Have Learned in My Life So Far.” Some life lessons include:
1) Helping other people helps me.
2) Having guts always works out for me.
10) Money does not make me happy.
15) Worrying solves nothing.

The maxims are taken from his diary entries he wrote in 2000, a sabbatical/experimental year. In the next few years, the life lessons turned into typographical design projects, photographing and filming the words from the lessons in different forms around different cities and then putting them together in different forms of media (Williams, 2008). Therefore, Sagmeister’s personal philosophies on life often coincide with his design philosophies.

Sagmeister first started grabbing consumer’s attention with his album art projects. Collaborating with Lou Reed and David Byrne (from “Talking Heads”) Sagmeister, garnered positive results and continued to do work for the “Rolling Stones” and “Aerosmith,” as well as several other artists. Sagmeister believes in working with kind-hearted artists whose music he truly enjoys. He has also received three Grammy awards for his album packaging and artwork. This includes work on Once in a Lifetime, a box set by Talking Heads, and the album Everything That Happens Will Happen Today by David Byrne and Brian Eno (Heller, 2009).

Among several interesting print fashion brochures and his album artworks, Sagmeister took on a unique project in “Unavailable,” a fragrance and soap line by Blue Q. The perfume was packaged in a book with the 15 Unavailable principles on the inside cover. The soap had “un” less embossed than “available” so that over time, the user would “become available” (Sagmeister, Inc., 2010).

It seems that Sagmeister has some sort of common thread in his designs in terms of designs that change over time. A few examples would include a billboard he create with paper that yellowed in the sun. His team prepped the paper in the sun and using stencils to block the light of the sun while the rest of the paper yellowed a bit. The billboard was hung up and as the day passed the stenciled letters appeared and then the yellowing took them over too so that they eventually blended into the rest of the paper. Another example is a book sleeve that had holes punched into so that over time the book cover underneath the sleeve changed color (TED Talks, 2004).

Of course, maybe Sagmeister’s most attention-grabbing, designer-defining piece was his own body on the AIGA Detroit poster. But lately, Sagmeister has found new work in his typographical works that take entries from his diaries and spread them around town in different fashions. His maxims have been made out of coat hangers, bamboo, inflatable monkeys, a computer graphical and motion censored spider web display, yellowed paper, building walls, steamed glass, and plenty more interesting objects (Sagmeister, Inc., 2010).

Sagmeister has also contributed political commentary through mobile displays about government spending, he has created a chameleon-like logo for Seed Media Group that changes according to what the logo is printed on and what that document’s purpose is, and he has created fully customizable Vilcek Award trophies. Sagmeister truly has no limit or restrained “style” to what he does. Just read his design monograph, “Made You Look” or life lessons book, “What I Have Learned in My Life So Far,” to understand why he truly loves the work he chooses to do (Sagmeister, Inc., 2010).

Stefan Sagmeister is his own person and his own designer. He takes challenges that he desires to take on and is truly happy because of it. He splashes humor and optimism in his extremely detailed works that require second looks and thoughtful insights. He makes statements about design and politics without ever picking a fight or attempting to start a commotion. He does not look for attention, but garners it through his work and is thereby extremely influential in the design world. Stefan Sagmeister is the epitome of a faithful and true designer.

(Cited Works and Sample Works are in the following two posts below.)

Cited Works for "Stefan Sagmeister"

Cited Works

Heller, Steven. "Stefan Sagmeister." Printmag.com. 02/01/2009. Coverleaf. 4/30/2010. http://printmag.coverleaf.com/printmag/200902/?pg=36.

"Sagmeister, Inc." 4/30/2010. http://sagmeister.com/sagmeister.html.

"Stefan Sagmeister: Graphic designer." 2004. TED. 04/02/2010. http://www.ted.com/speakers/stefan_sagmeister.html.

"Stefan Sagmeister interview." 08/15/2007. Wallpaper. 04/02/2010.
http://www.wallpaper.com/art/stefan-sagmeister-interview/1661.

"TED.com Conference Talks." 2004, 2008, 2009. TED.com. [4/20/2010]. http://www.ted.com/speakers/stefan_sagmeister.html.

Williams, Eliza. "Things I Have Learned In My Life So Far." 02/05/2008. Creative Review. 4/20/2010. http://www.creativereview.co.uk/cr- blog/2008/february/things-i-have-learned-in-my-life-so-far.

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

Stefan Sagmeister Works

Stefan Sagmeister works including album artworks, posters, his famous AIGA Detroit poster, and a few pieces from this life lessons book, "Thing I Have Learned so Far."





60's and 70's have come back. The 80's? Please, not yet.


British radio company, Pure, has come out with a line of retro/vintage radios. I have noticed a strong comeback of simple and retro music devices lately (record players and vinyl... new ones, but designed like the old ones), and it seems Pure has caught on to the trend. Its simplicity in design! SO... now you can check out the "Evoke (portable), the Oasis (poolside) and the Siesta (bedside)" raidos! Click through for prices!

Monday, May 3, 2010

Cellphone and iPod Mouses?

Carnegie Mellon University researchers have made electronic devices into their own mouses. Using two optical sensors, the new device can attach on to cellphones and ipods with touch screens to perform the the functions a finger normally would have difficulty doing... highlighting, moving through screens, etc. It uses common technology so it would be cheap and easy to duplicate... many of these could be available in the near future! I would love to keep my fingers off my screen to not obstruct my view!

Check it out:


A 3D Mars for the people


Filmmaker, James Cameron, has approached NASA to include 3D cameras on the next rover going to Mars in 2011. The idea was originally scrapped in 2007 due to budgetary reasons, but James Cameron lobbied for the cameras to be developed and included because it would spark public interest. If this happens, the public could get more involved in space exploration, giving the many people who oppose giving so much money to it a reason to pay attention. I'd watch it.

Check out the camera. Then check out this review on Hubble 3D.

Ball Bot

Researchers at Tohoku Gakuin University (Japan) have created a robot that balanace and move on a basketball using three wheels. The bot can balance when pushed, it can carry glasses of water, and it can act as a wheelbarrow by itself or teamed up with two other robots. Cool, except, my question is... what is it good for? I'm sure that this is a great feat for scientists, but socially and for the world, what good does it do us? What will it eventually be a part of? Give us non-scientists a reason to care!


Pedestrian Power


Pedestrians in Toulouse, France are going to test out a new form of sustainable energy. Inspired by a dance club in Rotterdam, Netherlands, they will install absorbing tiles in the city square that when stepped on generates a motor..... they will hopefully be able to power some of the streetlights! If the skinny french men and women are not heavy enough to generate enough noticeable power, they will try the tiles out in the fatter city of Huntington, West Virginia. Go America.

But still, great idea.

Eric Austin one-ups the BeetleCam!

So what happens when the BeetleCam can't get over the toughest terrain? What happens when being stuck on the ground (and getting mauled by lions) gets old, BeetleCam? Well, Eric Austin, has one-upped the BeetleCam with his Helicam. Essentially, a toy helicopter houses a Canon DSLR that shoots superb HD video. With an electrical motor, the Helicam is quiet and does not vibrate like a gas motor might. If you know how to fly it, you can get amazing aerial shots with out being close to the object. Hover over water and fly above trees. Just don't crash it!

I want one. Bad.


Aerial video with a Canon 5D , 7D helivideo.com from Eric AUSTIN on Vimeo.

BeetleCam


Brothers Will and Matthew Burrard-Lucas ingeniously created a mobile ground device that can house high quality cameras. Why is this important? Because when photographing dangerous animals up close, there is an extreme risk of being mauled. So! The brothers built a camouflaged mini remote controlled car with over sized wheels and an over sized engine built to endure tough terrain. They have successfully photographed Elephants, African Buffalos, and a Lioness (who ended up mauling the BeetleCam itself, but luckily the memory card was salvageable!). I guess thats what it was made for! safety!

The coolest, most effective billboard I've seen

In the Netherlands, it is common for public service employees to be hassled and attacked by other citizens. I'm not entirely sure why, but apparently, its big issue. The Dutch government, therefore, created its on public service announcement billboard and essentially shames all who stand by and watch these events happen. Using a prerecorded, bluescreen-ed event in one corner of the billboard and mirror image of the street below the billboard that shows people watching the billboard and the event that takes place on it, passerbys are directly confronted for their inaction. It gives 4 tips for when they encounter a real event in the future... essentially, do something about it to help your public service employees! What a cool and interesting way to truly get people's attention on an extremely important matter!

check it:


First offshore Wind Farm


The Cape Wind project has finally been approved for placement below Cape Cod. In what may be the first step in a making more wind farms down the coast, the project will be like the equivalent of taking 175,000 cars off the road. It is clean, reusable, and efficient. Downfalls? They are poles sticking out of the ocean creating bad views and unpassable waters. It is good for our environment but at the same time is marring the beauty of our environment. If more Wind Farms get approved... America will be guarded along the coast with turbines. Hmm... gotta weigh the positives vs. the negatives on this one!

Compressed air fire starters


This is pretty sweet. It makes sense, but I guess I never realized that the quick compression of air (or many gases) can creat fire caused by the extremely heating of the gas. I also didn't know that fire pistons are already used and have been used for quite some time... they are often used for survival or just to start campfires without flint or a gas lighter. No more rubbing sticks or using lenses and the sun to start your fire! sweet. $45-$65.


Gray Matter: The Fire Piston from PopSci.com on Vimeo.

Southwest progresses!


Southwest is one of my favorite airlines... it is a discount airline that offers all the amenities... amazing! Now, the airline takes another step in the right direction with GPS-Guided landing. Instead of dropping the plane in altitude via staircase-like steps for a landing (by communication from pilot to ground control), the GPS-guided landing will create a smooth, efficient, gas-saving (money-saving), and time-saving descent. With $175 million invested, Southwest hopes to make back that money with the money and time it will save when landing its planes! Yet, they insist that the pilot is still the one landing the plane, putting ease on passengers mind about technology landing the plane (without situational knowledge)... this isn't your Lexus parallel park assist. The pilots are still in control!

IBM's Aquasar Supercomputer


IBM has created a cooling system for its supercomputer processors that not only cools the data chips but uses the heat waste from the chips to help heat buildings. Talk about instant recycling! The water is cooled water is pumped through processors and the heated water that exits the processors is pumped through the floors of buildings and right now, dormitories! As the development gets cheaper, this process may soon be used as sellable energy.

A Beta version is already being used in Zurich!

Authentic R/C car


For $500 you can get yourself your very own car... remote controlled car, that is. Losi's 1/10 TEN-T TRUGGY RTR is a racecar that has its very own engine that runs on actual fuel.... as if gas prices weren't high enough, now you have to buy gas for your toy to run on for 10 minutes... and use a squeeze bottle to put it in! Using an electric starter and a glow plug acting as a spark plug, this R/C car is more real than ever.

I feel, however, that I would rather spend $500 dollars on a used car that I can sit in, rather than one I can break by stepping on it?

Humans: Gods of Weather?


This is kind of absurd. I didn't know that cloud seeding was already being practiced (the ability to manipulate precipitation using silver iodide crystals)... thanks, China. And now lasers are being developed to actually create rainfall. I won't try to explain it myself, so here is popular science explaining it:

"The concept works because laser pulses strip electrons from atoms in the air and promote formation of hydroxyl radicals. Those in turn make sulfur and nitrogen dioxides into particles which can form the basis for water droplets -- not unlike how current cloud seeding methods use silver iodide crystals as the "seeds" for water droplets."

But honestly, its frightening to think about how technology has given humans the ability to make certain weather... I just don't see this having positive repercussions... socially and environmentally.

Sunday, May 2, 2010

super small STORAGE.


NC State researchers have developed nanodots. These dots are small magnetic dots that have the ability to store a single bit of data each. With so many dots fitting into such a small area, a one square inch space can store up to billions of pages of data. If the research continues to go right, we may soon have whole libraries stored on hand held devices. It will be a breakthrough in storage technology! Now what to do with all that storage space? I definitely don't have enough music to fill that up, let alone 80 GBs on my ipod.

Portable Urine Battery


A South Korean group created Metalcell, a battery with militaries in mind. When a soldier relies on electronics in battle, sometimes those electronics run out of power at the worst times. With the new battery, soldiers only need to add saltwater to the battery in order to charge their electronics for up to 4 hours. If they are low on saltwater, urine will do the trick... something that is always hand! Similar to Baghdad batteries, these batteries are innovation at its best!

Solar Powered Bags!


It turns out that solar panels are becoming much lighter and much less expensive. This new bag features a panel sewn into the design so that one may charge a cellphone or ipod or any other device in 6-8 hours inside or outside. No carbon footprint, clean, easy, perfect! The price tag is at $200 (Solar Bag with G24 DSSC) but expect it to drop in the near future, especially when this one is made by Tonino Lamborghini.

Why wouldn't this catch on???



After learning about Liquid Galaxy by Google, finding an article on a proposed "Living Earth Simulator" blew my mind. After $1.3 billion+ in funding, the brainchild of Dirk Helbing could become reality by year 2022. The Living Earth Simulator would take not only massive amounts of information from the Earth and its environments but also from humans themselves to create a sim-like world where the future (financially, disease, weather) could be relatively accurately simulated... much like the weather is predicted today. How insane would that be? I would be interested to see how the world's inhabitants would react to such a God-like project!

Liquid Galaxy

Google's Google Earth was put to shame in an immersive world tour by its on predecessor, Liquid Galaxy. Liquid Galaxy as demoed by Jason Holt (researcher) on 8 linux machines with a 6 point axis view. You fly into 3D images of the earth's environment with a touch of the mouse or a spoken command. Fly around the world, fly to the moon, and fly to mars. As a traveler, this is entirely amazing to me. To view a map of the world (and even underneath the ocean) is like previewing your next world travel... or maybe it helps in deciding on where to go next!


Evan Roth

Evan Roth is quite the artist. Working through a studio via Eyebeam in New York City, Roth has made name for himself by means of popular culture research and design. A few works that stuck out to me in his presentation at Hofstra were his “L.A.S.E.R. Tag” project and his graffiti analysis project. Both do with defacing public structures, but they also both show the beautiful art of graffiti artists. L.A.S.E.R. Tag involves a projector that traces a light source held by an artist so that the artist can scribe graffiti on enormous scales (sides of buildings, the coliseum in Rome, etc.) with actually damaging property. At nighttime, the graffiti is so bright and big, people form miles away can experience the tag. Then, it can be erased instantly to give clean canvas for the next tag. The graffiti analysis project was interesting because it really breaks down the style and technique of famous taggers and thereby it creates the first ever intricate database of the art.

In general, Even Roth is about freedom of speech and freedom from censorship. He is an open source promoter and has worked with names like Jay-Z. His style and philosophy has garnered himself a great amount of attention in the design world.

As a speaker, Roth is very conversational. He was very intimate and interactive with his presentation, and his slideshow involved images, videos, and more. (I’m glad he stood up to speak, for it would have been difficult to hear him across the room.) Overall, he made a truly engaging presentation.

Thursday, April 8, 2010

Logo

Travel the World
Go to Antarctica
Unite the World
Play Music
Go into the Peace Corps


planview: 2D, looking from above

vector-based: illustrator... logos, can blow up image and images are always sharp
mathematical equations have infinite possibilities to keep image sharp

Monday, April 5, 2010

Poetry Slammed.

Taylor Mali blew me away with a badass yet powerfully messaged poem called, "What Teachers Make." In the poem that phrase is intended to ask how much teachers earn financially as compared to the lawyer sitting at the same table. In reply, the teacher reveals all that teacher's DO for children and their parents using the word MAKE. I make them wonder, I make them spell, read, write. I make them tremble, I make phone calls to parents to tell them what a noble thing they did at school that day. Teachers develop the minds of youth to become the leaders of tomorrow... it doesn't matter what they "make" financially. Then again, a teacher should go battle Adora Svitak for her opinion....

Nathaniel Ayers's Violin Teacher.

Robert Gupta, violinist in the LA Philharmonic, shares his story about he became Nathaniel Ayers's violin teacher. Ayers is the man man featured in the book and movie, "The Soloist," a well-educated and decorated musician whose life was turned upside down by schizophrenia. In Gupta's story, he explains that the first lesson was fearful... Ayers started imagining illusions and fading into a schizophrenic phase when Gupta just began playing the violin... immediately, Ayers started playing by ear and the two engaged in musical conversation. Ayers's imagination was transformed into his musical phrasing instead of just another phase of temporary insanity. "Music is medicine, music is sanity." - Robert Gupta.

Its amazing how the human brain can find an affinity with music to help save someone's sanity, and for all intensive purposes, someone's life.

Stefan Sagmeister

Stefan Sagmeister

Born in 1962, Stefan Sagmeister has become a world-renowned graphic designer and typographer through his fresh, timeless, and of-the-moment designs. Sagmeister is a Bregenz, Austria native who began his design career at the early age of 15 when he worked for “Alphorn,” a popular Austrian youth magazine. Only a few short years later, Sagmeister studied graphic design at Vienna’s University of Applied Arts. Due to his outstanding work, Sagmeister then received a Fulbright Scholarship to study at the Pratt Institute in New York. Finally, his formal schooling behind him, Sagmeister tried his luck in Hong Kong with advertising executive Leo Burnett’s Hong Kong Design Group in 1991, but he returned to New York after only two years. In New York Sagmeister teamed up with M&Co Design under Tibor Kalman, an influential American graphic designer of Hungarian descent. Unfortunately, as with when Sagmeister was in Hong Kong, his stay at M&Co Design was short-lived thanks to Kalman’s depature to be the editor-in-chief for Colors Magazine.

In the same year of 1993, Sagmeister founded his own firm titled Sagmeister Inc., a New York based design group focused on branding, graphics, and packaging design. Sagmeister had an great affinity for music, which may have been the reason for his common design collaborations with musicians such as Lou Reed and David Byrne. He also design artwork for the Rolling Stones. Along with his work on visualizing music, Sagmeister has been hired by an array of diverse companies such as Time Warner, HBO, and the Guggenheim Museum. Sagmeister also has a plethora of his own solo shows mounted around the world. He now teaches graduate classes at the Cooper Union School of Art in New York and has recently released a book of rules from his personal diary called, "Things I Have Learned in My Life So Far." Currently, Stefan Sagmeister is living in Bali, Indonesia taking the year off to refresh his vision and experimentation.

A kickass clock.

Analog plus digital = Art Lebedev Studio's cool new clock. It combines the analog arms of old clocks and the digital appearance of numbered/counting clocks. It is sleek and fashionable and quite simply mesmerizing to watch. Two hands per pivot point create roman numerals as seconds fly by!

Skinput?

Chris Harrison is a researcher at Carnegie Mellon University and has prototyped a new concept called skinput. Skinput allows users to wear an armband that understands complex motions in one's arm or finger when touched or poked or pinched. When determined they can act as buttons attached to devices like iPods and iPhones or even for playing a game like Tetris... this is also made possible by the armband which can project a graphic on the arm for visual purposes. Insane. No more surfaces to carry when your own body is the platform!



Carlo Heckman


Found an article on a hometown boy from Akron, OH.... Carlo Heckman was an industrial designer and in the 1950's he created a method for organizing birthday candles by essentially creating tally marks in fives with one long candle across four short candles. Interesting. Later he wrote a book called, "A Practical Guide to Sticks," laying out the... practical use of different kinds of sticks you can find in your backyard. After moderate success in Italy, he recorded a tape cassette of him reading the book and sold them at rock shows for a buck. He then faded into the abyss and died in 1998. It seems now that his designs are finally picking up pace. Why? Urban Outfitters and hipsters? Maybe.


Saturday, April 3, 2010

Take Turns.

Gary Lauder, a managing partner of an IT firm in Silicon Valley, dissects the financial cost of a 3 way intersection that is questionably necessary. Calculating the cost to stop and accelerate in and out of the stopping area in gas and in pollution, the results are astounding in dollars per year... in fact it is enough money to buy the lot on the intersection and sell it for profit. Essentially, Lauder concludes that it is not always the car that needs to be changed to save the environment or your money but the design of the road. He also explains how roundabouts save an extremely high percentage of lives lost in intersection accidents. How can we as a community learn to create better roads OR how can we just learn to "take turns," mixing the meanings of a stop sign and a yield side which would create enough uncertainty to cause a driver to slow down and be cautious but maybe not always come to a complete stop. Interesting indeed.

A Typographical story.

Rives hits up TED again... this time telling a story about a boy and a girl through the constantly developing language of typography. Using only type, Rives illustrates and describes a meeting between a boy and girl. In the most unusual but seemingly natural of ways... generation Y has designed a language full of emoticons, symbols, and codes. I thought it was stupid at first, but it seems that it is so in depth now that it is commonly accepted across the globe. A new universal language?

Art for money? Art for passion.


In Seth Godin's blog blurb about doing art passionately, he raises the point that you can't be doing art o make money... you have to have passion and trust and faith and just the idea that you're doing what you love... just to do what you love. The only people that should expect to make money by doing art are the ones who have made money on previous projects. So. Until you happen to make money on a project... don't work on a project to make money. Sounds about right?
Bill Stone explores caves. Deep caves. When we speak of design, sometimes we forget some of the most obvious and intricate designs... like that of the earth. Bill Stone explains expeditions into the last "nuggets" of unexplored Earth... expeditions toward the core. With new expeditions that are happening as we speak reaching downwards to 9,000 feet... it is essentially climbing a mountain in the opposite direction. There are millions of caves to be mapped, terminal siphons to dive through, and perilous adventures to undertake. Check out the undiscovered design of the earth:

Huge. Humongous. Human. Pronounce the freaking H.

I was watching a TED video (again) and I don't even want to talk about the content of exploring Saturn's moons... partially because I couldn't get through it without being extremely irked by a simple lack of the pronunciation of the letter H in the beginnings of words that start with H-U-etc.... I'm not from Long Island but I find certain speech patterns here annoying... just different cultures I guess, but it must be interesting in how they started (unfortunately, we may never find that out).

So. As I watched the presentation I noticed this woman, Carolyn Porco, kept pronouncing the word "human" without an "h" sound... so it sounds like "uman" (long "u" sound). I immediately looked up where she was from... born in NYC, went to school on Long Island. I knew it. I have several teachers who don't pronounce the letter "h" when the word begins with "H-U-." WHY?!?!?! The design of speech patterns may be fascinating but when it completely neglects a letter AT THE BEGINNING OF THE WORD... I just want to slap something. seriously. I understand its how you grew up, but its just so frustrating.

Revolution: Beginnings.

Another Derek Sivers (creator of CD Baby) 3 minute presentation explains how movements become revolutions with a simple video. One guy starts the movement and looks ridiculous doing so UNTIL the first follower takes the chance to support him. Once there are two it is easier for others to join. Once it becomes cool to join the ridiculous guy, it seems ridiculous to NOT join... A revolution has been created. The key element in the design of a revolution is NOT necessarily the guy who starts it, but the guy who has the guts to join him first.


Everyone can love Classical

Benjamin Zander, conductor of the Boston Philharmonic, gives a lesson in loving Classical music. With a piece by Chopin, Zander digs deep under the skin of the listeners by attaching an emotion to a musical line. He plays it once with no precursor and the audience becomes bored. He plays it a second time while having the audience attach their own personal stories to the sad and weeping line and tears stream. He describes that this same presentation made kids from the ghetto cry for the very first time... classical music! Music is designed to be emotional.

The Kid in Everyone.

Adora Svitak is a 14 year old prolific story writer and she's talking in front of thousands at TED... just another bridge between how adults can not only teach kids, but more importantly learn from them. In her presentation, Adora explains the childish ways of the adult world (war games, george bush, etc.) and the amazing things kids have done (raised money for haiti, helped in the civil rights movement, etc.). Its the design of our culture that is misrepresenting. Children dream bigger without knowing limits... this challenges the world, creating much more progression when dreams actually are accomplished. Maybe our education system can learn from this?

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

3/9

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Friday, March 5, 2010

Mapping the World.

Lalitesh Katragadda is a software engineer at Google that explains how the new software, Google Map Maker, will map the entire world with the help of common internet users. As of 2005, only 15% of the world was mapped. With knowledge of the area around you, one can find untapped resources creating jobs and a better economy. Mapping also allows for better saftey and evacuation securities. Check out the video on TED.com:


LXD

The League of Extraordinary Dancers (LXD) is a group of real life super heroes with real life super human abilities... or at least that what the video tells me on TED.com... this video speaks about the art of dance and how the internet has evolved it. For example... a move is created in Detroit and posted online... kids in Japan learn the move, build upon it, and repost it... then a group in California sees it and reinvents as well.... The underground movement and culture of dance is captured by LXD. Jon Chu, a filmmaker, plans on creating a web series devoted to LXD in the near future!


Thursday, March 4, 2010

3/4

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OK Go... Rube Goldberg Machine Music Video!

Maybe the coolest music video ever created to date... Incorporating a design inspired by the man (Rube Goldeberg) known for over the top, unnecessarily excessive designs used to accomplish the simplest of tasks, OK Go's newest music video ("This Too Shall Pass") is phenomenal. Over 4 minutes of constant kinetic energy, meticulous timing, and extreme set-ups equals one hell of a ride. One shot (not edited) proves validity and a team sponsored by State Farm Insurance helps to relieve the abundant stress this project must have presented. This is a design at its most extravagant... utilized for the simplest and most mundane result. All-in-all, good fun.


See more funny videos and TBT Videos at Today's Big Thing.


How'd they do it?
Answer here.

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Going Musically and Fashionably Green.


Alyce Santoro has creatively recycled her old cassette tapes by making the tape into musical ties and dresses. Not only are they a unique way to look fashionable and retro at the same time, they can also play music if glided over a tape head. They cost $140, but if you're looking to make a statement or own a conversation piece (and also be kind to the environment) then there is no better place to look than here.

Smart Glove


The Smart Glove would create a new way to type. Just as voice recognition typing programs came out (although they were relatively inaccurate and inefficient), this is another way to create type without actually typing. A user would use one hand in the glove and write the text, which would then be translated into print on a screen. As of now, the prototype takes 35 test runs of each unique letter for it to be 97% accurate when writing in freeform. It would cost near $100, so if that is too expensive for the market, they may use it medically for research in parkinson's disease.


Creationism or Darwinism? The ultimate debate on design.

My recent obsession with TED.com brought me to a talking parrot that recognizes over 200 words on cue. It truly is amazing to watch and wonder how a bird can do such seemingly complicated tasks (for a bird). Coming back to design, I thought about the debate on Creationism and Darwinism. I'm not going to shove any opinions down your throat (not sure I have a strong enough one anyway, at this point in time), but the truth is, no matter what you believe, the design of humans/animals is quite mind-blowing. The intricacies of the human body and the intelligence of such a small creature are quite marvelous designs in their own rite. For fun... here you go:

Refresh your Electronics!


I think I saw this on a commercial recently, or maybe saw an ad on another site, but The Refresh Electronics Charging Station is a great idea and I'm not sure why no one thought of it earlier! Its a black (or white) rubberized platform that is customizable to charge up to three electronic devices at once. So instead of having all your devices plugged into different outlets and finding all the right cords that match the device... the platform simply is an all-in-one charger. Easy to use, simple idea, extremely convenient!

Self-repairing architecture.

Rachel Armstrong is a medical doctor, multi-media producer, science fiction author and arts collaborator. In this TED talk, Rachel explains how manipulated metabolic material and help save a sinking Venice. The material latches on to supports under water and acts like strong limestone... rebuilding upon itself so that Venice would no longer sink. Talk about going green! Not only would the concept be safe for the habit (it would actually create new ones)... it aids in the saving of a city!

check it:

4am.

Rives, a poet and multimedia artist, spoke at a TED conference about the ominous moment that is 4am. Making coincidental connections in history using literature, birth dates and important events, Rives questions the significance of 4 am in them morning. Its hilarious to watch but even more fascinating. Do designers and great thinkers alike come to a climatic point in their work at 4am??

Weird or just Different?

Derek Sivers created CD Baby, one of the most notable independent music stores on the web. In this 3 minute TED talk, Derek speaks on the design of a city block. Its a rather simple comparison, but it draws out the differences in cultures around the world. Derek goes on to explain how in the US we name streets and in Japan they name blocks. Without this previous knowledge, directing yourself within a foreign country such as Japan can seem odd and slightly disheartening... but the truth is, who is to say who is right or wrong? Just as who can say a design on anything is right or wrong? Its a simple thing; to be brought up in certain ways and be absolutely certain that that way is the correct way. If we are not omnipotent, we have no means to judge anything... we must live on opinions!




Sunday, February 28, 2010

The Pentatonic Scale: a scale for the human race

Bobby McFerrin, an expert vocalist and performer, explains at a conference with ever really talking, about how all of the human race has an affinity to the pentatonic scale. I've always wondered the same question: why do we all hear musical pitches and their relationship to other pitches in the same way? Well, now that I know it seems to be true... the question is still why?

Check out Bobby doing his thing:

SMART(-ER) Boards

I was on TED.com for maybe an hour watching people share their brilliant ideas and achievements and stumbled across Johnny Lee, a humble researcher. One day he realized what one can create with a simple Wii Remote and some cheap supplies. SMART boards (used in classrooms) are great technological products... but they also cost up to $3,000. Clearly, not every school has those kinds of funds... a teacher of mine actually won a grant in order to buy 1... but could only afford the 1! Johnny Lee has discovered how to make a SMART Board for around 1 Wii Remote ($40) and $10 worth of cheap supplies... $50 compared to $3,000! Imagine every school with the ability to educate their students with a SMART Board! Heeeeeerrree's Johnny:




Amazing.

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Architectural Hologram Models

Well my entire post was just erased. So in a nutshell Zebra Technologies have created a holographic project that allows firms to view architectural models in 3D from any perspective (360 degress, birds-eye, ground level, etc.) on a piece of plastic. This saves time, resources, and possibly money depending on the size of the project. Check it out:

Holographic Architectural Imaging by Zebra from Core77 on Vimeo.


Gained: Efficiency, accuracy, effectiveness, time.

Lost: the use of wood and glue.

related articles:

architect magazine

architectural scholar

Thursday, February 4, 2010

A Bathroom Set-Up Design that Fails.

In a post on Core77.com, I contributor shares with us the misconceptions of two trash cans in an office bathroom. Apparently, after adding a larger trash can so as not to empty the smaller one more frequently, management left the small one in the bathroom anyway to catch the dripping soap tray. A sign on the wall explains to throw paper towels and trash in the new, black can but the set-up of the other can confuses. The blue can is open, the black is closed. So people tend to throw trash in the easier open can (though its not meant for trash). ALSO, the small, old can is BLUE, which is a common color meaning "recyclables go here." So in an attempt to solve a problem, the "simple" issue of placement and design of the room causes many misconceptions and actually creates more trouble than it solves. This kind of relates to the last post about simplicity and clarity of design... "More is Less."

More is Less...


A New York Times article by Alice Rawsthorn revisits the idea that "less is more," but more importantly that "more is less." After a awful experience with a digitized bathroom faucet at a friend's house, Rawsthorn explains how the un-necessity of functions that are supposed to make a device more user friendly, are making them over-complicated.

As one of the founding principles of innovative design, "clarity" is a lost cause in some innovators' purpose. By adding more functions to an already simple product, the consumer is not only frustrated when they don't work coherently, but they defeating the purpose of a product that was supposed to make it easier on themselves as well as save them time. The danger of this digital age and the phenomena that adding more means simplicity in use is luckily off put by innovators who still get "clarity" even if the device can do a million different things.

Rawsthorn brings up the folks at Apple and how they developed the user interface for the iPhone from scratch, and how they did not build upon older products' U.I.s, which has, without fail, caused many other similar devices to cause plenty of problems. The iPhone, therefore, is an extreme multitasking tool that seems more intuitive than complicated... even though it is more "complex than a bulldozer."

So the battle continues... Flashy lights and unnecessary functions to make a simple device complicated... and simplicity and clarity to make a complex device intuitive and easy... hopefully that latter will triumph....

The Copyright Issue with E-books


Bruce Nussbaum brings up a point I have also debated with myself in his blog about Amazon dealing with e-book copyright laws on the Kindle. Now that books can be bought electronically and stored electronically just as music is now bought and stored electronically, will they follow the same rules as music?

There is always a big debate around the sharing of music digitally... back in the day when CDs could not be burned to share, consumers usually bought their own copy (a reason the music industry did really well until CD burners and Napster). But for as long as books have been around (a LONG time)... sharing books was traditionally accepted. As Bruce explains, it is the culture of readers to save books and pass them onto friends or their kids, etc. Copyright laws never seemed to be an issue.

Now that the Kindle is a digital book device just as iPods are digital music devices, all of a sudden sharing books digitally is an issue. Companies never cared to track physical books in the past, nor did they have the ability to. Now that books can be downloaded and shared "illegally," all of sudden it matters... and the consumers are pissed. Taking books away from one's Kindle thanks to copyright issues never had before digital devices. So should we sacrifice the culture of readership for the sake of ease of use and saving space?

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

2/2

kearning: space between characters

letting: space between lines

sans serif: no foots on letters

serif: foots on letters

What Needs Saving?


Seth Godin's post, "Who Will Save Us?," brings up the point; when innovations like e-readers, iPads, and all other digital media take over the world... what will save the print and paper product industries? In fact, what will save any industry? He explains that many industries will evaporate and jobs will be lost... that paper cannot be saved. Godin explains that we need to move on from trying to "save" something that will be inevitably lost in the near future.

Godin then goes on... "If you want to know who will save the joy of reading something funny, or the leverage of acting on fresh news or the importance of allowing yourself to be changed by something in a book, then don't worry. It doesn't need saving."

He explains that we can have these things multiplied by a factor of ten because we no longer will have to worry about saving the other (paper) industry... if we just let go.

Ok. But what about the industry? What do we do with all the people, buildings, and institutions? More unemployment is NOT what we need. Lets figure out a solution before we scrap everything.

Monday, February 1, 2010

No Camera. No Creativity. No to the iPad?


After the hype for the new Apple iPad created inevitable excitement, it seems that the iPad has not hit home with (at least a few) Generation Y consumers. Bruce Nussbaum states in a recent post that his Parson Design students did not take nicely to Apple's new device. Apparently, after hearing that there is no camera on the iPad, that it does not have phone capabilities, and that it is not set up to create and share pictures and movies with ease, the students discovered a possibly fatal flaw with the product. It was concluded that the iPad was essentially a larger iPhone screen that allowed for a lot of media CONSUMPTION but not a lot of media CREATION. As a fellow Gen Y-er, I understand the students' complaint... its not like I need a new device just to filter more media into my brain, I'd rather have a handier device that allows me to express myself to create my own media to share with the world. It's not serious enough for work and its not fun enough for play.

Did Apple miss the mark? Time to go to the nearest Apple store to find out!

Gear Ring. Cool! But Aesthetically Pleasing?

Ben Hopson, a Core77.com contributor, teamed up with entrepreneur Glen Liberman of Kinekt Design to put together a line of "kinetic" jewelry. Essentially, this jewelry has motion.

I took a look at the video and was immediately intrigued by the "Gear Ring," the first product off the line. Check it:


Although, I could spend my whole day twiddling with my brand new Gear Ring instead of fingers as well as flash its edginess to all my friends, how aesthetically pleasing is it? To me it sacrifices fashion for functionality... which a ring never really needs, since of course rings are for show. I guess some other fads in the past have blown up even though they were awfully ugly... including many from the 80s.

Gear Ring: $165... go crazy.


Other attempts at kinetic jewelry:

http://www.etsy.com/shop/londonparticulars

http://www.4physics.com/catalog/popup_image.php/pID/33

Other jewelry turned nerdy:

http://www.geekalerts.com/retro-calculator-watch/