Filed under: design, graphic design, illustration, typography | Tags: adam the velcro suit, design, illustration, poster, type
http://www.flickr.com/photos/velcrosuit/
Filed under: design, Uncategorized | Tags: design, fashion, karl grandin, logo, sweater design
Designer Karl Grandin takes 180 animal-based logo marks and compiles them into a pattern which is then made into a sweater.
The original Animal Sweater was first shown at The Visual Power Show in Zollverein, Germany in 2006. Images of the prototypes from the Sandberg Institute’s New Work show in Amsterdam, September 2006.
Nature used to be an unpredictable place
of mystery. Fascinated with nature’s untamed wildness, artists created animal and floral patterns as a celebration of this phenomenon of the physical world.
Today this wilderness has disappeared and nature has lost its unique position. There
is nothing that has not yet been altered by human intervention. Man has conquered nature and is repackaging it neatly. Zoos, parks, artificial beaches and genetic engineering. We have cultivated nature for our own convenience. Now, it is instead man-made cultural constructions that are becoming increasingly autonomous and slipping out of our control. Wild systems
like brands, stock markets and traffic is the wilderness of today. Nature has become culture and culture is turning into our new nature.
As we are surrounded by logos, we are systematically invited, encouraged and directed in what we do. Brands want to be personal and engage in a relationship with you. They want to become a central part of your life. But there is no dialogue, only targeted one-way communication. The symbols are constantly in your field of vision but they are still not part of the public domain. Ownership is of the corporations and the destiny of the logos is in their hands.
In the Animal Sweater pattern, 180 animal shaped logos are set free. Emphasizing the beauty of the stylized animals and their collective kinship, rather than each mark’s individual commercial value, the pattern suggests a new way to experience the commercial imagery.
The fabric of the original sweater was knitted using computerized knitting technology at the Nederlands Textielmuseum in Tilburg and the garment was cut and sewn by Dima Stefanova.
Filed under: design | Tags: design, DESIGN FOR THE OTHER 90%, education, education design, energy, energy design, health, health design, shelter, shelter design, transport, transport design, water, water design
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—Dr. Paul Polak, International Development Enterprises
Filed under: design, va 301 | Tags: art gallery, corporate identity, corporate identity design, design, project, sabanci university, va 301
Our new project is corporate identity design, so we should create a new brand.
I want to design a corporate identity for a new contemporary art gallery that has a gift shop, thus there will be wide opportunities on designing objects:
logo
business cards
letterhead
nylon bags for the gift shop
pen and pencil
CDs
booklets
…
Filed under: illustration | Tags: 3 colour, 3 colour monster, andy smith, cmyk, cmyk monster, design, illustration, monster illustration
Actually I think monster illustrations are stereotyped, but this is a cool design.

Filed under: product design | Tags: design, gun, product, product design, tequila, tequila gun

Cool
Filed under: product design, technology | Tags: car radio, design, designer, interactive design, interactive design group, product, product design, productdesign, project, radio, sewing, sewing machine, sound, sounds.butter, vasco
A great sound visualization project by Sounds.Butter. Taking a car radio and sewing machine to create this product prototype. A mate of Vasco.

Filed under: product design, Uncategorized | Tags: apple, design, good design, ipod, keep it simple stupid, kiss, tv

“I was just saying the other day how bloody stupid it is now with cable, freeview, dvd, wii and everything, that to turn on the tv takes 3 remotes sometimes, fiddling with AV settings, and to change channel and adjust the volume can take a further scrabble around for two more. How many buttons do we really need ?? I said i wanted an iPhone Remote app where i can select the buttons i actually want to use and stick the others on the second page. Then anyone in the room can just grab their phone ( usually sitting obediently next us – day and night ) whenever the ads come on. If the old iPod can do everything it needs with one swivel thingy then surely you tv dudes could think about it. Or will it take Apple to design the whole tv for you as well?”
monster-munch
Filed under: art, installation | Tags: architecture, brian goggin, building, defenestration, design, furniture, san francisco, window
“Since 1997, the building sitting at the corner of 6th st. and Howard st. The piece consists of tables, chairs, lamps and
even a grandfather clock, all hanging precariously out of the building’s windows. Known as ‘defenestration’ (a word meaning to throw out of a window) the sculpture’s various pieces are all fastened to the abandoned building to create the illusion of falling. The pieces was conceived of by local artist Brian Goggin.”























