Designs for Living

1961Playboy-Nelson, Wormley, Saarinen, Bertoia, Eames, Risom

An article from the 1961 issue of Playboy magazine (although I assure you I did not find it there) on six of the leading designers of the time, including George Nelson, Eero Saarinen and Charles Eames. I guess Ray wasn’t good enough for Playboy. There’s some nice photographs and quotes, my favorite being Jens Risom: “People need wood.”

Lint

Lint1

Lint2

This is the lint basket in our basement. It’s full of lint. Each lint blob sort of represents the average color of the clothes in that load of laundry, and in total it’s a collection of three years worth of laundry. Most of the lint blobs are shades of bluish-gray, but there’s one there that came from washing my red towel.

sketchChair idea

This is proposal I’m working on for the design UI group in Tokyo.

sketchChairGregSaul

another sketch chair: Defne: http://www.to22.net/

Green yarn

A quick video experiment using yarn to connect objects in a room that share visual or tactile properties.

James Joyce

Map Dublin Environs

An essay on BLDGBLOG about James Joyce’s Ulysses. At least is starts there. Although the book is full of metaphors, allusions and pretty much every other trick in English language, the author suggests its a form of “descriptive realism”. And being that way, could you use Ulysses to make a map of Dublin? (that, actually,  was impetus for Fictional Convergences). But taking it further, what if Ulysses was written before Dublin existed–could you feed it into a CNC and create Dublin?

The essay talks a little about word-objects: how you might be able to create a language out of 3D forms, citing Quipu. Which, now that I think about it, could be an idea for a project. It’s an interesting space: objects can have abstract meanings and language a form, but they are usually not explicitly tied. How might a tangible language be formed, fit together into sentences? What if the sound a letter-object made when you dropped it was its pronunciation. How might the visual, tactile, and auditory senses go together in this language?

An Eames TED Talk

Video’s that I like

ekmek

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i cant believe we called our blog ekmek

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