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MMMR - September 14, 2009

Core77 presents Hack2Work: Essential Tips for the Design Professional

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We've just launched a new special called Hack2Work: Essential Tips for the Design Professional. Filled with hundreds of tips, tricks, lifehacks and advice for practicing designers, the feature covers everything from office politics to office snacks, from essential books to essential software, and from intellectual property and design research to design conferences, working with the press, sustainable practice, and creative hiring.

Dive right in at core77.com/hack2work. There truly is something here for everyone—fun, useful, irreverent, surprising—Hack2Work is ultimately a celebration of design...and its practitioners.

Summer's over. Hack 2 Work!



Joey Roth's porcelain speakers

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San Francisco-based designer Joey Roth's neato handmade speakers are "acoustically-dead" porcelain forms capped with cork. The maple plywood base, and volume slider, adds a nice touch of analog to your hi-tech MP3-player thingamajiggy.

No mere concept, these are for sale at gSelect (though as we've mentioned they are handmade, not mass-produced, so availability is limited).


New 1 Hour Design Challenge: The Future of Digital Reading

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Core77 has teamed up with Portigal Consulting and 826 Valencia to challenge you to design the Future of Digital Reading...in 90 minutes! What will reading look like as it continues to evolve, going digital (and beyond)? In 5 or 10 years, will we still be holding paper squares in our hands when we read? Will we be back to stone tablets? Will we still be using our eyes? Core77 challenges you to create a rich future digital reading experience based on the research findings by Portigal Consulting's Reading Ahead project.

Full details and video intro here.



1 Hour Design Challenge Winners! Ideation Sketches!

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The results are in for the latest 1 Hour Design Challenge: Ideation Sketches. Congratulations to winner Thedinomeister for hitting it all: good quality, good quantity and just loose enough to have been done in an hour. There were a ton of great entries to choose from, and thanks to everyone for entering.

See all the winning entries here.



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Confab!

Coroflot Creative Employment Confab
October 21, 2009 in San Francisco, CA

On Oct. 21 we'll be hosting the fourth installment of our Creative Confab, this time in downtown San Francisco, CA. The event features a panel discussion on creative employment, time for networking and a cocktail reception. We've added two workshops in the morning - one for employers and one for job seekers. Space is limited, so register now. $60 for the afternoon and reception or $85 for the workshops as well.

>>>Register Now!




Make History gathers 9/11 stories over streetviews

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The National 9/11 Memorial & Museum has launched Make History, "a world-wide initiative to gather any and every 9/11 story in an effort to understand history from the perspective of those who witnessed it. Using the website, visitors can search, group and sequence any number of histories, photos or experiences, creating custom sequences by time, geography or theme. Each photo is overlaid on a current street-view image of the present day, creating a 'double exposure' of past and present."

The site was created by Local Projects. Visit 911history.org to submit photos, stories, and video.



Eurobike 2009: Top 5 Trends

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Eurobike, the world's leading tradeshow for the bike industry took place earlier this month in Friedrichshafen, Germany. The upcoming E-bikes were one of the hottest topics but there's more to see. As usual, design is in the details, therefore a closer look at this year's trends in bikes and bike parts highlighting lightweight, comfort, computerization, and style!

1. Rise of the E-bike
Since the first E-bikes entered the market few years ago a lot has changed. Their engines have become extremely compact, sometimes invisibly integrated within the bike frame as demonstrated by the Sparta ION e-bikes. Also, their support range has improved to 80-90 kilometers. Being 3-4 times more expensive than a normal bike makes them a promising moneymaker for the bicycle industry. Of all spotted e-bikes, our favorite example is the lightweight and portable Gocycle, designed from scratch and awarded with this year's Eurobike award.

Continue reading


3 Questions for John Foster of IDEO

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IDEO is very likely the best known and most respected design consultancy on earth. And while hundreds of thousands of words have been penned in attempts to sort out how they got there, we're putting our money on a simple explanation: they hire astonishing talent.

You can argue about process and brand identity and consumer focus if you like, but a few moments discussion with pretty much any IDEO employee conveys a sense that they are the real reason; that together they comprise a sort of supergroup, radiating competence, skill, enthusiasm and thoughtfulness, and that none of those other strategies would be worth a damn without such talent available to implement them.

Finding and attracting such professionals is an incredibly difficult job, but keeping them engaged and productive even more so. As IDEO's Head of Talent and Organization, John Foster is responsible for both tasks. We've been fortunate enough to secure his presence on the discussion panel at next month's Creative Employment Confab in San Francisco, and to get a few preliminary minutes of his time to ask some basic creative hiring questions. Whether you're an employer or aspiring designer, this is worth reading.

Read it all here.



Call For Entries: 2010 Buckminster Fuller Challenge

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The Buckminster Fuller Institute has announced the call for entries for their 2010 running of the Buckminster Fuller Challenge, which seeks ideas for "the development and implementation of a solution that has significant potential to solve humanity's most pressing problems."

"We're looking for comprehensive anticipatory design solutions that address multiple problems without creating new ones down the road - integrated strategies dealing with key social, economic, environmental, policy and cultural issues.

Our entry criteria is deeply inspired by what Fuller termed comprehensive anticipatory design science - a methodological approach to solving complex problems that we feel holds an important key to how innovators need to be thinking about the design of strategies if they are to have a transformative effect on the system as a whole," explains Elizabeth Thompson, Executive Director of the Buckminster Fuller Institute.

Deadline's October 30th, and first prize is 100 large.



Redesign Your Farmers' Market Winners

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GOOD and Architect's Newspaper have chosen the winners to their Redesign Your Farmers' Market competition. There were lots of great ideas proposed by the 22 finalists, from hydroponic markets to refurbished train cars and rooftop urban farms. Read more about the winners below, and be sure to browse the site for more proposals.

The Winner: Farm on Wheels by Mia Lehrer + Associates, pictured above

Farm on Wheels is a program that brings locally grown produce to the people of L.A. County. The program selects fresh fruits and vegetables from local farmers and distributes the produce through a network of farm trucks. To engage more people in the consumption of fresh foods and support local and urban agriculture, Farm on Wheels creates a simplified and convenient food distribution network between farmers and consumers.

Continue reading to see the runners-up.



2009 Open Architecture Challenge Awards

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Speaking of competitions, Architecture for Humanity hosts the Open Architecture Challenge every two years, in which design firms partner with existing organizations to "address architectural inequities affecting the health, prosperity and well-being of under-served communities." This year's challenge focused on classrooms.

Section Eight Design was selected as the winner for their partnership with Teton Valley Community School, a non-profit, independent school in Victor, Idaho. The proposal, pictured above, focuses on scalability and a connection to the outdoors, taking advantage of the school's location at the base of the Teton Mountain Range. In addition to classrooms and meeting spaces that the school will build incrementally as they raise funds, gardens, farm animals, and local, drought-resistant flora will be integrated into the school's fabric to promote community, environmental responsibility and a "sense of place."

Continue reading



If the eyes are the windows to the soul, what are the lips?

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Although it took her 30 years to act on her idea, nurse Jeanne Hahne is developing ClearVision, which despite the cliched name, is an accurate label for a medical face mask with a window so patients can see the mouth (and thus the smile) of their cheerful healthcare professional. Although intended to "ease patient anxiety", early anecdotes point to the unexpected benefit of improved communication between colleagues.



Design Patriotism by Jeremy Zietz

That's a big title, but Jeremy Zietz's essay up on Continuum's blog is a good thinkpiece with tendrils all over hell and back. My favorite section is the "Disconnection to Manufacturing" of course (with its mention of How It's Made and Manufactured Landscapes), but Handmade Detroit gets a mention as well as a bunch of others. Further along, here's a paragraph we can all get behind:

Being involved in a community of commerce is about personal relationships with the people involved, the stakeholders. Who's behind the process? What motivates them? Strong product development companies and vendors know the value of these connections and spend big on fine-tuned service and sales. Similarly, we still realize the value of that ashtray we made in art class for our parents (smoking or non) and its endless value, a stamp in time. Owning things that are connected to strong relationships is of the highest value. The tighter our list of stakeholders becomes, the more we gain an understanding of the process and invest in our communities. We may see how development systems working on this community scale can more efficiently customize solutions to its needs and promote its own expression. As consumers understand their products more, stakeholder's values of fair trade, worker's rights, and local manufacturing will be heightened.



Atomic Atemporality: Atompunks unite for GOGBOT 2009

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The theme of this year's GOGBOT Festival 2009, a gathering of socially and aesthetically curious artists, designers and thinkers, was Atompunk—drawing inspiration for new ideas from the period framed by the cold war.

GOGBOT 2009 took place between September 10-13 at ten venues in the center of Enschede, NL (about an hour and a half east of Amsterdam and Utrecht.) The festival program was developed over the past ten months by the good people of PLANETART with shared ideas and images from the global community via the Atompunk mailing list.

The opening ceremony featured a presentation by guest of honor Bruce Sterling and a live performance by Alec Empire. Read Bruce's introduction to Atompunk here.



The arcade game cabinet designer who changed gaming forever

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Interesting factoid: In 1981, Shigeru Miyamoto was an industrial designer who had been working for Nintendo for four years designing arcade cabinets. Bizarre Japanese corporate structures being what they are, he was eventually somehow tasked with designing what would go inside the cabinet--that is to say, the game.

Miyamoto then developed the "gorilla/carpenter/girlfriend love triangle" that changed a generation and gave birth to a new industry. Donkey Kong was the first-ever videogame to incorporate a narrative, as well as characters that weren't deaf-and-dumb paddles or boring reticles.

Miyamoto is today referred to as the "Father of modern video games;" his subsequent hit The Legend of Zelda has been called "The Citizen Kane of videogames." He's also the man behind Super Mario Brothers, Star Fox, and Wii Music, to name a few.

In any case, when we came across Maximum PC's article on how to build an old-school arcade cabinet, we couldn't help but think it's the perfect DIY project for an industrial designer. We're sure Miyamoto would agree.



Velcro made of steel

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Totally wicked: The Metaklett strips you see above are essentially steel Velcro, developed by German engineers at the Technical University of Munich and intended, like the regular stuff, to be fastened and unfastened without the use of tools.

The steel strips, "one kind bristling with springy steel brushes and the other sporting jagged spikes," are only 0.2 millimeters thick, but a square meter of the stuff can hold "a perpendicular load of 7 tonnes." Developer Josef Mair foresees the stuff being used for building facades or automobile assembly. And it will withstand temperatures of up to 800 degrees Fahrenheit, so you could even use it in Arizona in July.

via dvice



Maarten Kolk & Guus Kuster's Avifauna

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And finally, Maarten Kolk & Guus Kusters have created Avifauna, a collection of odd and beautiful taxidermied animals. A Grey Heron, Tawny Owl and Blackbird were stuffed without their plumage then wrapped in fabric and mounted on an oak base.

From the designers:

'Avifauna' is about bringing two common worlds we love together, nature and textile. We've started to materialize the beauty, shape and language of form that we see in animals and what's better to start this search than to mold on the animal itself.



Special thanks to Steve Portigal and Michael Doyle for their contributions to this week's newsletter.

Please share the Monday Morning Must Read with colleagues, clients and collaborators. Many email programs do not forward messages in their original format, so please use this link: http://www.designdirectory.com/blog/newsletter



MMMR - September 8, 2009

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Core77 Photo Gallery: Maker Faire Africa 2009

We're very excited to present our newest gallery of over a hundred photos from the inaugural Maker Faire Africa in Accra, Ghana. One of the main purposes of the faire was to showcase African ingenuity to the world; inventors, artisans and makers coming from as far as Liberia, Malawi and Uganda. Core77 correspondent Nathan Cooke was on-site to capture it all, from plastic fashion to agricultural machinery. Take a look!

>>View Gallery



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Core77 Photo Gallery: Eurobike 2009

Hot on the heels of the Maker Faire Africa, we bring you another massive gallery! The Eurobike Show is one of the world's leading tradeshows for the bike industry. This year electric bicycles, or e-bikes, were all over the place, along with the usual lightweight parts, bike fashion, and colorful accessories to pimp your ride. Bonus: lots of BMX tricks.

>>View gallery



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Tai Chiem's gaming systems of the future

Australia-based designer Tai Chiem's bugged-out next-gen gaming systems take it to the next level. Above, his X-Box 720; middle, a Playstation 4 with a glass touchscreen panel, and bottom, the coup de grace--a PSP with a flexible, roll-out OLED screen.

Check out Chiem's full book on Coroflot.



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Ross Racine's Suburbs of the Imagination

Though he's been making the rounds in the art blogs for awhile, we just had to spotlight Ross Racine's hypnotic and highly detailed drawings of suburban alter-realities. Hand drawn on the computer then printed with an ink-jet, his photo-realistic, aerial photograph-like works are not so far fetched, capturing many of the qualities and absurdities of existing suburbs. To make it even easier for us to imagine them as real developments, Racine has illustrated his fake landscapes at different times of the day and in different weather —The Days and Hours of Brookdale Gardens might as well be seen from a plane.

Continue reading



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DRC - October 1-2 - Chicago, IL

DRC - Design Research Conference
Oct. 1-2, 2009
Chicago, IL

The Design Research Conference (DRC), hosted by the IIT Institute of Design, brings together a growing community of design professionals advancing the role of design research in innovation. A forum for discussing the current and emerging issues in the field, the conference fosters the collaboration of forward-thinking, creative professionals and students from a variety of disciplines.

Register Now!




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Jan Chipchase on the "Rise of the Superfakes"

Even though we just blogged him, we're putting the spotlight back on globe-trotting Nokia researcher Jan Chipchase for a brief moment, to draw some eyes to a completely fascinating series of observations on the future of fakes, in China and beyond.

Returning from a long research swing through China and SE Asia, Jan put together this essay on the growing volume and variety of fake consumer electronics on the market -- cellphones especially -- with some surprising developments in multiple tiers of "fake" quality (copy the logo? copy the ID? copy everything?), and the role played by packaging and accessories in their desirability:

Sometimes fake mobile phones can be bought in real (or exceptional quality) packaging. Whilst the size of the grey market is challenging to calculate - in countries with high import tarriffs there is a significant incentive for local entrepreneurs to smuggle in the devices, and since it's far easier to smuggle phones without bulky packaging and accessories these can be used elsewhere to increase the authenticity of fake products elsewhere. Simple arithmetic: what premium can be charged for a fake product sold in real packaging minus the cost of shipping that 'recycled' packaging? Phones sold through these unofficial channels may also come with real or fake, new or used batteries and chargers. In many of these markets and with few exceptions, the risk of being caught is negligible.

Read the whole thing, including some interesting proposals on how Apple might combat knock-offs in China, here.


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2 Questions for Kate Gilman of 24 Seven

Hey CDs and senior designers -- how many interviews did you conduct last year? Five? Ten? How about 450?

Kate Gilman's job at creative staffing agency 24 Seven, Inc. has her scrutinizing graphic and interactive designers, marketers, design directors, and a slew of other creative professionals at the rate of two per day on average. Coupled with her own design background (she holds a Graphic Design degree from RISD), this makes her exceptionally qualified to explain what does and doesn't work in creative hiring. As the first of our four panelists at the upcoming San Francisco Coroflot Creative Confab, we posed Kate a pair of questions on the topic recently Here's what she said:

In the months since the economic downturn, how much of shift have you actually seen in the creative hiring patterns of your clients?

I noticed the downturn start in the fall of 08, and everyone was on a freeze until January 09. Little did we know what we were in for...the beginning of the year was not good for recruiting in the advertising industry, to say the least. The market was saturated with top talent, funds were frozen, and jobs just weren't available. Lucky to have a job, my role at work became much more about consoling and advising people how to get through this, rather than fielding calls from my clients.

But a few months into it, marketing and advertising executives started realizing that they couldn't keep churning out the same marketing content: billboard designs, websites, catalogs, advertisements, direct mail, etc. had to be updated. So we've seen a rise in hiring since then, though it's definitely shifted towards freelance and temporary work, with direct-hire positions only trickling through. Budgets seem to get approved one project at a time, and people are hesitant to commit long-term. Designers have shifted too, and those who were only considering full-time jobs previously have widened their search.

Continue reading



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No-nonsense Teutonic time-teller

The Qlocktwo is a simple, cerebral, no-nonsense, and undeniably Teutonic-flavored timetelling device designed by German firm Biegert & Funk. How it works should be completely obvious by the photo.

via gizmag



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Cargo Bikes, Part 1

We spotted this Danish "Long John style" cargo bike making the blog rounds, and while we thought it was nifty-looking, it seems to be getting a mixed response. One commenter wrote that "Every third world country has a simpler, cheaper, and less awkward-looking version of this montrosity" and linked to this Flickr shot from China.

We knew there had to be a Flickr set devoted to these, and sure enough, we eventually found Bricole Urbanism's motherlode with an attendant explanation:

[In Chinese cities] informal collection of recycling, deliveries and use of bicycles for retail and selling is still very common.

...The bicycle remains by far the cheapest and indeed the only affordable means of transportation. Especially over short delivery distances, it would seem to many Chinese almost wasteful to use a truck.

Read more at Cargo Bikes, Part 2.



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A 15.4-inch laptop--with two screens

That's no mere concept--gScreen's dual-screen Spacebook 2009 laptop is slated to hit store shelves (or Amazon webpages, anyway) by December of this year. Alaska-based gScreen is hoping the dual LED screens will be a hit with designers, filmmakers, photographers, CAD engineers, finance guys with spreadsheets, and even the military. Of course, having two 15.4-inch screens and a full-sized keyboard in one package comes at a price--this beast weighs in at a whopping 12 pounds.

via gizmodo



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Designers Accord Charlotte Town Hall: Reflections and Photographs

We've got a post-script from the Designers Accord Town Hall Meeting at BOLTgroup in Charlotte, North Carolina. Thanks to Karen Smith for her reflections and Gianluca Camarda for his photographs.

How do you entice a crowd of designers to attend yet another meeting straight after work?

Offer rich content on sustainable design...and free wine.

BOLTgroup hosted the Designer's Accord Town Hall in Charlotte, NC, the first such event in the Southeast. The Town Hall created a forum for sharing sustainable design practices and was attended by over fifty designers. The Designers Accord is a global coalition of designers, educators, and corporate leaders, working together to create positive environmental and social impact.

Designers from the Charlotte area sipped on beverages in corn-based plastic cups, and ate off plates made from plant-based renewable materials. Industrial designers, graphics designers, architects and interior designers made connections with like-minded colleges committed to sustainability in their practices. Everyone was enjoying the initial "meet and greet" so much it was hard to start the presentations. An emergency run to the store for more wine reminded us how designers love their libation! After an extra 20 minutes of consumption and a tapping of the microphone from our MC, Monty Montague, the crowd settled in.

While brief technical difficulties got the presentations off to a rocky start (momentary microphone reverberations sounded oddly like a crackling radio station) the first presentation finally succeeded by way of a web link with Valerie Casey from San Francisco. Valerie, founder of The Designers Accord, gave us a history of how the Designers Accord came to be and reviewed some of the guidelines: 1. declare participation, 2. educate teams, 3. measure your footprint (be conscious of resources), 4. dialogue – talk to each client, 5. engage/experiment/collaborate – all design starts to tackle issues.

Continue Reading



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Designers Accord Chicago Town Hall: Reflections & Photographs

It's been a busy couple of weeks for Designers Accord, with a Chicago Town Hall Meeting following close behind Charlotte's. Here are some reflections and photographs from fueledbycoffee.

When it comes to sustainability, there are a whole slew of difficult topics that designers want to tackle but rarely get a chance to discuss in the open. The Chicago Designers Accord Town Hall called them the "elephants in the room" and engaged in a no-holds-barred discussion around the secret thoughts we all have but rarely share. Over 70 designers, critical thinkers and change agents made their way to gravitytank on August 19th for Chicago's first Designers Accord Town Hall meeting. Actually... scratch that, two designers drove out from Detroit, so it's really the Midwest's first DA Town Hall meeting.

Kicking off the night, Lucas Daniel & Teaque Lenahan of gravitytank introduced the evening's theme of "elephants in the room". Our hope was to learn from each other about the challenges, hurdles and questions that come up when engaging in sustainable efforts, either for clients or internally at companies. Teaque shared one big elephant-- that conservation and sustainability go hand-in-hand, but many projects, no matter how 'green,' are about selling more stuff. They aren't as In the end, it's about creating value for companies and consumers. He shared gravitytank's short video entitled "Wisdom," featuring interviews with senior citizens recounting their memories of conserving resources, recycling and reusing during WWII. The video brings to light that with a common enemy, a whole nation of consumers was motivated to act responsibly and how we have a lot to learn from the often ignored, but perhaps wisest of eco-consumers-our grandparents. Intended as a thought piece, Wisdom suggests that consumers will get creative when motivated and that there are ways companies can innovate and create value without automatically assuming disposability.

Continue Reading



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SCAD prof on the rise of "service design"

The Savannah College of Art and Design has over 9,300 students and 1,500 faculty members, so President/Co-Founder Paula Wallace is in a good position to discuss "the value of a design education," as she does in her guest blog for Fast Company.

In last week's installment she talks with SCAD ID professor Peter Fossick, who has an interesting take on design: It's not so much the product designs themselves, but the services designed around them that can make the difference. In Fossick's own words:

Everything is moving toward service design. Design is becoming more intangible, less about product and more about the experience of the product. Look at Velib, the bicycle rental program in Paris. The technology is ancient--it's a bicycle, after all--but the program is so brilliant thanks to the service architecture. I'm not saying we'll stop inventing new products. I'm just saying that designing the experience of the product is becoming just as fundamental as the product itself.



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INDEX: Award 2009 Winners Announced in Denmark

Earlier, we highlighted the finalists of this year's INDEX: Award. This 500,000 euros award is an initiative from Denmark that focuses on "Design to Improve Life" and recognizes projects where design offers solutions for major global challenges like climate changes, pollution, natural disasters, poverty, overconsumption and other important issues.

Now, all winners have been announced for the categories Body, Home, Work, Play, and Community. You can now watch the award ceremony online.

Continue reading for a rundown of all the winners



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Lina Nordqvist's family of Swedish stickback chairs

In A Pattern Language, Christopher Alexander advises us to "never furnish any place with chairs that are exactly the same," because a variety of furniture will accommodate a range of sizes and moods. Of course, Achille Castiglioni had this all figured out, but most of us find that it's just easier to buy things that match.

Linda Nordqvist, however, proposes a set of chairs that occupies a healthy middle ground. Produced by Design House Stockholm, Family Chairs is a series of traditional Swedish stickbacks. Each chair varies slightly, taking on a different character through the arrangement of its spindles. Though capable of standing alone, the chairs form a charming and boisterous family when grouped.

Now there's no excuse; all different is the way to be.



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In B Flat: A YouTube digital orchestra

And finally, we are loving In B Flat, an experimental, collaborative video orchestra from Darren Solomon. Each video produces one element of the composition (in B flat), which you can mix together by adjusting the volume sliders. Not to be missed! Give it a try here.

via It's Nice That



Special thanks to fueledbycoffee, Karen Smith and Gianluca Camarda for their contributions to this week's newsletter.

Please share the Monday Morning Must Read with colleagues, clients and collaborators. Many email programs do not forward messages in their original format, so please use this link: http://www.designdirectory.com/blog/newsletter



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+ MMMR - September 14, 2009
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