
In a better world, being a design junkie married to a NASA astrophysicist who spent a good chunk of the International Year of Astronomy planning a huge International Year of Astronomy event would mean you don't have to learn about Simon Page's awesome series of retro-inspired IYA posters in the New York Freakin' Times' fashion blog. Just sayin'.
Sunday, November 29, 2009
Simon Page's Throwback International Year of Astronomy Posters
Thursday, November 26, 2009
Wednesday, November 25, 2009
Illuminated Traffic Cones

Anyone know if the construction on Meiji-dori finally ended? If not, day-um, baby, people were already complaining about it a year ago. If so, great, but you'll have to steal your illuminated traffic cones elsewhere.
Walking from Shibuya to Harajuku [andyintokyo.com]
Vintage Thanksgiving Illustrations
Over on Sublime Stitching, Jessica posted a bunch of Thanksgiving links which included a really neato page of 50's cookbook illustrations, all aimed at the harried housewife (of course). Happy Thanksgiving!
Link (via the Silly BooDilly)
Original King Kong Model Sells for $200k
He was a giant on screen, but the King Kong figurine which climbed to the top of the Empire State Building in 1933 was less than 2 feet tall.
Yet he garnered a hefty price tag today, when the metal armature of the King Kong model sold for about £121,000 ($200,000) at a London auction.

CBS News story on the sale
More on Dudecraft
(Thanks, Scott!)
You're Either With Us Or You're With The Robots
Add another car to the linktrain!
"As president, I believe that robotics can inspire young people to pursue science and engineering. And I also want to keep an eye on those robots in case they try anything." --Barack Obama, speaking to Washington D.C. schoolkids on Monday as part of his science education initiative.For a brief, sad, stupid, and thoroughly unproductive several weeks many years ago, while I was stuck waiting for some options to vest, I advised a tobacco company about the new-fangled thing called the Internet. In real life, it probably helped siphon the company's marketing money off that might have gone toward actually keeping people smoking. On paper, it's the kind of thing that probably disqualifies me from elected office anywhere outside of Western North Carolina.
I say this because I only know am realizing that I don't know whether this guestblogging stint at D+R is going to save me when the robot wars start, or condemn me to death as a traitor to my species.
Mycotecture - Building with Mushroom Bricks
Our pal Phil Ross' new project, Mycotectural Alpha, attempts to build an architectural structure with bricks made of mushrooms.
Mycotectural Alpha at Kuntshalle Dusseldorf
Phil Ross
Tuesday, November 24, 2009
Lego x Muji
A mouthwatering combo, to be sure. Something interesting about the resulting product: Muji adds another dimension to Lego. Of course, Lego is 3 dimensional and Muji doesn't add a 4th dimension, but they do add a layer of 2-D flatness that is not normally in the Lego world.

The resulting builds are certainly charming, but I must admit, all that paper cutting, template marking and tiny scissor work feels a little fussy. I'm screwy for Muji, make no mistake, but this doesn't feel completely true to the natural, intuitive quality of Lego.
Lego origami!
Design Nirvana: Lego Teams Up With Muji at Fast Company (Thanks, Steve!)
Monday, November 23, 2009
Clown Bicycles

With all the usual caveats about my posting things about which I actually know very little--like vintage bicyles--I can say that Dino's descriptions of his odd-mod finds are like the golden hot butter on the popcorn of my Twitter feed:
Vintage, Very Small Carnival Circus Clown Bicycles, Trick Bikes from the Big Top of the 1930s.8 in.!
Wheel Size: 8 in.
$385 Each
Old Circus Balloon Tire Clown Bikes | Modern50 [via @modern50]
Sunday, November 22, 2009
Josh Gosfield
Josh Gosfield built an entire media world of magazine covers, snapshots, advertisements and album covers of a fictitious 1960's singing star, Gigi Gaston. Charting her rise and fall, Josh creates a completely believable alter universe in which Gigi hangs out with the Beatles, is a paperdoll or appears startled by paparazzi flash. A painstakingly thorough archive of something that never happened.
Josh Gosfield's Gigi Gaston at Kasher
Baja Sweatshirt
While at South Willard yesterday for the Shrimp Shop, I was blown away by the detail on the Patrik Ervell baja sweatshirt. At first look, it appeared to be a standard sweatshirt but it was assembled as if it were a suit jacket. For example, the sleeves were fully lined.
Patrik Ervell at South Willard
Saturday, November 21, 2009
McLean Modern

There's something really pleasant about the logos for the Central Park in McLean, Virginia, which I pass when I have to go to the horrible, sprawling mall complex in Tyson's Corner.
Maybe it's their unassuming simplicity which stands out in a town known for significant wealth. Maybe it's the unexpected appearance of modernism [albeit of a peculiar, early 80's retro-rustic variety] in a sea of faux-lonial Williamsburg. Either way, they're a treat. I'm sure that even as I type, a committee of upscale citizens has convened to plan their replacement.
Muji Paperclips

The launch of Japanese retailer Muji's Xmas 2009 gift collection has sent shockwaves through the novelty paperclip industry. Or at least the sector which caters to companies whose logos are snowmen, stockings, and the Statue of Liberty.
Muji Xmas 2009 campaign, JP shipping only [muji.net]
Previously: Hubble Paperclip
Friday, November 20, 2009
Reference Library x South Willard Pop-Up
Our man Andy of the always compelling Reference Library and Stork Bites Man blogs is opening a pop-up shop at our pal Ryan's South Willard. Rather than actual prawns, the store will sell the finest selections for children. My retail store, Coco's Variety, has contributed a minuscule Motobecane 10-speed from the 1970's as part of the commercial offerings.
The Shrimp Shop opens Saturday, November 21
Damn Vegetation, Get Off My Lawn!

I know space is filled with a network of wormholes as well as the next guy, and I'm stoked to see that Faulders Studio found one in their recent landscaping job in some San Francisco backyard.
But the cognitive dissonance of this sentence singing the praises of their paving job cracks me up:
This asserts the valued presence of the carbon-absorbing tree and its green canopy overhead, while allowing for a maximum of usable surface area below free of other vegetation.In other news, France'd be great, if it weren't for the French.
Deformscape [via boingboing]
Thursday, November 19, 2009
It's My Bed In A Box, Baby

Yes, I am constitutionally incapable of not referencing Justin Timberlake whenever I use the phrase "in a box" in a blog post. Now that that's out of the way...
The previous Mobile Totale post reminded D+R reader Michael of the slick, multi-functional built-in Barcelona architects Eva Prats and Ricardo Flores made for their own small apartment. Called Bed-in-a-Box [after Duchamp, not Timberlake], it features a kitchen/dining table on one side, and a slide-away bed and storage on the other.
ReadyMade Magazine #43 actually has a set of instructions for building your own, baby. d'oh!
ReadyMade #43 | Projects | Bed in a Box, by Prats Flores [readymade.com]
Tuesday, November 17, 2009
Louis XV Style x Louis Vuitton Style

Oh, New Jersey.
Your Turnpike provides me endless hours of entertaining conveyance--and cheap, full-service diesel.
And your more upscale estate auction houses provide me with equally entertaining views onto the sometimes questionable decorating choices of the most recently departed of your leading citizens.
And for that, I thank you.
Lot 358: Louis XV style giltwood bench with Vuitton upholstery, 19/20th century, est. $1,000-1,500. Millea Bros. auction, Nov. 21, Morristown Armory. [liveauctioneers.com]
Doris Duke's Shooting Gallery

In a move they will surely come to regret, the mandarins at The Doris Duke Charitable Foundation decided that an environmental center based on a 2,700 acre New Jersey estate does not, in fact, need a turn-of-the-last-century, mechanized shooting gallery in the basement. Last May, the shooting gallery, which was apparently quite a popular feature at the free-spirited heiress's parties at Duke Farms, was sold at auction for $43,200, deinstallation and Duke gun collection not included.
It was designed by William F. Mangels, a pioneer of the amusements industry, whose Coney Island company invented, among other things, the mechanism for making carousel horses go up and down and The Whip.
Sunday, November 15, 2009
Grid Beam

Mentioning Ken Isaacs always flushes some interesting tips out of the Internet brush.
Take D+R reader Stephen's suggestion of the Grid Beamers, for example, next-generation Isaacians "united to build a better world through logical thinking and reuseable parts." Rectilinear, modular parts with lots of carefully drilled holes.
Here are some things the Grid Beamers love: open source, prototyping, square stock, modular lengths, 1:1 ratios between stock width and hole spacing, tri-joints.
Here are some things they don't: curves, user-centered design, the metric system.
Here's the web page for Phil Jergensen, the Linus Torvalds of Grid Beam [gridbeamers.com]
Almost exactly a year ago, Make linked to The Citizen Scientist's review of Jergensen's ersatz Grid Beam Bible, How To Build With Grid Beam, then some Makers discussed specifics of getting started with Grid Beam. [makezine]
Connors934 is the go-to flickr user for Grid Beam, mostly from this years Bay Area Maker Faire. [flickr]
Thursday, November 12, 2009
Wednesday, November 11, 2009
Two More Gramophones for Ipods
Hendekagram by Alexander Rybol and Michael Neubauer.
Phonofone II from Charles and Marie.
Tuesday, November 10, 2009
Gramophone-style Acoustic Amplifier for iPhone
Using no electricity, the Aircurve uses a gramophone-style acoustic chamber to amplifier an iPhone. Will it work on Greg's iPod and allow his child to listen to Yo Yo Ma? Don't know, but it sure is looks better than Greg's iPod in the cereal bowl.
Too low tech for you? Check out Ross' homebrew chip amplifier.
Griffin Aircurve (Thanks, Darren and Ross!)
Is There A Gramophone For The iPod?

After being so helpful in finding the right tropical vinyl tablecloth [Coco's Variety, of course!], I wonder if the D+R community knows if/where I can find a well-designed gramophone-like object which will, solely by virtue of its optimal geometry, amplify the sound from my iPod Touch, so that the soothing sounds of Yo Yo Ma can fill the kid's room and lull her to sleep--and I can have my laptop back?
Until then, I'll just be using this bowl. The sound's louder if you point it face down.
20th Century Space Invasion Exhibit
Our man at Telstar Logistics has a report on a space toy exhibit that is hiding in the San Francisco United Airlines terminal.
The Joy of Space Travel at SFO
Gramophone Speakers
The Gramophone by Aesthesis (via Wallpaper)
Gramophone is a highly exclusive Hi-Fi loudspeaker, 1.2 metres high and handmade in Sweden of carbon fibre and stainless steel. Gramophone has been developed by many of the companies behind the swedish supersportscar manufacturer Koenigseggs’ cars like Ergonomidesign, Eker Design and Carbocomp on commission by us. The attention to detail has been immaculate - from the overall sound quality right down to each and every component. We are very proud of our achievements!
Monday, November 09, 2009
Mobile Totale by Titina Ammanati & Giampiero Vitelli

I had an article remaining before my NY Times archive 10-pack expired, so I just threw in a name I liked to see what the paper of record had to say about...Ken Isaacs, evangelist for the modular design movement and author of the awesome, How To Build Your Own Living Structures [OOP, but free PDF download here.]
Wow, just five hits for a legend? The best one was a 1968 article on the still more glorious dawn that awaited the overthrow of the furniture hegemony: "It's a Bed, It's a Kitchen, It's an 'Environment'"!
But Isaacs' scruffy lumber Living Structure was overshadowed by a chrome version by Verner Panton [still researching], and this stunner, a gigantic, slot-together, all-in-one Italian masterpiece from the husband-and-wife architecture team Titina Ammanati and Giampiero Vitell.
Dubbed Mobile Totale/Total Furniture, the 1965 design featured a convertible sofa bed and trundle [keep your guests close!], built-in storage shelves, and a fold-out kitchen and dining table on the back. It's like the early Living Unit sculptures of one of my favorite artists, Andrea Zittel--only earlier.
Mobile Totale was totally new to me. Just about the only Internet reference at all was one I should have spotted but didn't: a Phillips de Pury auction in London last September. It had a very high estimate for something so little-known, and sure enough, it didn't sell. The Furniture Industrial Complex's day of reckoning may still come, but not yet.
Lot 93: Mobile Totale, 1965, Ammanati & Vitelli, est. £15,000-20,000, didn't sell [phillipsdepury.com]
Saturday, November 07, 2009
Physics Flipbook
I know giant mylar balloon projects have sort of a credibility problem right now, so rather than saying I want to re-create Project Echo by launching a 100-foot diameter spherical satelloon into orbit [after exhibiting it at the Pantheon in Rome or the Grand Palais in Paris, that is], let's just say I'm researching what was one of NASA's first missions.
Which is why I keep hauling home every 1950s and 1960s space and physics book I can find, including The Restless Universe, a primer on advanced physics for the general interest reader by Nobel Laureate Max Born, which was first published in 1936 and revised in 1951.
The stark cover design won me over the second I saw it on the library sale shelf [J. Lloyd Dixon, btw.] Only after thumbing through did I see the nice line drawn illustrations--hey-o! they're moving!
The Restless Universe has seven flipbook style animations in the margins to explain various physical phenomena: gas pressure, electron orbits, Hertzian oscillation, &c. Born actually even refers to them as "films," which I thought was very sweet.
I pressed upon my astrophysicist wife to help me shoot these little films, and it's only after I uploaded the video that I realized the first three are running backwards. Also, I stripped out the audio because the helpful sound of pages flipping was drowned out by the kids' screaming battle over a hairband. Maybe I'll put it back on the DVD.
Friday, November 06, 2009
1969 Bedford CA Dormobile 4-Berth Camper Van
Awkward from every angle, it is difficult to resist this little charmer. Do you think the driver's door window opens or are you just left in there to bake like you were in a terrarium?
1969 Bedford CA Dormobile 4-Berth Camper Van at Bonhams
Wednesday, November 04, 2009
Giant Guns at Yard Dog
While hanging this weekend's show Over and Under at Yard Dog here in Austin, I had to stop and play with this fantastic gun carved from wood (the barrel spins too!) by Camp Bosworth. There are also giant bullets, giant machine guns and giant piles of money.
Link
Ausgezeichnet, Gasstationhaus!

One of the things that pulled me into fanboi orbit around Mister Jalopy was his deep, abiding love of gas stations. See, I want to live in a modernist gas station some day, preferably one with some connection--one, two or three degrees of separation, it doesn't matter--to Mies van der Rohe. And since Mister J. had claimed to know the whereabouts of at least one disused International Style service station, I figured I could do worse than follow him around and pick up the porcelained steel scraps.
Anyway, Juerg Judin, an art dealer in Berlin, has beat us both to the punch. While we were just blogging about it, Judin bought, decontaminated, renovated, added onto, and moved into his service station in Berlin. AND he got a writeup and a big, fat slideshow about the project in the NY Times, too, from whence this sweet photo was just ganked.
In Berlin, A Renovated Gas Station [nyt]
The Poetry Of The College Art Association
I've actually been to a few, so I know most of it will be tedious minutiae, poorly read in haste by nervous art historians whose real concern is securing one of the dozen or so tenure track positions--and eventually, health care!--hidden somewhere in the sprawling, frenzied job fair, but damn, do I love me some College Art Association Conference!
Now I'm content to linger over the sheer fantasie that is the sessions list of the 2010 conference, and to dream. About discoursing with Jeff Werner, Goteborg Museum of Art at the Design and the Rhetoric of Democratization session on the Gold Level, West Tower, Hyatt Regency Chicago about "IKEA’s Genealogy of Democratic Design."
Maybe head over to Acapulco [sounds warm!] to hear Melissa Ragona, Carnegie Mellon University's take on "Andy Warhol’s Proto-TV Production." Definitely stay for Margot Bouman, Parsons the New School for Design's "Televisual Spaces and the Paradox of Anamorphosis" show, too.
But mostly it's comfort enough to realize that our society somehow manages to find a gatheringplace for the thousands of people whose intense, lifelong interests range from "Remixing the Phenomenology of Technology: An Analysis of Unplugged Performance-Installations" [Robrecht Vanderbeeken, Ghent University] to "Repetition, Reflection, and Intergenerational Storytelling on Attic Grave Stelai of the Fourth Century BCE" [Elizabeth P. McGowan, Williams College]. Even if that place is the icy shore of Lake Michigan in the dead of winter. They should put the whole thing on YouTube next time.
Sessions list - CAA 98th Annual Conference, Feb 10-13, 2010, Chicago [collegeart.org]
Monday, November 02, 2009
Pour One Out For Johannes Hevelius's Telescopes

Maybe you're different, but I don't expect to be struck by sudden pangs of sadness when I browse the US Naval Oceanography Portal's small rare book selection.
Johannes Hevelius was a 17th century Polish master brewer and astronomer. He built a giant viewing platform across the roofs of his three adjoining houses in Gdansk to hold his awesome array of astronomical instruments, including a giant 45m focal length Keplerian telescope and massive sextants of his own design and fabrication. It was considered the best-equipped observatory in the world, and Hevelius and his wife/collaborator Elisabeth received successive kings and queens of Poland, as well as international colleagues like Edward Halley.
Anyway, here is LSM's catalogue description of Helevius's Machinae coelestis pars prior [published in 1673] and pars posterior [1679]:
The first volume, lavishly illustrated, describes his instruments. Some plates show his wife, assisting him with the observations. The second volume, which gives his observations from 1630 to 1679, had just been returned to him by the printer, when a fire burned down Hevelius' house, destroying his instruments, library, and almost the whole edition of this work. Only a few copies survived, which had previously been sent to personal friends.Wikipedia uses the phrase "maliciously destroyed," but offers no details. Perhaps someday a novelist will tell us what happened.
Hevelius later named the equatorial constellation Sextans after his lost instruments.
The Naval Oceanography Portal has several large images of Hevelius's set-up. [usno.navy.mil, via a bibliodyssey tangent]
A full scan of Machinae coelestis pars prior at Carnegie-Mellon's Posner Center looks like the 1969 facsimile edition. [cmu.edu]
Jonathan A. Hill, Bookseller, New York, lists a 1st. ed. of Machinae coelestis pars prior on Abebooks for $85,000 [jonathanahill.com]











