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Suzak vs Bufa: Two Takes on a Textile Chair

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Like so many entrepreneurial-minded designers today, Daniel Aristizabal and Jose Manual Carvajal of Medellín, Colombia have turned to Kickstarter to launch their company. QSTO's (pronounced "KOO-sto") flagship product, "Suzak," is a chair that looks something like a piece of sports equipment mixed with, well, a piece of camping equipment. The chair form consists of a spandex-like fabric stretched across a curved steel frame, held in place by a single crossbar and a pair of heavy-duty shock cords. Check out the pitch:

At $135 for the medium (based on the video, the large looks huge), the "Suzak" hits a pricepoint that's somewhere between dorm room and bachelor pad; easy maintenance doesn't hurt either. It's elegant flat-packability is also a nice touch, though I wonder how durable the frame is, especially since some users will likely see it more like a trampoline than a chair.

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Abercrombie & Fitch is seeking a Technical Designer in Columbus, Ohio

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Technical Designer
Abercrombie & Fitch

Columbus, Ohio

Abercrombie & Fitch is seeking a Technical Designer, who will be responsible for building detailed tech packs utilizing the designer's initial flat sketch and trim sheet. A&F Tech Designers also communicate with factories to identify and resolve production issues. Day to day responsibilities include creating detailed technical illustrations and specs, editing and correcting paper patterns, creating patterns from scratch when necessary, and conducting fits on live fit models. Tech Designers work closely with Design, Merchandising, and Sourcing to ensure proper construction and fit for all product.

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Hell in a Handbasket: The $260 'Perfect' Pencil

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I respect Faber-Castell, and their Grip Plus Ball is still one of my favorite ballpoints, but this is just ridiculous: Their Perfect Pencil rings in at an absurd 260 bones.

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Yes, the fluted body is cool and probably feels great in the hand, but does it need to be made from "precious Californian cedar?" And do we scribes and scribblers require an onboard sharpener made from silver, platinum or Sterling silver plating?

Arguably the Perfect's target market may not be the indigent design blogger or industrial designer; it's probably aimed at Wall Street types who can thoughtlessly snap them in half when frustrated by the market.

Oh, almost forgot, the erasers are replaceable. Although if I dropped two and a half bills on a pencil, I'd never erase anything that came out of it.

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Core77's Seven Designer Phenotypes: #4 - Traveling Wo/man

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Traveling Wo/man

Habitat: Airports, Train Stations, Fine Sidewalks Everywhere

Plumage: Multi-functional & Hyper-Efficient

Attributes: First String Travel Bag, Backup Travel Bag, Bags within Bags and the Perfect Sunglasses.

Description: At home or on-the-go, the Traveling (Wo)Man is hard to pin down. Her most reliable companion is her trusty travel bag, designed down to the last detail—a secure place for each essential gadget and gizmo to help along the road. This designer can find new uses for even the most efficient and multi-functional products.

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For our eighth annual Ultimate Gift Guide, Core77's crack editors have identified a taxonomy of seven known 'Designer Phenotypes' who might be on your shopping list. From Designer Dandy to Studio Snob, Homebound Hobbit to Workshop Workhorse, we have something for the discerning gift giver and recipient alike.

In addition to our beloved online Gift Guide, we're also pleased to announce that we've partnered with Blu Dot in New York City and our sister store Hand-Eye Supply in Portland, OR, to open bicoastal Holiday Pop-Up Shops for your shopping convenience. Stop by before December 24th to check out the product in person and pick up a poster featuring all seven designer phenotypes, illustrated by Core-toonist Tony Ruth, a.k.a. lunchbreath (while supplies last).

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And Now, a Chinese Cotton Candy Craftsman

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This video is interesting on a couple levels, but I won't ruin it:

According to the sign in the closing shot of the video, the cotton candy flower costs five yuan, or about 80 cents at the current exchange rate. Upon a bit of research, I was interested to learn that the treat debuted at the 1904 World's Fair for the hefty sum of 25 cents a box—the equivalent of about $6.00 today. Confectioner John C. Wharton filed a patent for the first cotton candy machine in 1899 with the help of dentist William J. Morrison (irony aside, there is at least one research paper dedicated to the life and times of the sometime lawyer, author and inventor). In any case, the Nashville-based team sold nearly 70,000 boxes of "Fairy Floss," as it was called back then—a second dentist, Joseph Lascaux of New Orleans, LA, devised a similar machine in 1921, when he coined the term 'cotton candy' (no word on whether infringement was an issue back then).

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As for the gauzy treat itself, cotton candy is essentially melted sugar that is rapidly cooled in a centrifuge as gossamer strands are collected along the edges of the bowl. Here's a short and sweet vid of the 'traditional' way of making it:

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Extreme Parallel Parking with MINI

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Earlier this year, unconventional car brand MINI set a Guinness World Record for a feat that we urban drivers all brag about being able to accomplish: Tightest Parallel Parking Job. I myself have wedged cars into Manhattan spaces in ways that I felt defied physics, but after witnessing MINI's feat, I realize I'm not even in the running.

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Putting the the "king" in "parking"

MINI went all the way to China to enlist an incredible precision stunt driver named Han Yue, whose preferred method of parking involves...the emergency brake:

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Save the Date: Core77's NYC Pop-Up Shop Holiday Party & Design Talk Next Monday, 12/17

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Join us next Monday for Core77's Holiday Party and Design Talk featuring three Brooklyn-based designers from our Ultimate Gift Guide discuss the triumphs and challenges of getting products to market:

Chris Kucinski, Critter and Guitari
Ian Collings, Fort Standard
Alex Mustonen, Snarkitecture

And as a special treat, we'll have the first shipment of Marshall's special edition Hanwell HiFi speaker on display!

Monday, December 17th
6–8PM - Talk begins promptly at 6:30PM

Core77 Pop-Up Shop @ Blu Dot
140 Wooster Street
New York, NY 10012
rsvp [at] core77 [dot] com

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Core77's Hand-Eye Holidays #5: Magma Sketchbook: Design & Art Direction

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Designed by Matt Willey and Zoe Bather of Studio8, the Magma Sketchbook: Design & Art Direction, has been remarkably popular at the Hand-Eye Supply store. We believe the appeal lies in the Swiss Army Knife quantity of tools in the book. Beyond the numbered, perfectly toothed, blank and graph sketch pages, there are an additional 16 pages of essential tools for designers. With informative diagrams and data on typography, binding and folding techniques, body measurements and even tips for sustainable design, this book runs the gamut in terms of relevance for a multiplicity of design fields.

Magma Sketchbook: Design & Art Direction
Available at Core77's Hand-Eye Supply
$15.95

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The Craft-Brew-to-End-All-Craft-Brews Available in U.S. for the First and Last Time, Today Only

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Westvletern-inGlasses-MarkLampertviaNPR.jpgA veritable holy grail... photo by Mark Lampert for NPR

It ain't design, but a monastic lesson, of sorts, for modern artisans: any beer connoisseur worth his or her salt—or hops, as it were—knows that the trappist brew Westvleteren (pronounced as it's spelled: WEST-v'letter'n) is widely considered to be the rarest beer in the world. As the coveted product of one of six Trappist breweries—legally sanctioned abbeys in Belgium—Westvleteren is considerably more obscure than widely available bottles from Achel, Chimay, Orval, Rochefort and Westmalle, mostly because the monks at St. Sixtus Abbey don't distribute their ambrosial libation at all.

Instead, intrepid beer drinkers must make the pilgrimage to the Belgian hinterlands and schedule a visit via phone. The reclusive monks are notoriously difficult to contact, and availability remains limited to what is available at the time (there are three styles, a blonde and two bottle-conditioned ales numbered 8 and 12); rumor has it that they'll give you a time and date and ask for a license plate number to coordinate pickup.

So yes, American seasonal one-offs notwithstanding, Westvleteren is indeed the rarest beer in the world, and while you can find similar flavors in Rochefort's formidable brews, Westvleteren's sheer unattainability is part of its appeal: lucky drinkers are sure to savor every last drop. The current generation of microbreweries can come up with marketing gimmicks as they please, but (as the story goes), the monks at St. Sixtus have been at it since 1838, and even though they didn't start selling the beer until nearly a century later, their business model still predates the dawn of American craft brewing by about half a century.

Of course, it's also worth mentioning that the production is limited to what the monks need to sell to support the Abbey and nothing more, roughly 3,800 U.S. barrels per year. While it goes without saying that scarcity is part of the myth, the supply-side restrictions have not obviated a secondary market for the premium brew. On the contrary, your humble editor was able to track it down—years ago, while studying abroad in Europe—at a beer store in Amsterdam for the altogether reasonable price of 10€ for a Westvleteren 12. It's as delicious as you might expect, definitely worth the money if not a journey to the Low Countries (not one to squander the opportunity, I picked up several bottles at the time, and I have no intention of drinking the remaining Westies, which are currently aging in an undisclosed cellar, any time soon).

But here's the kicker: in what might be the limited-time-only special offer to end all holiday deals, the Trappist monks have made the beer available Stateside for one day only... 12/12/12. NPR reports that the abbey needed to raise funds for a recent renovation—spokesman Mark Bode says it will likely be the last public sale of the beer—and I highly recommend listening to the story, which aired on Morning Edition today.

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Unfortunately, I imagine that the entire shipment has been long sold out as of press time; the Whole Foods on Bowery reported that many customers wound up emptyhanded, as they only had 24 of the gift packs in stock. The six-packs were priced at $85 (I expect that individual bottles might resell for upwards of half that) at select retailers nationwide.

So it's not quite a teachable moment: Etsy sellers and Kickstarter aspirants have nothing on the ascetic artisans of St. Sixtus... which just goes to show that a little storytelling can go a long way. That and 174 years of heritage.

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MINI Goes to Santa Claus

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In keeping with their recent "Not Normal" brand campaign, MINI decided to take an active role in Christmas this year. While Santa Claus has got the business of gift delivery covered, the MINI team in Italy figured they could assist with the pre-ordering process, so to speak, and have some fun along the way.

To that end MINI amassed as many Christmas wishes as they could, canvassing Belgium, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Russia, Singapore, Slovakia, Slovenia, the United Kingdom and the United States of America. After amassing all of those letters in Milan, where the project originated, the team then loaded them up for transport—it took eight MINIs to carry the haul—and set out for a northbound roadtrip.

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Three-thousand five-hundred kilometers later they were inside the Arctic Circle, at the Official Village of Santa Claus (also known as Rovaniemi, Finland). Core77 was one of just two U.S. outlets on hand to witness the handover--and subsequent certification: As it turns out, MINI had broken the Guinness World Record for The Longest Wishlist Ever Delivered to Santa Claus.

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All told MINI delivered 75,954 wishes, and after printing them out onto a continuous scroll—even Santa has to deal with ergonomic issues—it needed to be supported on a large metal wheel, as it was nearly 4,000 meters long.

Hit the jump to see the short:

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Hub Folding Box Company is seeking a Solidworks Operator/Industrial Designer in Mansfield, United Kingdom

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Solidworks Operator/Industrial Designer
Hub Folding Box Company

Mansfield, United Kingdom

Hub Folding Box is seeking an industrial designer to create technically-accurate Solidworks renderings of customer products, boxes and plastic components. The job entails creative design or design based on client needs: all jobs would be to scale in 3D and would resolve the need of clients who need to show renderings before prototyping. This position will also be trained in the Plastic Technology division of the business and will be responsible for learning technical data, mold making, and plastic thermoform part design.

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Reclaim NYC: Sneak Preview & Interview with Brad Ascalon & Jennifer Gorsche

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In addition to sharing an etymological root with the word "salvation," the notion of "salvage" also connotes wreckage; specifically, an effort to recover that which might be lost in the face of disaster. Brooklyn's Uhuru, for one, has long sought to revive serviceable materials in furniture form, and we weren't surprised to see them among the designers who participated in Sawkill Lumber's 12×12 exhibition during New York Design Week this year.

ReclaimNYC-DanielMoyer-FireIsland1.jpgPhoto of Fire Island by Daniel Moyer

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Uhuru is just one of the two dozen designers revisiting that theme for an forthcoming fundraiser in response to the devastation of Hurricane Sandy. Organized by writer Jennifer Gorsche, DesignerPages Editor-in-Chief Jean Lin and designer Brad Ascalon, Reclaim NYC is true to the spirit of salvage in every sense of the word.

New York City's design community is teaming up to raise money for those affected by Superstorm Sandy with an auction of furniture created from materials reclaimed or salvaged after the storm and of pieces inspired by the flooding...

Furniture collectors will have a unique opportunity to take home a piece of the storm while benefitting those most affected by it. More than 20 designers have pledged pieces to the silent auction, the proceeds of which will go to the American Red Cross in Greater New York. Each designer is bringing a unique take on Sandy and its aftermath with pieces ranging from tables and chairs to lighting fixtures to art objects. Some designers have plans to explore themes of the storm in future work as well.

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We had a chance to catch up with Gorsche and Ascalon, who gladly provided a sneak preview of some of the work that will be at the auction (full list of participants below):

Core77: Let's start from the beginning—how did Reclaim NYC come about?

Jennifer Gorsche: I was running in the park and saw how many trees had been damaged. The wood was being hauled away and I wondered if it would be possible for some designers to use it. I called Jean Lin, my good friend and Designer Pages editor and chief, to talk about the idea. We talked with Brad Ascalon about it too, and started reaching out to NY-based designers. The response was really positive and though the timing of the event ultimately didn't allow for large pieces of downed trees to be used (because of curing time involved) the designers have been very creative in addressing the theme of reclamation.

Brad Ascalon: As Jen mentioned, she and Jean reached out to me to see if I'd be interested in participating. Because I was so into the idea, the discussion ended with me wanting to be involved in the organization of the project alongside Jen and Jean.

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A Scintillating 'Retroreflective' City Cycle by Bike Safe Boston's Joshua Zisson

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The criteria for the ultimate urban bicycle varies widely from rider to rider, but cyclists, pedestrians and motorists alike can agree that visibility is paramount. We see plenty of lights—Sparse is just the latest of many—but there is growing interest in alternative illumination for alternative transportation.

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As a bike law specialist, Boston's Joshua Zisson combines his passion for cycling with his JD, extemporaneously sharing his thoughts and experiences on his blog, Bike Safe Boston. He recently posted his long-awaited custom city bike, featuring hub dynamo-powered lights, an ad hoc brake light (activated by decreasing voltage from the dynamo), internal gearing, fenders and a chainguard—in a word, the works.

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But the most salient feature of the bicycle isn't visible to the naked eye: the frame and fork (built by Ted Wojcik) are powdercoated with a custom retro-reflective paint job by Halo Coatings. "Unlike existing retroreflective tech that's produced as a laminate (think 3M Scotchlite), Halo came up with an ultra-durable reflective coating that can be applied to just about anything (metal, plastic, rubber, etc.) at a fraction of the cost of reflective tape."

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JoshuaZisson-RetroreflectiveBike-ConstanceWinters-ridingfront.jpgYes, he also got his glasses Halo-coated

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Core77's Hand-Eye Holidays #6: Czeck Edge Ruler Stop

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This is one of our favorites from Core77's collection of Workshop Workhorse gifts: when it comes to production, precision begets precision. This high-quality machined doodad will multiply the uses of your trusty ruler, turning it into a capable production aid. Slide it on and start quickly squaring things up and marking consistent depths. When done break down and stow it.

Czeck Edge Ruler Stop
Available at Core77's Hand-Eye Supply
$32.00

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App to the Future Design Challenge Open for Entries

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Today is the day! Our App to the Future Design Challenge is Open for Entries. Core77 and Windows Phone have teamed up for the second year in a row to challenge people around the world to design an app for Windows Phone 8! This year, we're asking the community to design an app that helps create, connect or delight their future self.

Apps have become a way for ordinary people to take control of their day-to-day lives. Today apps help us wake up, get dressed, get through our commute, stay abreast of news and reach each other throughout the day; and they offer endless options for dining, socializing and entertainment. At their best, apps can help us do the things we want to do, in a way we prefer to do them—they empower our passions—but what more can they do for us tomorrow?

This year we've picked three categories that App to the Future submissions should be inspired by:


  • Design to Do. Love what you do, and you'll never work a day in your life—this is your chance to create an app that helps you do what you love. What part of the design process are you most passionate about? Design an app that focuses on creativity and improve it.

  • Design to Connect. Sometimes it isn't what you're doing as much as whom you're doing it with. Design an app that keeps you close and connected with the people you love and care about.

  • Design to Delight. Harness the power of that computer in your pocket and design an app that surprises and delights—get people excited about what they're doing, and they'll love it as much as you do.

To participate in the challenge, you must submit a design concept by February 3, 2013. It doesn't need to be a fully functioning app. A great mockup, images, brilliant napkin sketches, or a video will do. Our esteemed jury will look at the originality of the idea and how you blend your creativity with the Windows Phone design language to make their decision.

30 finalists will be selected, then the judges will chose 5 winners who will receive a Microsoft Surface, a Windows Phone 8 and 1-year Dev Center membership.

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Sounds intimidating? Don't know where to start? We're excited to share two new resources for designers for this year's challenge: Windows Phone Design Boot Camp and Lightning Design Reviews.

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Google Maps for the iPhone is Back!

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While yesterday's date of 12/12/12 was good luck for the numerically superstitious, it's today's date of 12/13 that's looking auspicious for me: Google Maps for the iPhone was finally made available today, at its good ol' price of zero dollars.

The Apple Maps debacle was a clear reminder that there are some areas where Apple can't out-design the competition, namely in raw data. Apple has my loyalty with most of the stuff they make, due to their unrelenting focus on the user experience: As I've steadily populated my parents' house, several states away, with Apple products over the years, I've experienced a steady decrease in those painful parental tech-support calls. But the Maps mess made clear that blind, across-the-board brand loyalty isn't the way to go.

So yes, no more trying to get crosstown directions and winding up with a destination in Kentucky. No more having to type every last letter of an address because Siri's silent partner is incapable of basic logic. The downside is that yes, there's no way to access Google Maps with Siri, meaning more typing; but I'd rather let my fingers do the walking, rather than my feet leading me in the wrong direction.

Get it while it's hot here.

Ed. Note: This is also a good opportunity to revisit our Case Study, "Google Maps: Designing the Modern Atlas.

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Time-Warp Video: MINI Rally Racing with Rauno 'The Rally Professor' Aaltonen

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It was an unlikely turn of events: A tiny, unconventional automobile, designed as a thrify response to the Suez Oil Crisis affecting Britain in the 1950s, would become a ferocious racecar competitor in the following decade. In the '60s a small group of sure-handed drivers drove the MINI to beat out larger, faster cars on some of the most challenging rally tracks on Earth, like the world-famous four-stage Monte Carlo Rally, and this cemented the brand's image in the minds of European auto enthusiasts. (Fans could spot the car from afar, by design; the roof was painted in contrasting white.)

One of those drivers was Rally Hall of Famer Rauno Aaltonen, a bloke from southern Finland who had speed in his bones. Aaltonen started off racing speedboats as a boy, then motorcycles, and eventually cars. We caught up with MINI Ambassador Aaltonen for a too-brief interview in Finland—while relatively unknown in America, he was in high demand by European journalists at the press event—and before we get to an awesome time-warp rally vid further down in this entry, we'll show you the two questions we got to squeeze in:

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GrinOn Industries' System for Providing Immediate Beer-- By Filling Through the Bottom of the Cup

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Many of us enjoy a beer after work (and some of you, during), but for the most part we're not in a rush; we understand the tap dispenses beer at a set pace, and I almost like the anticipation that comes with watching the glass slowly fill with amber up to the top.

In a sports stadium, however, you want beer NOW. You sneak away from your seat because they called a time-out and you think you can make it back before they take the ball out; otherwise you wait in an interminable line during halftime, wondering if the Miami fan behind you will ever shut his mouth, or if he'll require your assistance.

To beer people faster, an Indiana-based company called GrinOn Industries has invented the Bottoms Up Beer Draft Dispensing System. As the name suggests, the system's innovation is to inject beer into a cup through the botttom, which greatly speeds the filling time—they're claiming it's nine times faster than a tap, and that one person can fill 44 pint cups in one minute—while leaving a decent head on the brew. Observe:


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Core77's Hand-Eye Holidays #7: Merchant & Mills Oilskin Sewing Kit

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In this era of eco-awareness, we often find ourselves choosing between buying beautiful new things and making do with what we have. When it comes to clothes we feel like we might have an answer for fashion conscious types who find themselves in this situation: All the endearing quality and craftsmanship of a quality garment in a product that hovers on the periphery of one's wardrobe, a sort of meta-fashion toolbox: a sewing kit.

The Merchant & Mills Oilskin Sewing Kit is on our list of ideas for Off-The-Grid designers, but its portability is only part of its appeal—it comes with all of the basics for extending the life of your garb, but its form is the force that will inspire and elicit the best of your darning abilities: a heritage aesthetic that nods at tradition and an untying, unfolding presentation that will ritualize you right into the mood for zen-ing out on your stitching.

Merchant & Mills Oilskin Sewing Kit
Available at Core77's Hand-Eye Supply
$75.00

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Off the Clock: 'Lithe' by Studio Ve

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We've seen several projects from Tel Aviv's Studio Ve before,
following up their "Manifold" clock with another horological Kickstarter project. Founders Shay Carmon and Ben Klinger—Shay ve Ben for short ("ve" means "and" in Hebrew)—are pleased to present "Lithe," a purportedly superlative clock: "We've designed a new wall mounted clock with the longest and thinnest hands (at least that we know of...)."

The hands of the Lithe Clock are long, longer than your arm, yet thin and subtle. The flexion of the steel gives the still hands a surprising vibrancy. Placed on a delicate ceramic base they bring out the elegant appearance of time... Its long hands give it a smooth and soft flow, resembling a dance—they rise and wilt, turn and bend.

The idea of the clock came when we were dealing with raw material—music wire, used for pianos. The steel wire, although still, performed a surprisingly animated behavior. We just had to take it and give the clock a life of its own; it obeys the laws of physics—not rigorously, but rather in a special, vivid way.

The Lithe clock is currently available for pre-sale on Kickstarter, where they're currently seeking a grand total of $15,000 in the next two months or so. The antenna-like arms are available in grass green, deep orange or 24K gold, as well as custom colors, and customers will also offer a choice of glaze for the body.

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