Cool Hunting

06 July 2006view entries from: this week | this month view previous day | view next day

Double Balloon Whisk

by Ami Kealoha

Balloonwhisk

While fancy electric mixers costing hundreds show up on many a bride-to-be's registry, cream whipped by hand has a more velvety texture and just tastes better. Any cook with an overdeveloped forearm will appreciate the ingenious design of these Kuhn Rikon whisks. By simply doubling the number of wires, the stainless steel beater cuts down whisking time by half. Available in 10" and 12" sizes from Amazon.



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Trust Nobody x Methamphibian

by Leonora Oppenheim

Bread & Butter, a fashion fair that travels between Barcelona and Berlin every six months. This behemoth event is so overwhelming that after just a few hours you feel like screaming to be let out of the warren of mega-brands, wishing none of us would ever have to wear clothes again. That’s why the smaller events happening around town make for better bite-sized morsels of style. The Trust Nobody store and gallery dedicated to limited edition sneakers and skatewear is much easier to take. This month they have a collaborative exhibition with Methamphibian and Nike. Check out the Trust Nobody blog and gallery for the amazing Methamphibian graphics, like the pictured "Pestilence" card. Their four horsemen of the apocalypse are coming to scare the fashionistas away!

Trust Nobody Gallery
Calle Tallers 45, Bj.6
Barcelona
tel. + 34 93 481 45 60



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Royal College of Art Summer Show 2006

by Ami Kealoha

Doodledudes2 Doodledudes3

Having spent weeks talking to students and looking at the annual Royal College of Art degree show, Exhibit-K, a London-based art tour service, came up with five hot design picks exclusively for Cool Hunting.

Doodle Dudes
Andrew Haythornthwaite's Doodle Dudes gives the characters that children create in their drawings a 3-d life by using rapid prototyping to print their drawings in 3 dimensions. Children’s drawings are transformed into a toy that—given the high retail cost—may be more for adults than children. The toy comes in parts that have to be slotted together and can be made in resin or metal.

Tonguesucker1

Tongue Sucker
A new essential item for the first-aid box, the Tongue Sucker literally sucks the tongue away from the windpipe to prevent suffocation when a patient is unconscious. All current designs on the market can only be used by a trained professional, but the Tongue Sucker can be used by anyone. Inspired by the lack of such an item during the 7/7 bombings, this group of designers (Phillip Greer, Graeme Davies, Lisa Stroux, and Christopher Huntley) have won several prestigious awards for their product, which is set to become a staple of all first-aid boxes in the UK. It's a simple, cheap and effective piece of design that will save countless lives.

Liqorange2 Liqorange1

Liquid Orange
Allowing the user to juice an orange from the inside, all vital nutrients and fibers survive within the orange's natural sphere. Graeme Davies juicer takes only 20 seconds to blend the inside of an orange and makes about 160 ml of the freshest juice. Simply stick a straw in the top and go—all the goodness within an entirely biodegradable package. Davies is already working on a mini juicer ideal for the picnic hamper.

Digimemory2

Digital Remains
A design for storing memories in the digital age, Michele Gauler suggests that in the increasingly digital terrain of our future we will no longer be able go to the attic and look through a box of old letters and photographs to remind us of dead loved ones. This kind of material is more likely to be stored digitally and found by looking through a loved one’s desktop. She proposes a system where all our personal information is stored on a remote server that is only activated when with a login key, the property of our next-of-kin. Once activated, one would have access to digital storage of a loved one and be able to hear the last piece of music they listened to, image they stored or email they sent. This thought provoking piece explores how we may deal with rituals of mourning and remembrance in the digital age.

Scratch

Fiat Scratch
With a carefree approach to car ownership, Flat Scratch makes a car gain worth as you use it. Designed by Uros Pavasovic specifically for the Italian market, four layers of different exterior colors means that this car gets more exciting and beautiful the more you scratch and scrape it. This socially sensitive design provides a fun take on our contemporary obsession with vintage, second-hand and retro products. In some ways, Pavasovic’s proposition for the vehicle industry is a mere extension of Levis’ highly successful trade in already faded and soiled jeans.



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Four Tet: DJ-Kicks

by Ami Kealoha

Fourtetdjkicks

Lauded British experimental electronic musician Keiran Hebden, aka Four Tet, added DJ to his already impressive re´sume´ with a residency at London’s The End and more recently with a smashing mix CD for K7’s DJ-Kicks series.

The selections are tasty, sometimes surprising, and wildly varied as you might expect from a DJ whose own music draws from folk, electronica, hip-hop, and jazz influences among others. Transitions range from the traditional blend to original synthesizer tone poem segues.

The mix begins with stuttering organ and mellifluous trumpet tones of David Behrman's abstract and beautiful "Leapday Night (Scene 1)," transitions into Syclops' "Mom, The Video Broke," a live breakbeat excursion with buzzing and swooping synth accents, and then into Curtis Mayfield's sunshine soul stepper "If I Were Only a Child Again," setting up the listener's expectations for the enjoyable whirlwind that is to come. Along the way, he manages to meld a wide range of genres—including head-nod hip-hop, minimal techno, and traditional Rhodesian thumb piano—into a strangely cohesive compilation.

Four Tet, not exactly known for dancefloor anthems, says he made this mix with ass-shaking in mind. Unless you are as creative on the dancefloor as he is on the tables, that might be pushing it. But as long as you appreciate a little eclecticism, you'll enjoy this adventurous mix. Pick up the partial (13-track) version from Dancetracks Digital or the full disc from Amazon.

by DJ Scribe



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July 6, 2006view entries from: this week | this month view previous day | view next day
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