Cool Hunting
| 30 November 2007view entries from: this week | this month | view previous day | view next day |
2007 Gift Guide: Watchismo's Picks and LIP Watch Giveaway
by Watchismo

To celebrate my redesigned Watchismo.com website and year anniversary contributing to CH, I thought I'd force my Lips on you all!
Actually, I'm giving away a $300 French LIP watch, your pick from six styles, each one evolved from the original 1970s Mach 2000 (below left and right) and other seventies designer series. LIP is a 150-year-old watch company that hired some of the hippest designers of the sixties and seventies to create a futuristic line of wristwatches like nothing seen before (or since). The brand disappeared for almost three decades since the mid-seventies but now they're back, faithfully reviving many of the original series and even adding some new designs. Watchismo is the exclusive distributor in the U.S.
The most influential by far was Roger Tallon, who has designed everything from mid-century modern furniture to space-age high speed trains. From the fifties through the eighties, Tallon created everything from modern 8mm cameras, portable televisions, modular staircases and furniture, motorcycles, cars, typewriters, industrial equipment and subway maps to the aforementioned bullet shaped French TGV train.
Most iconic horologically was his asymmetric and rectangular aluminum Mach 2000 watches, easily distinguished by the primary color protruding balls for crowns and pushers for the chronographs. Each ball is situated with stylish negativity inside the cutaways of the watch case. Tallon designed a multitude of other styles including a digital LED "Diode" (above left), minimal "Frigo" (below center) and boxy "Tele" (below center).
The designer that started it all in 1969 was by Prince Francois de Baschmakoff. His Jump Hour (pictured above right), though often imitated in the four decades since, hasn't been reproduced true to the original design—with spinning digital discs and overlapping interchangeable straps—until now.
And taking a step into the past with a leap into the future is up and coming French LIP designer, Prisca Briquet and her "Mythic" (top center) It takes Roger Tallon's "Tele" case design and adds a new twist, revealing the entire dial with exposed digital discs that line up to tell the time.
One lucky CH reader will have their pick of the litter but the rest of you can have 10% off any LIP purchase at Watchismo just by mentioning Cool Hunting. See a few of my favorites and some other watches that make great gifts in the gift guide.
To enter, send an email to watchismo [at] gmail [dot] com with "CH LIP Watch Giveaway" in the subject line by 14 December 2007. (Please note that your name will be added to the (infrequent and not annoying) Watchismo mailing list by entering.
Samuel Sparrow
by Jacob Resneck
Samuel Sparrow, a Glasgow-based artist who's exhibited recently in Sweden, Scotland and England, has some recently completed new pieces. An accomplished illustrator, he's contributed periodicals like Rant and Bearded Magazineamong others.
If you're passing through Stockholm before Sunday, he's also one of the featured creative minds being featured at an exhibition being held inside a former downtown cinema that's been converted into an Urban Outfitters store.
Polanoid
by Jonah Samson
Polaroid nerds of the world unite!
Well it's no secret that I'm crazy in love with Polaroids. So as you might imagine, I was thrilled to bits to come across Polanoid—which it seems was created especially for Polaroid geeks like me. Polanoid is trying to build the biggest Polaroid picture collection on the planet by asking instant-picture enthusiasts around the world to register and upload pictures for free.
Check out their site where you can search their huge archive of pictures based on the many different formats of Polaroid film and cameras.
How to Hoola
by Fiona Killackey
Work off the turkey this season with one of the freshest books on the planet How to Hoola. The first in a series of "How To" flip books by new Aussie publisher RayPress, How to Hoola instructs the uncos of the world how to stand, squeeze and circulate their body to keep the hoop from dropping. Small enough to fit in your back pocket How to Hoola is the perfect entertaining exercising companion. Available from local bookstores Genkior Metropolis Books in Melbourne, Australia. For more info or to order a copy, email raypressaustralia [at gmail [dot] com.
David Reed
by Lost At E Minor
It's either the eye-pop effect of his palette or the graffiti tag sensibility of the brushstrokes that endear David Reed's new paintings to me. They just seem familiar. In what can feel like an austere and exclusive world of high culture and Chelsea art openings, his solo show opened with a mix of 20-something hipsters and beret-topped collectors. So it seemed like Reed achieved what his bio outlined as his original premise—to re-contextualize abstract painting within a greater visual culture.
David Reed: New Paintings
8 November-22 December 2007
Max Protetch
511 Est 22nd Street
New York, NY 10011
tel. +1 212 633 6999
