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Showing posts with label conceptual design. Show all posts
Showing posts with label conceptual design. Show all posts

Harmonious Design. Virtuoso, The Board Game Of Musical Proficiency.



Virtuoso is a music theory board game designed by graphic designer and illustrator Caleb Heisey.  The semicircle wooden board with silhouetted instrument icons, game pieces with metallic gold printing and beautifully typeset game cards and rules all fit into an equally attractive box. Players compete against each other by successfully answering trivia questions about music history, composition, listening comprehension, and theory.

Virtuoso is a competitive, yet educational game geared for high school and college musicians to expand their knowledge and show off their skills.





images and info courtesy of Caleb Heisey

*This board game is not yet for sale. Caleb is currently looking for a publisher to produce it. The pricing and date of availability are not yet determined. If you would like updates on the progress of the game, shoot him an email at heiseycb@gmail.com

Marina's Birds. Modern Design Meets Folk Art In These Charming Tabletop and Suspended Ceiling Lights.





Marina's Birds by Belarus designer Fajno is a collection of prototype ceiling and tabletop lamps that are a charming mix of modern and folk art attributes.




The tabletop lamps are single bird shaped objects made of either wood and glass or colored plastic and glass. The light, encased in glass, serves as the head.








The suspended chandeliers are clusters of these bird shaped lights with a matching ceiling mount.



They work in both home and office, appeal to both adults and children and males or females. If only I could buy them.

See more work by Fanjo at fajnodesign.by

Shoes With A Built-In GPS System. There's No Place Like Home by Dominic Wilcox.





Designer Dominic Wilcox has created a fully functional prototype pair of shoes that will guide you home no matter where you are in the world.
"I was commissioned by the Global Footprint project in Northamptonshire*, a place famous for shoe making, to create some shoes. I decided to make a pair of shoes that can navigate you to anywhere you wish to travel to. I thought about the Wizard of Oz and how Dorothy could click her shoes together to go home. After uploading your required destination to the shoes via a piece of custom made mapping software and a USB cable, the GPS, which is embedded in the heal, is activated by a heal click. It then communicates to the wearer via a ring of LED lights to point in the required direction. The shoe with the GPS wirelessly communicates with the right shoe that has a progress bar of lights to show how close you are to the destination." - Dominic Wilcox






Wilcox etched little illustrations onto the sole and chose a red calf leather for the inside as a small reference to Dorothy's red shoes in the Wizard of Oz:



The progress bar starts with one red light at the beginning of the journey and ends on the green light when you arrive.



The correct direction to walk is shown by the illumination of one of the LED's on the circle:


A little piece of software was created to plot your preferred destination on a map. This is then uploaded via USB to the shoe. The GPS is powered by a battery similar to those found in mobile phones. The data from the GPS in the left shoe wirelessly communicates with the right shoe which shows the progress made on a row of lights:


The perforated arrow detail is a nice touch:


The red tag at the back contains the GPS antenna which is positioned to point upwards. The shoes are built around two microcontrollers called Arduinos:


A magnet in the right shoe and sensor in the left shoe detects when the magnet is near and tells the microcontroller in the left shoe when the heels have been clicked to start the GPS.



In order to create the fully functioning prototype shoes Wilcox worked with interactive arts and technology expert Becky Stewart and local Northampton shoe maker Stamp Shoes to create the bespoke leather shoes.



The bespoke made GPS prototype shoes are currently on display at Dominic Wilcox's solo exhibition at KK Outlet, 42 Hoxton Square, London, until the 26th September.

*Global Footprint delivers an innovative and ambitious countywide programme of contemporary ‘living heritage’ events and exhibitions, using visual and digital arts to showcase and celebrate Northamptonshire’s defining cultural heritage and identity: its boot and shoe industry.

The industry will be brought to life by a series of special commissions, exhibitions, events, trails, projections and talks that utilise a range of new digital technologies to explore the boot- and shoe-making’s continued importance to the national and international economic, creative and cultural profile of the county.

Key partners include Northamptonshire County Council, Northampton Museum and Art Gallery, the University of Northampton, Fishmarket Gallery and numerous independent museums and heritage organisations.


images courtesy of Dominic Wilcox and inhabitat

A Power Pig with 17 Snoutlets (and the Design Process behind it.)





Russian design studio Art Lebedev is always designing clever items, some as concepts, some as produced items. One of their latest concepts is something I wish would come to fruition. Check out the design process and final protoypes of their Power Strip Svintus with 17 snout-plugs (or Power Pig with 'snoutlets' as I like to call it.)



Task: to play up a conventional piggy.

Svintus power strip is a multi-snout cutie that you will not want to hide behind a couch. It’s a pink, fully functional device with seventeen snout-plugs.

Spiral cord evolved from a pig tail:


The built-in circuit breaker protects from overload (Circuit breaker disguised as a mono-nipple):




The Design Process:





Release date: September 30, 2011

Credits:
artistic director: Artemy Lebedev
art director: Timur Burbayev
designer: Kirill Musienko
industrial designer: Alexei Sharshakov
modeler: Alexander Pozdeyev
visualizator: Philipp Gorbachev

A special shout out to Technabob for bringing this to my attention.

The Paradigm 180 Yacht by Pama Italian Design




I usually try to avoid posts about concept designs since they cannot be purchased and because it's a lot easier to design an amazing concept than to actually get one produced. However, this hypothetical 60 foot yacht (The Paradigm 180) designed by Pama Architetti, a design firm started in March, 2010 by architects Alessandro Pannone and Francesco Malinconico, is worth sharing for its clean lines, modern and elegant interior and innovative helipad.

















drawings and plans:







Hopefully, some wealthy investors can make this dream boat come true.


Pama Design

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