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  • July 25, 2010

    Alphabet of Everyday Objects

    [posted by Donald®]

    A by Bela Borsodi
    Awesome work by photographer Bela Borsodi. By combining everyday objects and precise angles, he creates visually stunning compositions that form giant letterforms. My personal favorite is definitely that uppercase ‘A’ in the first photo below.
    source: ugmonk
    designer/photographer: Bela Borsodi

    • April 8, 2010

      Moritz Waldemeyer

      [posted by Benz Roos]
      Video dress with 15000 embedded LEDs

      Video dress with 15000 embedded LEDs by Waldemeyer

      I was checking the site of lighting designer artist Moritz Waldemeyer and found out that he made the amazing video dress of Hussein Chalayan. Check out his site here.

      • March 30, 2010

        Vertical Omotesando by Wai Think Tank

        [posted by Benz Roos]
        Vertical Omotesando by Wai Think Tank

        Vertical Omotesando by Wai Think Tank

        Wai Think Tank have made a proposal for the Fashion Museum Competition in Omotesando Street in Tokyo, Japan. The challenge consisted in designing a 100 meters high tower-museum, containing exhibition areas of 20th century fashion history and becoming a landmark for Tokyo.
        I like the colourfull design. It looks like a stack of colours in the night. Hopefully Wai Think Tank design a nice lighting scheme for their colours as well. source: Archdaily

        • January 7, 2010

          Typographic Scarf

          [posted by Donald®]
          Number Scarf by Little Factory

          Number Scarf by Little Factory

          While it is snowing very hard in the Netherlands I was looking for a nice scarf. Look what I found at Little Factory.
          They have three different typographic laser-cut scarfs, caps, lowercase and numbers. Size 160x10cm, material 100% Microfiber Suede, available in black, white and grey at their shop.

          • December 13, 2009

            Wearable Typography

            [posted by Donald®]
            Wearable Typography by Amandine Alessandra

            Wearable Typography by Amandine Alessandra

            This is an experiment on wearable typography.
            It started as a series of three day-glow and black tee-shirts, each with a slightly different pattern that becomes different highly visible letters when seen from a distance, providing that the wearer places his arms and body in a specific way.
            When wearing these tee shirts, a group of people can form a word, a sentence or a statement. Because a single person can mimic a whole set of letters, the message can change, from one movement to another.
            Designer & Source: Amandine Alessandra

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