Monday, February 18, 2008

Why classical styles continue to endure

I rushed to see the Samuel McIntire, Carving an American Style exhibit at the Peabody Essex Museum before it closed and was justly rewarded. The exhibit explores Samuel McIntire's contributions to the American design vocabulary. As woodcarver, architect and designer, he was among the first to carve eagles in wood to ornament buildings, furniture and other decorative art objects. The eagle came to signify the power of a nation, what came immediately to my mind- what does today's obsession with skull motifs signify? What does it mean that someone paid $122M for Damien Hirst's diamond encrusted skull? Why do Heidi Klum and Seal travel with a $2000 bag covered in skulls?

The following day, the inside cover of the NY Times magazine had a Honda ad with the American eagle dominantly featured. Graffiti will inform design in the short term, but on this President's Day I'm convinced that the powerful iconic symbolism of the classical will continue to endure.

LED throwies Demo

And can light graffiti be far behind the serious use of LEDS? Today things happen in a heartbeat and it is hard to know which will push the trend to expanded use faster. What I could have done with this at those famous Rehobeth parties in the 70's?

Interactive LED Coffee Table Demo

Ingo Maurer did it first, he made art and his work remains relatively obscure - know only to the design community. This video has been viewed over 2M times in four months, it's lots more fun.

Friday, February 15, 2008

Spring 2008 Color Trends

In case you were skeptical of the 60's Peter Max look returning, check out this fashion video. I will let you know how well this retro look is catching on in fashion by what is left on the mark-down rack at Saks in the summer. This palette has a future in interior products because LED lights offer an exciting way to create this palette in an interior, and even offer the opportunity for a 00's "psychedelic" effect. With the "teens" just around the corner as far as finish product development - a 50 year celebration of a 60's color palette is in order.

Thursday, February 14, 2008

San Miguel de Allende, Arroyo Gallery

I whipped up this youtube spot for an artist and designer friend that is opening a gallery in Mexico. The colors that surround her inspire her art.

Wednesday, February 13, 2008

Pecha Kucha Training Bite

Pecha Kucha is a wonderful tool to force the focus of any message or information.

Tuesday, February 12, 2008

More inspiration from the Archives

Square Feet, the real estate column in the NY Times in "Nods to the Old Country in a Modern Space" describes the inspiration for the interior of the new 5th Avenue Ermenegildo Zegna store. Designed by the architect Peter Marino as modern homage to the textile heritage of the company with displays of menswear with literal references to fabric bolts and looms. It is becoming more essential to share the stories of who you are with every medium at your disposal, and that certainly includes the interiors of retail spaces and showrooms.

Monday, February 11, 2008

Atmospheric Images in NY Times Sunday Magazine

In time for the Oscars, The NY Times Magazine has an article entitled Breakthrough Performances of 2007. (The link is to the slide show with commentary.) Move over Arnold Newman, there is a new portrait photographer in town. Now that everyman can shot a "perfect picture" with a digital camera, artists are moving beyond static images. RYAN McGINLEY shot the riveting atmospheric photographs of the stars for this article. This series of images is a must-see for anyone that works with aesthetics in any format.

You may wonder why this is important. I had a history professor at UNC-G who made his world history classes read the Sunday New York Times and tested us on it on it every Monday - a life long habit was born and come rain or sleet or snow, I read the NY Times on Sunday even when on vacation. What I now have is a history that tells me that stories and images published in the Times are culture defining. Despite their strongly held political opinions, I have found their influence on cultural trends holds more sway and influence on the entire country than their editorial and op-ed pages. I have since added the Thursday Home section to my "must read" list. I still like reading print, but I go to the website for the video, slide shows and better quality images than is possible on newsprint.

If you are responsible for product photography, imagine the interesting possibilities this style offers in truly focusing on a product. Expect to see more of this style in the future.
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Saturday, February 9, 2008

Peter Max's 7UP Butterfly and "Me"


I started thinking about the interior finish trends from the beginning's of my career. Very few companies connected to current culture at the time. Interior design training centered on historic styles up to and including Bauhaus (what we now call mid-century modern.) I have no memory whatsoever of "looking forward" in my design education. History is instructive, but much like using last year's sales as an indicator for tomorrow, time marches on.

We were boomers, and from our days on college campuses we were used to starting revolutions and interiors definitely needed a revolution - but corporations were not really ready for us. We made ourselves heard anyway, this model home family room in central Florida was my first bit of daring in a traditional corporate culture. We were on a tight budget, and all it took was a phone call to 7UP and they sent one of their fabulous Peter Max posters - without hesitation. I was working for Armstrong at the time, and they may not have been on the leading edge of product styling, but I got away with this unusual stunt because they were, without a doubt, the most progressive marketers in the entire interior finish industry. The story about the how the advertising department of the company created a "brand" before that word took on a life of its own, has been chronicled in
How Armstrong Floored America-the People Who Made It Happen, 1945-1995 by Eugene Moore published by the Lancaster County Historical Society.

When I rediscovered this picture, I realized that I had found the centerpiece for the narrative I am compiling of how color trends in finishes have continued to change since corporations started tracking trends rather than leaving product aesthetics up to the tastes of individual stylists and the whims of marketing executives.

Thursday, February 7, 2008

Journal from World Economic Forum 2008

Jay Nordlinger of National Review writes a charming daily journal from the Davos World Economic Forum 2008. Links to each entry are on his archive at National Review.

Apparently it wasn't all economics all the time, some fun topics included:"The Scent of Success," "Classic Clarets," "Reveal Your True Colours" and "Brands: Today's Gods." I am curious who was on the "color" panel, but "googleing" offered no answers. Webcasts and videos of many of the sessions are available on the official site.

Wednesday, February 6, 2008

Scion xB transformer commercial

Toyota marketed this car, with many customizable features, to young drivers and are finding that boomers are buying it as well. The interesting thing is that this is the way American's used to buy cars, until the Japanese invented "packages." It seems what is "cutting edge" today evokes more than a few "back to the future" concepts.

Adidas Originals

Adidas shows attitude with their new marketing campaign, who wouldn't want to shop in their new store concept? Is Germany the new go-to country for the new marketing? Adidas will reformat some of its 80 worldwide stores into Originals, an "atelier" concept, allowing visitors to design their own shoes and send pictures and videos to a large wall within the store. They are also collaborating with hip jeansmaker Diesel in time for New York Fashion week.

Tuesday, February 5, 2008

BMW WELT Walkthrough

Enjoy this walkthrough of a brand new architecture that fits the "Beemer" image as well as those Star Trek space suits fit the guy trekkies favorite female characters Seven of Nine.

S. S. Enterprise lands in Munich! BMW World

We know that Star Trek influenced the design of the clamshell cell phone, now it seems the show has inspired a building in the newly opened BMW Welt (World). The New York Times introduced the building by Coop Himmelb(l)au in an article: Polishing the Brand in a Cathedral for Cars . Now about that (l) in the architect's name?? The New York Times article writer tied his title to the idea and what a fun pun it is - Himmel is sky in German, blau means blue and bau means building - what is a cathedral but a building that rises up into the blue sky. On the architect's website, the "L" is actually a subscript, making it almost disappear. This building is seriously forward looking and I sense the need for a road trip.

Look for inspiration in the archives

A simple and timely idea (Look for inspiration in your archives) exquisitely executed like all of Hella Jongerius's highly original work.

Monday, February 4, 2008

Interior Design finally arrives in Detroit

BusinessWeek headlines are at the top of my igoogle page because they are consistently on the mark in all areas of the design world's impact on business. Detroit's New Push for better Interiors is their latest insight on how the American automobile industry finally is beginning to understand what Asia and Europe has known all along - that interior design matters. The industry has know for a long time that 85% of car buying decisions are made by women, it is about time they realize that we spend most of our time sitting in the car, not admiring it from the outside.

Superbowl score upset, ad response predictable

It is amazing how similar the responses to the Superbowl ads were across age, gender and income on the US TODAY admeter. I don't know how long this page will remain online, but the responses show, current wisdom aside, that there is still a consistent mass-market. Year after year, we love animals: Budweiser's Clydesdale ad, Sobe LifeWater's lizards yet were easily bored by 30 seconds of Gatorade's water-drinking black lab. The top four top admeter scores were all animals. And there was only one response that differed markedly by gender, scoring 23 of 55 - men loved the Victoria's Secret ad and women "not so much." Four lessons from Superbowl 42:
  1. The mass-market is alive and well.
  2. It is critical to keep the real customer firmly in sight when promoting a product
  3. Animals with stories that entertain engage!
  4. The internet offers a solid afterlife for the ad dollars spent at the Superbowl.