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James Lileks is a veritable pioneer of internets snark, and applied to a design-related topic, it's enough to make a lady split at the seams. Interior Desecrations is a hilarious review of various and miserable design trends from around the 1970s. He has them in book form, too, but there are amazing ones on the site (ay, me, for want that I could ever write such captions) :
"The ever-popular 'explosion in the consignment store' look is achieved quite nicely here." (Note: everyone knows someone with a mountain house decorated like this)
"No unauthorized cameras allowed, says the Old-Timey sign. Oh, don’t worry. Not when this hue and this pattern is described in most technical handbooks as 'the lens-cracker.'"

"This is the Age of Aquarius. If it’s moving, offer it a bong hit. If it’s not, paint it. "

Hanukkah a-go-go:
Minimalist, quick-burning menorah for your Festival of Lights on the run. 9 X 1.5 X 1 cm.
Thanks to Inhabitat.
After all the simplicity and concision I've seen recently, this project addles my brain. "Falling garden," by Gerda Steiner and Jorg Lenzlinger, is complex and beautiful. I can't decide if the wording on their site is poorly translated or an accurate verbal representation of their artwork. The materials they used are as eclectic as the rest of it:
Plastic berries (India), cow pads (Jura), waste paper (Venice), baobab seeds (Australia), beech, elder and magnolia branches (Uster), thorns (Almeria), nylon blossoms (one-dollar-shop), pigs’ teeth (Indonesia), seaweed (Seoul), orange peel (Migros shop), fertilizer crystals (home grown), pigeons’ bones (San StaĆ«), silk buds (Stockholm), cattail (Ettiswil), cats’ tails (China), celery roots (Montreal), virility rind (Caribbean), wild boar quills (zoo), banana leaves (Murten), rubber snakes (Cincinnati)...
Another of their projects, Meta-jardin, features junk juxtaposed with nature. "Growing and decomposing structures live in the same territories hand in hand. Values dissolve. A dense vegetation after the big crash!" Not unrelated to my post about Detroit.
Now here's a good idea for the exterior shell of my building: reclaimed wood. An article mentioning how teak wood is being salvaged from houses destroyed by earthquakes in Indonesia, then something incomprehensible at the end, but I think it's about green resorts.
(Found at Hugg)
Tee-shirts are, of course, pretty multipurpose:
Linked from Treehugger.
I think there should be a "Napkin" one. Ooh, or one with "Kleenex" written on the sleeve. The graphic would be pretty funny, anyway.
What can you create in 15 minutes?I think about it and feel like I could do something spectacular, but think about it a little more carefully and realize I have no idea what I would do, but it's a pretty amazing contest; it's like Iron Chef for design. I'll be interested to see the results and hope they post them all.
Dismantling expensive stuff in the name of science:
I love this kind of thing. Take something well designed apart, and see how it got to where it is. Core77 featured a segment called "Dissection," in which you find something neato, research all of its little bits, take it apart, and look at all of its little bits. A Motorola V.70 looks pretty much exactly as you would expect: lots of circle-pieces.
Hella good (oh man I couldn't resist, I'm so sorry.):
Hella Jongerius's pattern Repeat, commissioned by Maharam, are designed "to create a single textile which would permit a suite of chairs around a table to be cousins – each unique but all related". She takes four seemingly unrelated patterns (stripes, polka dots, florals, houndstooth, etc) and unifies them all through a color theme. I encountered some this summer while working in the sample library, and this stuff is neat in person; the texture is just as interesting as the color and pattern.
Grandma-style teacups made no-skid:

I'm surprised that they're actually made to be distributed (by Tassa, produced for Umbra), and not just part of an art exhibit. It recalls the modernized Victorian jewelry I posted. It also brings that whole idea of art down to an attainable level, even if they are hell of expensive (which I don't doubt). Michelle Ivankovic hand-dipped the teacups (and saucers, creamers, and sugars) in bright, food-safe silicone. The most fun part of doing this would be visiting various thrift stores and antique shops for the cups, so I really hope that's how she got them. Plus, it's reusing: taking something you wouldn't use anymore and making it into something you would. (from mocoloco)
Before:

After:
It's a lamp that "blushes" in response to the pitch of a cell phone conversation. It's a pretty interesting concept: humanizing technology, responsive environments. Presumably the pitch of your voice gets higher when you're upset or excited, but being the shrill harpy I am, the lamp would be all pink all the time. which isn't so bad.