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The Museum of Math in NYC just opened, and it features some of Matthew Brand‘s hypnotic holograms, which he calls zintaglio.
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Via FastCo Design:
At the Museum of Math, 45 of Brand’s specular holograms have been installed on a metal matrix along one gallery wall. Visitors can use an array of overhead lamps to make the looping knots and patterns move as light cascades over the surfaces in multiple directions. Our rods and cones are telling us that we’re seeing a 3-D image. Turns out, we’re seeing 2-D pieces of metal that Brand has engraved with millions of tiny pinpoints, each engineered with its own curvature that reflects light in a specific way.

Brand calls the process zintaglio, and he discovered it one night after playing a set at a blues club in Chicago. He took off his glasses to rub his eyes, and suddenly noticed that the club’s holiday tinsel produced a different image in each eye. He began trying to prototype metal objects that would take advantage of the effect in a controlled way. β€œIt occurred to me that the optics I wanted should be carved out of metals and plastics, but, it turned out, at the time even high-end CNC machines were not sufficiently fast and precise,” he writes. β€œHowever, thanks to Moore’s law, a few years later, that obstacle was gone.” Today, he makes the holograms out of small pieces of metal. Most of the software, he tells Co.Design, “is home-brew with some open-source visualization tools thrown in.”

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Maximo Riera’s hand-made furniture series is definitely something to behold. The growing collection of all-black furniture is striking, hilarious, serious and one-of-a-kind.

The Animal Chair collection constitutes a diverse range of species, from mammals to reptiles, and even including insects. Each creation retains the animal’s natural vitality whilst being totally biological accurate in their appearance. This collection is homage to these animals and the whole animal kingdom which inhabits our planet, as an attempt to reflect and capture the beauty of nature in each living thing.

Via DesignBoom:

Each of the Spanish creative’s work is manufactured to order, taking an average of 11 weeks to produce.
Each chair requires 170 hours of machine operation and 160 hours of workman as it is assembled, sanded and painted by hand,
making them all unique.

octopus-chair-20110113-121232rhino-chair-20110824-084020walrus-chair-20110913-153407whale_chair01whale_chair04

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At the height of winter, nothing sounds better to me than an afternoon in the sauna. Unless you live in Scandinavia or the northwoods of this country, they can be hard to find, however. Β Well, the Sauna Box aims to change that. A retrofitted shipping container, this all-in-one unit looks just about right. But you’d better start saving, it sells for $41,000.

Via Uncrate:

DESIGNER/MANUFACTURER:
CASTOR

MATERIALS:

SHIPPING CONTAINER, WESTERN RED CEDAR STEEL, INSULATION, HARDWARE

DIMENSIONS:

L96″x W96″x H96″

DESCRIPTION:

This tradtional wood-burning sauna is built into shipping container. The suana box is completely self-sufficient, with solar power and a wood-fired stove. The box comes standad with ipod stereo, electric guitar hook-up, Castor stool, magnetic truck light Β and bronze antlers.

DESIGN YEARΒ 2005

PRICE:
$41,000.00

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These have got to be some of the more beautiful forms I’ve ever seen. Check out the video here to see the creation of these wondrous colors and shapes.
Millefiori by Fabian Oefner:
The shapes, you see in these image are about the size of a thumbnail. They are created by mixing ferrofluid with water color and putting it into a magnetic field.
Ferrofluid is a magnetic solution with a viscosity similar to motor oil. When put under a magnetic field, the iron particles in the solution start to rearrange, forming the black channels and separating the water colors from the ferrofluid. The result are these peculiar looking structures.
OnΒ itsnicethat.com, you can find out more about the project.
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Defringe has a cool look at the work of Moneyless, who does abstract sculptures using rope. In our modern world of 3D rendering, the physical ropes often look superimposed on the scene.

Moneyless creates the next level of what the Spanish La Pluma ElΓ©ctri*k street art crew calls Spider Tags: Two and three dimensional abstract installations made of cotton threads combined with geometrical paintings. The results are often impressing, especially when the installations look like wafting through the air. Moneyless is based in Straussburg, Germany.

By Moneyless

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At first glance, this quirky music video by Eran Amir doesn’t really seem all that impressive, until you realize that it’s completely captured in camera, with no post-production colorizing. And then it’s like, “whoa. How’d they do that?”

 

Thanks to Colossal for the tip. And here’s the making-of video!


Micrograph of a strawberry by rob kesseler
image Β© rob kesseler, wolfgang stuppy, madeline harley andΒ papadakis publisher
Fabulous images of nature, really really up close.Β Β via DesignBoom:
British photographer and professorΒ rob kesselerΒ captures the exotic microscopic detailing of various flora. Merging the worlds ofΒ 
art and science, Kesseler’s depictions of the natural world were initially inspired by medieval stylistic illustrations and Dutch flower paintings –Β 
slowly evolving to reveal the ornate and mesmeric structures of the various plant material he examined.Β 

To create the eclectic visual imagery – original samples are spluttered with a fine coating of gold and then photographed on a scanning electron microscope.Β 
These images are then manipulated using subtle washes and layers of colour to amplify their forms and display the intricate anatomy ofΒ 
pollen, seeds, fruit and leaves with breathtaking clarity. The micrograph artwork is directed solely by nature’s mystery and peculiarity –Β 
its richness and complexity- and most palpably, its sheer beauty.Β 


‘scutellaria galericulata’
image Β© rob kesseler, wolfgang stuppy, madeline harley and papadakis publisher


‘acacia pollen’
image Β© rob kesseler, wolfgang stuppy, madeline harley and papadakis publisher


‘rumia crithmifolia (apiaceae)’
image Β© rob kesseler, wolfgang stuppy, madeline harley and papadakis publisher


‘commelinaceae’
image Β© rob kesseler, wolfgang stuppy, madeline harley and papadakis publisher


microscopic seed
image Β© rob kesseler, wolfgang stuppy, madeline harley and papadakis publisher


‘larch pollen’
image Β© rob kesseler, wolfgang stuppy, madeline harley and papadakis publisher


‘hackelia’
image Β© rob kesseler, wolfgang stuppy, madeline harley and papadakis publisher


‘hippocrepis unisiliquosa’
image Β© rob kesseler, wolfgang stuppy, madeline harley and papadakis publisher


‘castilleja flava’
image Β© rob kesseler, wolfgang stuppy, madeline harley and papadakis publisher


‘krameri erecta’
image Β© rob kesseler, wolfgang stuppy, madeline harley and papadakis publisher


‘malva sylvestris’
image Β© rob kesseler, wolfgang stuppy, madeline harley and papadakis publisher


‘nemesia versicolor’
image Β© rob kesseler, wolfgang stuppy, madeline harley and papadakis publisher


‘tolmiea menziesii?
image Β© rob kesseler, wolfgang stuppy, madeline harley and papadakis publisher


‘cardiospermum’
image Β© rob kesseler, wolfgang stuppy, madeline harley and papadakis publisher

This video has been out for a few days, but it’s hilarious enough to share again. Commissioned by the Danish government to encourage public transit, the ad brings a ride on the bus to a whole new dimension. Thanks,Β Midttrafik. I think you did the job smashingly.

Via Treehugger:
Most of us are familiar with the bane of plastic water bottles and how they end up in our landfills and pollute our oceans. Collaborating for Spanish design company La Mediterranea, designers Alberto MartΓ­nez of CuldeSac, HΓ©ctor Serrano and Raky MartΓ­nez turned to traditional Spanish terracotta to find inspiration for this vessel which actually cools liquid down and yet is playfully shaped like a plastic water bottle.

 

Fashioned after the old Spanish “botijo” earthenware jug, MocoLocoΒ transcribesΒ La Siesta’s description:

The vessel is handmade in the traditional Spanish way. The special white terracotta made with salt from the region of Agast keeps the water cold even when the sun hits it.

Some interesting macro photography by Eszter Burghardt, a Canadian-Hungarian artist based in Vancouver BC, Canada. Her work is atmospheric and clever, and certainly embodies the spirit of “Moss and Fog“.

Thanks to Colossal for the tip.

Wooly Magma


Wooly Fissure


Wooly Ice


Fleeting Woolscape


Hot and Wooly


Hraun’s Saga


A Wooly Saga of Creek


Fjord of Wool


A Wooly Saga with Snow


A Wooly Saga of Jokul


Inflatable tents are not new, necessarily, but they haven’t ever been perfected enough for them to make sense in the wild. Now, a German firm named Heimplanet wants to change that with their tent called “the Cave”. With a setup time of one minute, this could be a great, if expensive ($650) option for those nights you arrive at your campsite and its already dark.


Colossal has a great look at a fantastic stop-motion music video by Vincent Pianina & Lorenzo Papace, entitled Østersøen. It is artistically and emotionally impressive, and makes me want to get back to my stop-motion work!


Exquisite Papercraft Stop Motion Video for Γ–dland video music animation

Exquisite Papercraft Stop Motion Video for Γ–dland video music animation

Exquisite Papercraft Stop Motion Video for Γ–dland video music animation

Exquisite Papercraft Stop Motion Video for Γ–dland video music animation

Exquisite Papercraft Stop Motion Video for Γ–dland video music animation

Exquisite Papercraft Stop Motion Video for Γ–dland video music animation

Exquisite Papercraft Stop Motion Video for Γ–dland video music animation

Via Colossal:
I was absolutely floored watching this enchanting stop motion video directed by Vincent Pianina and Lorenzo Papace for a song called ØstersΓΈen that was also written, composed, and recorded by Papace for his band Γ–dland off the album Sankta Lucia. What strikes me most about the video is the transitions between scenes, as objects change scale or as the camera zooms in to reveal alternate dimensions embedded in the smallest of areas. You’ll watch it two or three times before you see everything. See many more making-of photos over on Le Petit Γ‰cho Malade. Can somebody please give this Papace guy lots of money so he can make a short film? I would pay lots of money to see it.

Colossal is a fantastic Art/Design blog that I’m a big fan of. One of their most popular posts from 2011 was of high-speed liquid photography by Heinz Maier.

Via Colossal:

It never ceases to amaze me: just when I think I’ve seen every possible permutation of an artform or techniqueβ€”be it figurative sculpture, stop motion animation, or in this case, high speed photographyβ€”somebody comes along and manages to do something radically different. German photographer Heinz Maier says that he began taking photographs less than a year ago in late 2010. He claims to not know what direction he’s heading in just yet, right now he’s experimenting with macro photography, mostly insects, animals, and these delicate high speed water droplets. Personally, I think he’s found a great direction. There are so many things happening here to make these photographs simply outstanding: the lighting, the colors, the occasional use of symmetry in the reflection of water, let alone the skill of knowing how to use the camera itself. It’s hard to believe these aren’t digital. See much more of his work here.

In these times of recession, perhaps a shiny gold carrot stick is all it’ll take to make you feel special. Children who won’t eat their broccoli? Perhaps sparkly pink paint will change their tune.

The Deli Garage is offering Esslack, an edible spray paint for your food. Why? Hmm… that’s a good question. Regardless, it’s both ridiculous and kinda awesome.Β  € 24,80

Watches are cool. The wristwatch has been around for over 100 years, and in that time, as evolved into much more than just a way to check the time.Β  Indeed, wristwatches are an integral part of modern day attire, serving as status symbols, fashion accents and aspects of personality.

I thought this particular watch broke the mold in a stylish and unusual way. From the design duo 666 Barcelona, the ‘John’ model is striking, for sure. Described as a woman’s watch, I think it could look cool on anyone. And Watchismo lists the watch at $149, which is pretty cheap, considering how unique it is.