Sighted on the Web & Elsewhere

Sighted on the Web: Week of August 5

By Tiffany Lambert, Designers & Books August 9, 2013

This week's finds span the globe—from Konstantin Grcic's redesign of Le Corbusier's Appartement 50, to Russian design in Moscow, to Swedish-based studio Teenage Engineering's new synthesizer.

Tom Hanks loves typewriters

“[T]he tactile pleasure of typing old school is incomparable to what you get from a de rigueur laptop. Computer keyboards make a mousy tappy tap tappy tap like ones you hear in a Starbucks — work may be getting done but it sounds cozy and small, like knitting needles creating a pair of socks. Everything you type on a typewriter sounds grand, the words forming in mini-explosions of SHOOK SHOOK SHOOK. A thank-you note resonates with the same heft as a literary masterpiece.” ––Tom Hanks

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Appartement 50

Go inside Le Corbusier's monumental residential complex in Marseille, Cité Radieuse, where each year a contemporary designer is chosen to furnish and decorate Appartement 50. This year's project went to German designer Konstantin Grcic, who mixed some of his own work with prints from punk magazines.

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Russian design on view

Curious about the Russian design scene? Check out the recently established Moscow Design Museum, located right next door to the Kremlin in a 200-year-old building called the Manege. Exhibitions have covered Soviet design spanning from the 1950s to the 1980s and packaging design. The Mobile Hall—a bus turned multimedia exhibition space—takes Russian design straight to the streets.

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Graphic Design: The Movie

From the archive: In 2008, the editors at Design Observer created a mock casting for a movie about graphic design, selecting dozens of actors to “play” designers. See the hilarious pairings and don't miss the comments section where the designers themselves have a say.

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Dream machine

OP-1, the latest design from Swedish-based studio Teenage Engineering, is an all-in-one portable synthesizer, sampler and controller. Its clean design language and graphic interface make it accessible for a wide audience, but even professionals are trying it out. OK Go’s Damian Kulash used the OP-1 on the band's latest album. Here, Kulash sat down to speak with Teenage Engineering’s Jesper Kouthoofd to discuss the new synthesizer.

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