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3BY10: Designers on Design

Skinny Tanner belt

We get that the short-format Pecha Kucha-esque presentation thing has replaced the long-format lecture-as-art thing in Portland. Art and entertainment aside, here’s a brand new monthly quickie series that makes a lot of sense. 10 minute introductions to project or trend by three local design professionals (or students) followed by a roundtable discussion and afterward, socializin’. Put on by the Portland chapter of the IDSA, 3BY10 launches Wednesday, March 25 at Souk (322 NW 6th, Suite 200) beginning at 5:30 PM. Admission is always free. This month, Art Institute of Portland instructor Matthew Perkins presents his innovative, automotive-inspired seating project. FUSE design principal Toren Orzeck. Tanner Goods co-founder Sam Huff describes the founding of a new accessories brand. At end of eve’, meet for drinks and more talk at Someday Lounge (125 NW 5th).

That’s a Tanner skinny belt above (♥). More Tanner goodness here: delicious wallet and brand new copper hardware. When that copper hardware meets the skinny belt and patinas a little, mmm.

Tanner Goods Wallet

Tanner Goods Belt Copper hardware

POSTED: March 24th, 2009 | AUTHOR: lisa | FILED UNDER: design | TAGS: , , | No Comments »

Project Chaboo: All-Star Artist/Designer Collaboration

Chabu

This is the blank slate. Ken Tomita’s low bench called the Chabu, after the low Japanese table, the chabudai, around which the family gathers. Looking for a way to get to know other designers and artists, as well as generate interest in his and their work, Tomita issued an invitation to a handful of designers and artists: to customize his chabu.

Emily Knudsen for Project Chaboo
Emily Knudsen for Project Chaboo. detail. photo: Anna Campbell

The new piece would be called a “chaboo,” the double-o’s a nod to the original material used for the bench. Project Chaboo then meant a furniture design/builder creating an interpretation of the chaboo from scratch based on Tomita’s design, or Tomita building half of it for a metal worker who would built the other half, or Tomita building a chaboo for an artist like Amy Ruppel to customize (he built dozens for the show). From the first invitees, Tomita received more recommendations for participants. Eventually, more than 50 chaboos would be created by makers coming from architecture, interior design, photography, fine art, illustration, graphic design, carpentry, engineering, industrial design, as well as furniture design. The chaboo would be painted, pierced, knit. It would serve as a canvas, an armature for sculpture. It would grow legs, get bent, and sprout live plants.

Can’t wait to see work by some really intriguing makers like furniture maker Sara Huston, interior designer Lisa Kuhnhausen, furniture designer Joel Wakeman, textile/accessories designer Erin Albin of Appetite, and art-duo APAK (Aaron+Ayumi Piland). Oh, and David Butts’ walking chaboo.

Don Jensen for Project Chaboo. detail.
Don Jensen for Project Chaboo. detail. photo: Anna Campbell

And the project didn’t stop there. Tomita then arranged photoshoots of not only the pieces, but the makers with their chaboos in a stunning series of portraits by photographers Anna Campbell, Alleh Lindquist, Joe Mansfield, and Jamen Lee. Then he and his brother, Yuji, built a beautiful website that features all of the chaboos, photos of the makers, and profiles and a few portfolio shots from each participant. What results is not only great and intriguing work, but a chance to get to know a great slice in cross section of Portland’s creative community, folks whose work you typically won’t see at First Thursday, whose work isn’t in the papers.

Brendan Budge for Project Chaboo
Brendan Budge for Project Chaboo. detail. photo: Anna Campbell

Best of all, the results of Project Chaboo will be on display at a party this Wednesday March 4 from 6-10 PM at GALLERY HOMELAND at The Ford Building, (SE 11th and Division). And by the results, I mean the chaboos, the photos, the stories of the people who answered Tomita’s invitation to customize a chaboo. Tomita tells me the exhibition design itself, by Lisa Kuhnhausen and Emily Knudsen, is something to see.

See and interview I did with Ken about the project for portlandspaces.net/blog/the-design-district.

POSTED: March 2nd, 2009 | AUTHOR: lisa | FILED UNDER: design | TAGS: , , , , | No Comments »

Oh, Pigeon Toe Ceramics!

Pigeon Toe Ceramics Dent Vase

Loving these little pieces from Pigeon Toe Ceramics, a new project by Portland-based graphic designer Lisa Hough (Finishing School Design). You can be the first kid on your block to have these porcelain wheelthrown pieces which beg to be grouped in ivory tableaux. Find these and others at Lisa’s Etsy shop at PigeonToeCeramics.etsy.com.

Pigeon Toe Ceramics Tuck Pot

Pigeon Toe Ceramics Furrow Pot

first noted on Design District.

POSTED: January 26th, 2009 | AUTHOR: lisa | FILED UNDER: design | TAGS: , | 1 Comment »

Almost Dead: Deadline for Cut&Paste Imminent

Cut&Paste

Design live, on stage, in front of judge/jury and a crowd of hundreds of your peers at Cut&Paste…but no pressure.

January 23 is the last day to submit your portfolio for the 2D, 3D, or Motion Design competitions at the Portland version of the Cut&Paste Digital Design Tournament 2009 to be held Saturday, March 7 at the Portland Art Museum (1219 SW Park Ave).

POSTED: January 19th, 2009 | AUTHOR: lisa | FILED UNDER: design | TAGS: , , | No Comments »

Not Richard

Nixon by Cinco Design in Portland, Oregon
image via Cinco Design

Trunk show of Nixon watches designed by Portland’s Cinco Design tonight, Tuesday December 16 from 6-8 PM at OFFICE (2204 NE Alberta). Cinco will be presenting color/finishes/materials and doing a special presentation on all things Nixon and design, including insight on how they keep the product fresh; plus 15% off all Nixon watches that night.

POSTED: December 16th, 2008 | AUTHOR: lisa | FILED UNDER: design | TAGS: , , , | No Comments »