Philippe Starck's "Design for Life" Episode 1

I recently watched the first episode of Philippe Starck's "Design for Life" reality show.

In an effort to find a new generation of British design talent, Philippe Starck, one of the world's best known product designers, invites 12 hopefuls to a school of design he has set up in Paris.

Starck (to me) has always been rather contradictory in his design philosophies.. nothing frivilous and unnecessary, but often creates intensly lavish and unnecessary products or environments. Controversial, but nonetheless beautiful and ironic.

Even if Starck chose the designers based on portfolios alone, I wonder how much of this show is 'reality' versus production. 'Design for Life' is great for the publicity of not only Starck, but also the profession of Industrial Design, raising awareness (much like Gary Hustwit's Objectified), bringing design to the surface (no pun intended) and making people aware that many products would not exist without designers.

More episodes at BBC

theDieline packaging: NYC Spaghetti

Packaging 9


Packaging 8


What a brilliant use of packaging to create something so much more than the product itself:

"I created this spaghetti packaging for a university project last year. The brief was to package one of 5 difficult items i.e. eggs, a rose, custard powder, spaghetti or marbles. I chose spaghetti. The spaghetti sits on a 3d model of the chrysler building that was modelled on CAD by my friend Ben Thorpe. And then modelled out of high density foam at uni. Creating a spaghetti model of the Chrysler building!"

Designed by Alex Creamer, a student at the University of Central Lancashire in the UK. Two more images after the jump.

Packaging 6

Pakaing 7


Infographic Video: The World Wakes Up on #Twitter

Jer Thorp's new project, "Good Morning!" visualized 24 hours of "Good Morning" tweets across the globe.

Each of the tweets has been color-coded by time--green tweets are early morning, local time; orange occurs somewhere around 9am; red tweets are late morning; and black represents Tweets that are "out of time," meaning that they don't correspond with actual morning hours.