Posts Tagged Urban Outfitters

«REW Cable Wrangler Has An Old-School Design

Posted by on Tuesday, 12 January, 2010

«REW Cable Wrangler (Image courtesy Fred)
By Andrew Liszewski

Oh Fred! Besides brightening my occasional trips to hipster-mecca Urban Outfitters and providing perfect gift ideas for people I don’t really care about, you also occasionally come up with something that even I wouldn’t mind using. «REW not only cleans up those dangling headphone cables by spooling them inside a snap-shut case, but it’s got a retro cassette-tape design that lets everyone know you’ll always have a soft spot for your first Walkman, even if you’ve long since sold your soul to Apple.

[ Fred - «REW ]



Portable Air Hockey Doesn’t Seem That Well Thought Out

Posted by on Thursday, 12 November, 2009

Portable Air Hockey (Image courtesy Urban Outfitters)By Andrew Liszewski

Any time I’ve enjoyed a game of air hockey on a real table, the puck still manages to find it’s way off the table on many occasions. So while I applaud the clever design of this portable version of air hockey, where the fan is integrated into the puck itself allowing it to float across a table or any flat surface, I can see it losing its novelty when you have to go pick it up for the 37th time in the first 3 minutes of a game.

But for just $14.99 from Urban Outfitters you get the puck, 2 paddles and a set of nets making it a cheap and easy gift. Just don’t let the giftee rope you into playing.

[ Portable Air Hockey ] VIA [ The Red Ferret Journal ]



Ask the Artist: How Windows 7′s Iconic Home Screen Evolved

Posted by on Thursday, 5 November, 2009

Chuck Anderson, creator of Windows 7‘s laid-back, cerulean-cool default wallpaper and login screen, showed me the evolution of his work—including Easter eggs, avoiding Mac tropes and why flaming skulls didn’t make the final design.

Chuck is the embodiment of the dreams of thousands of DeviantArt users—he started out in screenprinting just after high school, worked for t-shirt maker Threadless by day and began creating a name for himself in the online art community by night. Under the pseudonym NoPattern (now the name of his design shop), he achieved incredible success at a startlingly young age: You’ve seen his work before on projects with Pepsi, Urban Outfitters, Reebok, and many more. My personal favorite has to be the cover art for Lupe Fiasco’s fantastic debut album, Food & Liquor:

Today, at only 24, he’s achieved a new level of stardom: His designs for Windows 7 will literally be seen by hundreds of millions of people over the lifespan of the OS. Microsoft hunted him down, and it was definitely a good call; Windows 7 is the best-looking Windows OS ever, and its style is reflected in the cool screens designed by Chuck. Check out some of his previous work in the below gallery (including a great graffiti-inspired piece for Zune) to get a sense of his style.

Since he’s such an independent guy, I was curious to hear how he managed to collaborate with Microsoft, the tech corporation most likely to have the word “monolithic” as an epithet. Chuck says the actual design team he worked with was quite small and surprisingly open to his ideas. The first thing they showed him back in December 2008 were those glorious Dr.-Seuss-as-read-by-Hunter-S.-Thompson wallpapers, so it was clear right off the bat that censorship wouldn’t really be a problem.

The two pieces took about four months, start to finish. Chuck started with a pencil and paper, and moved on to Photoshop for the Windows 7 sheen, but the two pieces retain that sketchy feel—in fact, all the individual threads on the login screen were hand-drawn with a Wacom tablet.

This first gallery shows the stages of the default login screen, the first image to be completed. Later came the default desktop wallpaper and Windows 7′s physical packaging, which both have the login screen as their aesthetic jumping-off point. This is where it begins—click on the first thumbnail to read Chuck’s own words about how his vision evolved.

The Login Screen

As it turns out, there are a few repetitions of the number seven in the login screen, but weirdly enough, that little Easter egg started out as an accident. Once Chuck and Microsoft noticed that there were seven white strands on the bottom left, they started repeating the number: There are also seven leaves, seven branches, and seven flower petals in the yellow quadrant of the Windows logo.

The default Windows 7 desktop is one of my favorites; usually the very first thing I do with a new computer is replace whatever wallpaper comes with it (Apple is a particular offender here—I hate that cheeseball space motif) and yet I happily left this one on my latest computer.

The Default Desktop

Microsoft sought out this young, independent, mixed media digital artist rather than going through traditional channels, and it resulted in a fresh new look that couldn’t have come from another source. It’s credit to them, as is the walkthrough itself. You’d never see Apple showing, say, the pieces that mysteriously got tossed aside in favor of that clip-art snow leopard on their latest OS X packaging, would you?

Thanks to Chuck and to Microsoft for showing us their rejects. [NoPattern, Chuck's Twitter]

Note: Speaking of rejects, you might notice that all the screens are capped at 700 pixels in width. It’s because Microsoft isn’t dumb: They don’t want shots they took a pass on becoming the wallpaper of netbooks and PCs all over. Sorry guys, we tried.


The 404 445: Where we sharpen our blades and prepare for glory

Posted by on Wednesday, 14 October, 2009

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Polaroids for the masses!

(Credit:

Flickr User: * luna *

Today’s episode of The 404 Podcast starts with a big change in the show title format. That’s right, we’re now announcing the date with the episode number and name. Can you feel the excitement! Well, if that didn’t do the trick, check out this funny headline from the first story of the day: “Woman fired for eating boss’ meatball.” I don’t even think that requires any further explanation, but you can read the whole story here

.

Now that you can invite friends to Google Voice, maybe Wilson will be generous and spread the love. Google Voice is great for users that want to consolidate several phone numbers into one. The service also transcribes voice mails, assign personalized greetings by caller, forward voice mails, and many more convenient features that help you screen your communication with the outside world. Do you have a Google Voice number already? Let us know what you think of the service, and share the wealth, will you!?

Models, high schoolers, and crime scene investigators will love this next story: Polaroids are making their triumphant comeback in 2010! A group called The Impossible Project is taking the reigns and collaborating with Polaroid to reproduce a limited edition of the Instant Film in mid 2010. If you can’t wait that long, they’ve also partnered with Urban Outfitters and have the classic film and a special edition Polaroid camera kit available in stores now.

Finally, we definitely want to show our support to Drew Olanoff and Drew Carey for actually making philanthropic use of Twitter! Drew Carey will give away $1,000,000 to the LiveStrong foundation if his Twitter account receives a million followers by midnight on December 31, 2009. In the small chance that he doesn’t get the million followers by that time, the amount will be prorated according to how many he ends up with. In other words, if he finishes with 600,000 followers, the LiveStrong foundation will receive $600,000. Right now he’s at 92,017 followers–with The 404′s help, we can get him closer to that million!

Oh yeah, do yourself a favor and go check out Loaded today to see Natali talking about the Love Vibes iPhone app that rates your lovemaking skill…or lack thereof.




EPISODE 445


Listen now:
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Video coming soon, check back later today!


Originally posted at The 404


The Second Coming of the Polaroid

Posted by on Tuesday, 13 October, 2009

2nd-coming-dramatic
It is upon us!

Almost a year ago, Polaroid announced that it would be leaving this Earth. We cried a bit, lusted after the last ones sold at Urban Outfitters, but in the end, we decided it was probably time. But some never gave up hope. The Impossible Project purchased some manufacturing facilities and decided it would carry the torch. But the torch has been reclaimed by the original owners! Or some people who licensed the torch. I don’t know, I’ve got a couple metaphors going on here. —I drop them.

The news is that Polaroid is re-launching the old One Step camera and may even have something new going on.

It’s going to be a bit more complicated than that. It’s not exactly a return from the grave. Polaroid was bought by Summit Global lock, stock, and barrel back in April. They’ve likely had the plan to re-launch then and are just now ready to give it a shot, perhaps in time for the holiday season (mm?). How The Impossible Project is involved is difficult to say, so I’ll let them say it: “Re-inventing a new analog integral film, we are now preparing, supporting and managing the comeback of Instant Photography.”

I hope that’s not an exaggeration! They said they were redesigning instant film, and it looks like Summit Global thought them worthy of inclusion in the big comeback. There are even rumors of a redesign and relaunch of a new PoGo-style digital print camera. If you can’t wait, however, go check out their limited sale of SX-70 Polaroids with film, bag, and accessories included. Only $430 starting Friday.

[via Gizmodo]



Happy Birthday, CDs

Posted by on Thursday, 1 October, 2009

sonyThe Compact Disc was quite a revolution when it came out. With a sampling rate of 44.1 kHz and a 16 bit rate, CDs marked the shift to digital music. Unfortunately, it seems to have fallen from being the playback medium of choice. These days, people either buy vinyl records because “they sound better” (especially when played on your vintage hipster record player you bought from Urban Outfitters) or MP3s online for the convenience. And noone even thinks about cassette tapes anymore.

27 years ago, today, marks when the first commercial CD players hit the market. Sure it was in Japan, but they always get the good tech first. The CDP-101 was hardly affordable either: $2,200 if you wanted one, so that you could listen to any one of the mere 113 albums available at release. Then those were another $40 a piece, don’t forget. But that didn’t stop Sony from moving 20,000 of these units in a single year.

So today, we can set aside the hate of the music industry (might be hard, considering there isn’t one anymore) and say Happy Birthday to one of the greatest data mediums of all time.