NTIMM


direction artistique

of Montreal – Id Engager

January 16th, 2010 by ntimm

of Montreal – Id Engager from Polyvinyl Record Co.
Official video for of Montreal’s “Id Engager.” Directed by Marc Reisbig of SSSR and Hanne Berkaak.
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New illustrations from mcbess > show in paris very soon..

January 15th, 2010 by ntimm

Des nouvelles illustrations de mcbess! Celles-ci seront exposées à la gallerie issue > exposition Un an au chchâteau du 5 au 27 fev.
Vernissage le 05 février à partir de 18h
Concert des Dead Pirates au Combustible, le 05 janvier à partir de 22H

Find of the day > turntable clocks + stockings

January 14th, 2010 by ntimm

Horloges faites à partir de tourne disques recyclés


wooo > il y a encore des choses intéressantes sur etsy… autre que la taxidermie..

des bas collants..



par les queues de sardines

Mast > a minimalist humidifier that requires no electricity

January 14th, 2010 by ntimm


Humidifiers = big, ugly, noisy, cesspool of bacteria, right?.
Not anymore!
Designed by Shin Okada, Mast is a minimalist wood based humidifier that requires no electricity nor a fan… just capillary action.
Crafted by Masuya Koubou out of Japanese cypress > “Known for its high-quality timber, rot-resistant qualities and lemony scent, the thinly sliced Hinoki mast absorbs water from the hull and diffuses it, and its intrinsic aroma, into the room.”

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web2.0 suicide machine > Sign out forever!

January 14th, 2010 by ntimm

suicidemachine > kills your 2.0, liberates you.

Bad news for:
twitter
facebook
myspace
linkedIn
Tired of being stalked and reading tweets of people you actually don’t really care about?
Liberate yourself with a twitter suicide and feel free like a real bird again!
Go to suicidemachine.org

58,401 friends have been unfriended and
230,922 tweets have been removed since launching

grotesqueries

January 14th, 2010 by ntimm

Un peu dans le même ton que ” the new english “, Elizabeth McGrath revisite la porcelaine par le biais de la beauté dans la grotesquerie.

Schwein Haben

Schwein Haben > détail

Blue Bunny

Urban Deer

Muerte & Little Loc

Titanic Buffalo

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What type are you

January 13th, 2010 by ntimm

what type are you >> Password: character

Why did Brian Wilson use Cooper Black on the cover of Pet Sounds? Why did Obama use Gotham for his election propaganda? It has long been apparent that typefaces reflect the character of the person using them, and that type choice, as well as the words that are typed, is a powerful conveyor of meaning.

This fun interactive microsite figures out which typeface best represents you. The recommendation is sometimes controversial but always unerringly true…. so they say…

By answering 4 questions, “what type are you ” determined I was dot matrix… Now I have to kill myself.

So what type are you ? > A brilliant little app by Pentagram

password : character

merci hobbs pour le fil

théorème > les ensembles

January 13th, 2010 by ntimm

A = vélo
B = bouche d’égoux
A B = flat

photo by Sam Javanrouh

glitters

January 12th, 2010 by ntimm

by alex turvey >
“I was invited by production company Blink Ink and director Noah Harris to create three unique scenes which feature within the new Ford Fiesta commercial. Having honed an obsession with all things glittery, I decided to take the creative freedom and healthy budget of Ford’s brief to push my fixation to the next level. The obvious choice was to build a four-foot rotating glitter heart and then explode large volumes of glitter from a compressed air rig directly at a kissing couple who had been painted matt black. My content is featured alongside the work of modern day design luminaries such Rachel Thomas, Carl Burgess, Dan Tobin Smith and Chrissie MacDonald.”

olympia 2012.. of düsseldorft…

January 12th, 2010 by ntimm

olympia 2012

Last call for Düsseldorft
Drapeaux des nations > belle interprétation graphique et minimaliste pour les olympiques de 2012
by CYAN

reminisce > powers of 10

January 11th, 2010 by ntimm

Powers Of Ten from VILLA on Vimeo.

Powers of Ten is a 1968 short documentary film written and directed by Charles Eames and Ray Eames. The film depicts the relative scale of the Universe in factors of ten (see also logarithmic scale and order of magnitude). The film is an adaptation of the 1957 book Cosmic View by Kees Boeke, and more recently is the basis of a new book version. Both adaptations, film and book, follow the form of the Boeke original, adding color and photography to the black and white drawings employed by Boeke in his seminal work.