Wednesday, 7 December 2011

Wordle:


Very handy word cloud generator for any URL, pasted text/copy and RSS feed with the final cloud editable with many cool layout and design options!

WORDLE_rgproduct_word_cloud

Monday, 5 December 2011

Designed and Made in England


designed_and_made_in_England_rgproduct_deviantart_union_jack_quality_sculpture_stunning_speakers_www Support UK based creative's, designers and jobs (Lord knows the government does not seem to want to)!  Create UK jobs, buck the (downward) trend of this once great manufacturing nation.  And yes, I know China can make cheap stuff by the million but do we actually need lots more rubbish. No, we do not. Quality and heirloom or up-cycled products and items.  (Flag image courtesy of:) 

An example: www.rgproduct.com

Please re-use and re-link the “Designed and made in England” logo to this blog or my website home page to push this forward; as well using as on your site to promote your work.

Monday, 28 November 2011

Up-Cycled Screwfix catalogue: mix palette.

A really useful re-use of all those catalogues that end up being pulped...Simply use each page as a clean sheet for mixing your filler, paint or whatever. Tear off the used page when you need a fresh mix area, easy. Perfect!

Wednesday, 23 November 2011

Utility Bike Vernacular:

This simple and functional update to the freight carrying capacity of a push bike is both elegant and practical. An old wire shopping basket gets a second life. Up-cycled hardware saved from landfill if not re-cycled. Maidenhead Town centre.

Tuesday, 22 November 2011

Clear Skies…


“Clear skies for you my friend that you may see this night's end” - Astronomers shanty (anon).

Utility Bike Innovation Competition:

 
Gorgeous design detail meets high engineering standards as the most versatile transport form evolves:

Monday, 21 November 2011

Davis University deodorant; Amazon review:


When those pesky students start getting their own ideas and radically linking arms fairly quietly and frankly, stinking the joint out. Try the following product: A biting Amazon user review, with link after the image:

defense_technologies_pepper_spray_rgproduct_blog_oppression_fascism_newworldorder_disgrace_US

5 out of 5 stars Accept no substitutes when casually repressing students, November 21, 2011

This review is from: Defense Technology 56895 MK-9 Stream, 1.3% Red Band/1.3% Blue Band Pepper Spray (Misc.)

Whenever I need to breezily inflict discipline on unruly citizens, I know I can trust Defense Technology 56895 MK-9 Stream, 1.3% Red Band/1.3% Blue Band Pepper Spray to get the job done! The power of reason is no match for Defense Technology's superior repression power. When I reach for my can of Defense Technology 56895 MK-9 Stream, 1.3% Red Band/1.3% Blue Band Pepper Spray, I know that even the mighty First Amendment doesn't stand a chance against its many scovil units of civil rights suppression.
When I feel threatened by students, no matter how unarmed, peaceful and seated they may be, I know that Defense Technology 56895 MK-9 Stream, 1.3% Red Band/1.3% Blue Band Pepper Spray has got my back as I casually spray away at point blank range.
It really is the Cadillac of citizen repression technology.
Buy a whole case!

Wednesday, 16 November 2011

Sound Suits:

With an alluring title this blog story combines costume, sculpture, (e)motion interaction and recycled found materials.  These figures literally rustle, clatter and joculate through space carried by their bearer:

image

Standing Desk:

Intrigued by various Tweets on tall and standing desks I thought my recent sculpture workstation fitted the bill rather well. Fully height adjustable and rotates for 360 degree work access (note the up-cycled screw adjust stool and tripod base made from scraps). The accompanying side table for tools and materials is simply a wood board scrap screwed on a quick release foot on a Camera tripod, simple and very effective. The sculpt is of my latest loudspeaker, a reworking of my classic African Mask Speaker:

standing_desk_rgproduct_allthingsblog_design_sculpture_speaker_african_mask

Tuesday, 15 November 2011

Tact:

In Baisers volés, Delphine Seyrig explains to her young lover the difference between politeness and tact: ‘Imagine you inadvertently enter a bathroom where a woman is standing naked under the shower. Politeness requires that you quickly close the door and say, “Pardon, Madame!”, whereas tact would be to quickly close the door and say: “Pardon, Monsieur!”’ It is only in the second case, by pretending not to have seen enough even to make out the sex of the person under the shower, that one displays true tact.

Mountbatten Pink

Mountbatten Pink_Plymouth Pink_SAS_war_camouflage_ rgproduct_blog_Pink Panther_Land Rover_desert_warfare_terrorism

Monday, 3 October 2011

Das Unheimliche

Any Psychological concept with a core concept named the “uncanny valley” deserves a link in my opinion, Great stuff:

WIKIpedia_Mori_rgproduct_dot_com_allthingsblog_Uncanny_Valley_Masahiro_Unheimliche

Monday, 25 July 2011

"The average man, who does not know what to do with his life, wants another one that will last forever". ANATOLE FRANCE (1844-1924)

Perhaps the trick is to make this life last for ever in its impact, ideally for the best?

Tuesday, 14 June 2011

Temporal Pixel Multiplexing:

This is something even cooler than its outrageous name suggests. All I can do is link to the explanation and wait for the sound of jaws on the floor.

I love it and can't wait to try it or use it some day. Happy Temporal Pixel Multiplexing!

Tuesday, 31 May 2011

Alice in Wonderland/Disney – Berlin - Gala Magazine Fashion Shoot.

I found this great little making of video for an AIW themed Fashion shoot shot on the Alice Touring Exhibition I took round the Disney territories, here shown in Berlin below the Potsdamer Platz. It goes back a year or two but gives a good feel for the show and its marketing potential:

“Exclusive behind-the-scenes footage of Gala Magazine's Alice-inspired fashion shoot, against the backdrop of Disney's Alice in Wonderland Touring Exhibition”.

Thursday, 19 May 2011

Duke Nukem Viral Autopsy Video:



I sculpted and created the Alien baddie "PigCop" Head for this Nukem promo shot in a London Morgue; we used a leather hide for the grey skin and it worked great. A local murder victim was brought in on the day. "We don't have many murders at the weekend, haven't for ages..." RIP.

Wednesday, 18 May 2011

African Ancestor Head speakers on display in LA:

A quick snap from the DIALECT Gallery in down town LA. My speakers are on display here and one can be seen by the cash desk.

Sunday, 27 February 2011

Ceiling baffles, Paris. Neon+small scale.

Another set of white geometric ceiling forms, this time off Boulevard St. Germain, Paris. The light tubes are proper white neon and the ceiling a very small bar/service area. Good double espresso here too. Retro, sci-fi and cool. Wonderful.

Thursday, 24 February 2011

Paris; Market stall clings on for dear life!

Any tourist to Paris will recognise this as one of the book come art stalls along the river on the way to the Notre Dame. They are like the mountain goat of the stall world. Lovely Vernacular solution to the best use of space. Clinging on to the wall top with metal straps:

Beautiful White relief ceiling light baffles; Germany.

In a branch of a large German bank I was struck by the sheer power of these angular light baffles. Obviously they hugely reduce acoustic reflection across the bank interior. Brilliant dual purpose technical solution to a number of problems. Stunning:

Tuesday, 22 February 2011

Classical Capital Chronology; animated.GIF/Paris image

During a work trip to Paris, Champs Elysees recently I took the following photo:

Paris_ChampsElysee_Capital_blog_France 
…and extracted this attractive GIF element from the photo for decorative/graphic use:

Column_top_detail_linedrawingThis piqued my already strong interest in Capitals (Doric, Corinthian etc) and I found a lovely old image of Architectural masonry Capital design development through time on Wikipedia, image shown below:

wiki_original_GIFI then created an animated GIF showing Capital design progression over the years (if you have not tried before, there is a very good Photoshop based GIF creation tutorial here FYI). I really like animated GIF’s and think I will add a few more to the blog):

Classical_Capital_chronography_rgproduct_italian_design_architecture_design_history_blogger_allthings_spesaker_product

Sunday, 20 February 2011

Chris Cattle grown furniture/David Nash sculpture

This subject has been in the back of my mind for nearly 20 years as I am fairly sure the guy involved in this is/was a Furniture design Tutor during my Uni days, he told me about his love of Grown furniture. It is a fascinating and completely sustainable way of splicing together vines and trees to create tough grown frames for stools, chairs and almost any required item. The subject deserves promotion as it is both ecologically and structurally sound as well as having truly holistic merit. The practice has survived thousands of years and now competes with post modern sculpture as a format of expression, this posting prompted by a recent BBC show on David Nash a globally famous wood sculptor as well as my own wood use and interest.

Simply; a tree or sapling is induced to splice and grown to a controlled frame giving a required shape.

image   image

A comprehensive interview with Chris (Independent Saturday 1st June 1996 David Davies) is republished below:

Plant your own furniture. Watch it grow.

The way we use wood in furniture making can hardly be described as efficient. We're not particularly inventive, either; consider the trouble we go to in chopping up trees, moving pieces of wood from one place to another, machining them and gluing them back together. And judging by the contents of the average skip, all this effort often has less than satisfactory results. Furniture designer Chris Cattle is trying to change this with a more direct approach - growing furniture straight out of the ground.

"It may sound a bit crazy, but all I'm doing is changing the point in a tree's life at which I decide what its going to be," he explains. Based at Brunel University, High Wycombe, Mr Cattle has begun a living design experiment by planting 40 saplings arranged in various jigs designed to control the shape and grafting of the young trees. "I expect to get usable table and stool frames within about three to four years," he predicts.

If you think this is rather too long to wait for a piece of furniture, then you might have forgotten what any wooden article relies on: "If you compare the time spent growing perfectly straight trees ready for processing and making a conventional piece of furniture, my idea will be considerably quicker."

Tree species that grow rapidly, are flexible and graft easily are likely to work best. Mr Cattle has planted sycamore, maple, alder, cherry and beech and his experiment will determine which species will be the most suitable. The best time to harvest the crop of furniture is when the sap is down - the piece would then need to dry out before finishing.

Mr Cattle points out that his chair and table frames will be stronger than conventional furniture because the grain follows the shapes and because all the joints, rather than being stuck together, are formed through natural growth. But apart from functional advantages he also sees new design possibilities: "The opportunities are intriguing. I will be able to get shapes and angles that would be difficult and expensive to machine. The only real restrictions are in the size of pieces: large items would take too long to grow." To overcome this, he suggests a halfway point of growing large, shaped pieces that can be joined in the conventional way. The flat panels needed to make seats and table tops will also present something of a challenge although techniques for growing square bamboo posts for use in traditional Japanese houses are well established and could be adapted to British tree species.

A future where furniture growing has replaced manufacturing sounds bizarre but appealing - a non-industrial approach where intervention is minimal and the trees are left to get on with the production. Growing large quantities of furniture would need huge areas of land but Mr Cattle argues that his production method is feasible because grown furniture will last far longer than conventional pieces and growing can be scattered around the country on small-scale sites. "Relying on the sun's energy and avoiding the polluting aspects of machining, laminating and gluing is an attractive prospect. Furniture can be grown relatively near to where it's needed - DIY enthusiasts could use their own gardens."

However, on a rather more realistic note, Mr Cattle is resigned to his idea meeting considerable resistance. "Its a radical proposal that will demand quite a substantial rethink for both industry and the public; furniture will look more organic and shapes will be more flowing."

The concept of growing your own furniture is actually far from new - both the Egyptians and Greeks made chairs using this technique - but apart from agriculture implements and walking sticks with right angled handles, most controlled tree growth in recent times has been decorative.

Today, our fixation with the predictable results that industrial production lines offer has meant that skills in living design and the potential of controlled tree growth for practical uses have remained unexplored - until now.

Chris Cattle has a quiet conviction about his idea that draws you in - however crazy it sounds. "This is a move away from throw-away culture towards manufacturers becoming concerned for the life-cycle of a product," he says. "After all, a piece of grown furniture could produce the seeds for future designs."

A growth industry

1570-1305 BC Three-legged stools thought to be made from pieces of wood grown into curved shapes were commonplace in Ancient Egypt (an example is on display at the British Museum).

500 BC The legs of Greek Klismos chairs used wood that had been artificially trained in order to get correct curvature.

15-1600 Garden houses made from living trees originated in the Middle East and spread to Europe. There are accounts of a three-storey version at Cobham, Kent, which was large enough to hold 50 people.

Until 1940s grown pitchforks and walking sticks were common. The forks were traditionally produced in southern France with three or four branches pruned to make the prongs; walking sticks grown in Surrey were produced by planting saplings at an angle to the ground in order to produce right- angled handles.

1908 John Krubsack, a farmer in Wisconsin USA, grew a chair from seed using 28 box elder trees to form the legs, back and seat - it took 11 years to grow. ARTICLE ENDS.

(I Googled the following image to enhance this article RG – Krubsacks chair))
image

Chris actively promotes this process and I am happy to further the cause with the following links and articles:

http://www.arborsmith.com/index.html
(The site is a little hard on the eye but the information it contains is impressive) A huge amount of information here from a longstanding practitioner of Tree manipulation who has written a book on the subject. A blog too! http://www.arborsculpture.blogspot.com/

image


http://markprimack.com/pages/tree_circus/tree_circus.html
A terrific resource, Mark has researched thoroughly the history and use of Tree manipulation.  Even as entertainment, a Tree circus! He obviously loves the subject and presentation is top notch.

tc_29 
 

As mentioned at the start of this posting I recently saw a BBC documentary on David Nash, wood sculptor.  Personally I have always worked in wood and consider myself a wood Engineer/magician in the truest sense.  Both understanding and respecting the material and being able to precisely make with it, or not as the wood type/case may be.

His approach to his work was a methodology I completely relate to and found it fascinating. Famously he lets the material in a raw state age and progress under atmospheric conditions.

He took the idea of a sculpture to new heights some decades back when he grew a sculpture from saplings creating; Ash dome.  Directly linked to ancient furniture growing, British coppicing and Forest crafting.  The circle completes.

image

David’s work also uses the process of burning and destruction to show the stages of life, following death of live wood.  It never actually dies: The wood is cooked (Charred/charcoaled) to create its patina, or left to distort:

Interestingly the Nash piece below is labelled as made from Silver: Silver Egg.  Though the look and feel directly link it to African wood sculpture in my opinion.  Something I relate to via my African loudspeaker sculpture and finishing for one of my speaker products (www.rgproduct.com) image to follow.

image

David's Tripod-al piece, “Standing frame” combines the engineers tripod stability with the intoxication of a tree upturned yet still standing.  Again the dark patina is powerful.

image 

I see and feel identical thematic qualities as Nash’s in my approach and this is illustrated in a piece I created a few years back that apes the Ghanaian ancestor mask in form and patina (partly moulded from an original). Obviously the physical abstraction into an electronic based product then cast in modern resins is not lost on me but the aesthetic and conceptual elements are identical: Richard Grant Ghanaian Ancestor mask (female) loudspeaker :

African_copyright_RichardGrant2009

The next step from celebrating Wood’s processes and death or the suspension of that process, the alternative to the aging process, and what we spend most of our time doing is trying to freeze the wood in an unnatural stable state. With rot proofers, shellac, varnishes and oils not to mention paints we hold fast against he natural aging dilemma. Time is frozen, the eternal moment. Trapped; the beauty of nature having to and making us work with it.

(The similarities to the modern cosmetics and surgery industries are seemingly stark).

This further leads to my fascination with trees and organic things growing through and assimilating man made objects.  I will collate some images to illustrate this but also intend to photograph examples I see on my travels (and will post these up as and when, some from childhood play memories and locations)

image

image 
A limb grows through a fence, a man made item, the tree slowly envelopes and traps the fence. The tree overcomes the obstacle, as humans overcome their obstacles. Be it instant or slow.

The biological processes at work here are fairly mind boggling, I intend to look into this at some point…

A terrific Blog with excellent examples of wood in sculpture and abstract expression:

http://www.genetologisch-onderzoek.nl/index.php/category/biologie/dendrology/

My current projects are leading into territory that encompasses all of the above in methodology and technology.  I will report as things occur.  R

Nikolas Schiller; Geospatial Art.

Nikolas’s Blog has so much rich artwork based on his map renderings I do not know where to start.  It is at once fascinating and everyday.  Highly abstract patterns and images come from his manipulation and work with freely available images. 

image

Saturday, 19 February 2011

PSD file preview in Vista/XP.

Technorati  D7VM3TXWV4MP

I love Photoshop and have become fairly proficient over the years; however having had to go Vista recently due to new laptop etc (I know I could install a new OS but that can be a real pain) and in fact under XP never been able to see PSD files as thumbnails I can’t recommend this solution highly enough.  It works a treat and saves real time in sorting what is what and where. Brilliant!

Echo antennae

Having a WordPress Blog based website for some time (www.rgproduct.com) I thought it was time I had a proper live Blog.  Somewhere to post up thoughts, discoveries and interests outside of my folio and professional endeavours.  Obviously there will be some cross over, not the end of the world (that is another blog).  I have set up my BB to publish here so posts could come from anywhere…

The title image has fascinated me for years and encompasses a lot of interests I have, it neatly sums up some facets of mine.  It shows a Radio wave echo antennae (Hogg) used in the very early days of space exploration. Signals were bounced from orbiting and balloon satellites and the weak signals physically collected by the large horn device.  Further it has lovely acoustic connotations I could not resist, not withstanding the idea of an ear or horn to the universe both physical and electromagnetic

I have been and am fascinated with acoustics, music and psycho-acoustics so to tie this in with architecture is a boon, these structures come from the early days of WWII and predate and were quickly superseded by radar:

acoustic_mirror_rgproduct_blogger_music

The combination of architecture, surveillance, history and acoustics is fascinating at Denge.  They also shout Star wars in their imposing and unearthly aspects, reminding me of both the look, colour and style of Lucas’ “used universe