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Sam Hecht

Home Tag Sam Hecht

Why design? Herman miller asks questions: sam hecht and kim colin.

Oct 30, 2012

click > enlarge

Herman Miller launched a design series [ “Why Design” ] 10 September. Here’s there the official announcement:

At Herman Miller design is the language we use to ask questions and seek answers to the problems our customers face. The design process is a journey into the unknown—or as George Nelson once quipped, “I have never met a designer who was retained to keep things the same as they were.” Before we decide what we do and how we do it, we like to begin by asking the question “Why?” In Why Design, a new video series, we explore the world through the eyes of our designers, and share something of why we value their point of view.

This film ( below ) focuses on London-based industrial designer Sam Hecht and architect Kim Colin, who partnered to form Industrial Facility. Their work is marked by a rigorous approach that seeks to render the complex more simple, and the simple more elegant. Hecht and Colin’s products are minimal, functional, and attuned to the world in which we live.



“If you’re working in an environment which doesn’t necessarily work very well (Sam is referring here to a chaotic London), it’s a great enviroment to try and make things work well.”



“I go to the top of Primrose Hill as much as possible to get this view of contrast. In my mind you’re not looking at the fine details, you’re looking at a big world.” ~Kim

the model shop shelves are littered with micro-size prototypes

Each Monday morning, from September 10th through October 29th, Herman Miller will launch a new designer profile at Why Design. The series includes:

9.10.12 – Yves Béhar – “Surfing Is Like
Improvisational Jazz”

9.17.12 – Don Chadwick – “The Camera Becomes an Extension of Your
Eyes”

9.24.12 – Ayse Birsel – “Your Life Is Your Most Important Project”

10.1.12 – Irving Harper – “Paper Is a Versatile Medium”

10.8.12 – Gianfranco Zaccai – “Great Food Should Be Like Great Design”

10.15.12 – Studio 7.5 – “Design by Its Nature Is Collaborative”

10.22.12 – Steve Frykholm – “It’s the Breaks That Allow My Mind to Refresh”

10.29.12 – Sam Hecht + Kim Colin – “We Need Contrast and Tension to Be Able to Create”

Accompanying each video is a series of candid photographs from the designers’ daily lives, offering a glimpse into their world and thought processes, and a profile of their design work for Herman Miller and beyond.

kim colin and sam hecht

[ why design ] [ herman miller ]

Dieter rams new book. Phaidon.

Jul 21, 2011



“My goal is to omit everything superfluous so that the essential is shown to best possible advantage.”
Dieter Rams, 1980

Dieter Rams, head of Braun and its prominent designer for forty years, believed that exceptional design is simple design, both visually appealing and functionally sound, relieved of any non-essentials. “As Little Design As Possible” by Sophie Lovell brilliantly shares the relevance of his work in today’s design climate in this beautifully illustrated, eight hundred-page paperback.

The book includes interviews with influential industrial designers, such as Naoto Fukasawa, Sam Hecht and Jasper Morrison, who speak to the cultural significance of his design and its timeless quality. Thorough and hypnotizing with well-written texts in both English and German, “As Little As Possible” also illustrates never-before-seen prototypes of unrealized products and engineering models that reveal his design process.

Few designers have been as prolific yet as modest as Rams. Back to purity, back to simplicity: our lives improve when we embrace as little design as possible.

Overview

>A comprehensive monograph on highly influential product designer Dieter Rams (b.1932). As head of design at Braun from 1961 to 1995, Rams created some of the most iconic objects of the twentieth century

>A detailed text covering Rams’ life, the intellectual context in which he worked, his designs for Braun and Vitsoe, and the ideas and lectures he developed as an advocate for good design

>Includes a foreword by Jonathan Ive, head of design at Apple Inc.

>Sketches and photographs of finished products and prototypes provide insight into Rams’ design process; diverse archival material and photographs give a complete picture of his life and work

>Includes newly-commissioned photographs of Dieter Rams’s house and the Braun archive: a never-before-seen glimpse of the world’s most complete collection of Rams’s designs

[ phaidon store ] [ dieter rams 10 design principles ]

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