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1 vote
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Arne Aksel: ‘Denmark had become this decorative no-go land. We've been in a white or gray or beige box for what – 20, 25 years? I think people have had enough.’
5 votes -
Inside one of Japan's tiniest houses
6 votes -
Help me understand how I feel about a particular style of watch
There's a type of watch that's very popular. It has a clean, clear, design. It's definitely a classic. I have mixed feelings about it because of the origins of the design. The watch is big. I has...
There's a type of watch that's very popular. It has a clean, clear, design. It's definitely a classic. I have mixed feelings about it because of the origins of the design.
The watch is big. I has a black dial with white numbers and index marks. At the 12 o'clock position there's a triangle. There's plenty of lume on the dial. They usually have a leather strap, and that strap often has two rivets.
Sometimes the dial has two index rings, the inner ring has hour markings and the outer ring has minute markings.
IWC makes the most well known example: https://www.iwc.com/en/watch-collections/pilot-watches/iw329301-big-pilots-watch-43.html
There are lots of homages:
https://www.watchshop.com/watches/mens-sekonda-aviator-watch-3347.pdp
https://mwcwatches.com/products/vintage-ww2-style-german-pilots-watch-1
This style of watch is called "B Uhr", or "B Uhren"and you get many results if you use that search term. It's German, and it's an abbreviation for "Beobachtungs-uhren" which means "observation watch".
My problem with the watch is that is that it was specifically designed for the Luftwaffe in WW2.
https://monochrome-watches.com/the-history-of-the-pilot-watch-part-five-b-uhr/
After the war other airforces, including the British RAF, started using very similar watches.
Most watch sellers do not celebrate the Nazi history of the watch. But some do: https://b-uhr.com/en/collection/b-uhr-luftwaffe-flieger-chronograph.html
So, I don't know how I feel about this watch. Can its clean design be appreciated when I know of its Nazi link? Can I separate the creator from the product?
8 votes -
Two-Face, Batman Forever - Sculpture timelapse
3 votes -
What went wrong with the London Tube map? | Unfinished London
9 votes -
In 2017, I made an unofficial transit diagram covering the Oslo region in Norway – now, five years later, it's time for a revisit
4 votes -
Design collective Andra Formen has created furniture from electric scooters fished out of the canals of Malmö
4 votes -
King Charles III's new cypher is a design classic
14 votes -
Why food commercials cost hundreds of thousands of dollars | Big Business
2 votes -
Making of mathematical instruments - transforming a public domain book into a website
14 votes -
On writing better error messages
6 votes -
Variations of Star Trek TOS computers
4 votes -
Leftover Star Wars sets
5 votes -
The smartest website you havent heard of
11 votes -
Adobe in final talks to acquire Figma for $20B USD
17 votes -
How mushrooms are turned into bacon and styrofoam | World Wide Waste
10 votes -
Designing accessible color systems
5 votes -
How “dementia villages” work
6 votes -
Why do we love hostile worlds?
7 votes -
eCharts for Python
3 votes -
Velocipedia - Bicycles based on people’s attempts to draw them from memory
16 votes -
Wind chimes - it doesn't have to be complicated
8 votes -
Five UX improvements that could save lives
14 votes -
Is the open-plan office heading to the grave?
5 votes -
The archive saving home sewing history from the trash
6 votes -
How OXO conquered the American kitchen
18 votes -
Art, fashion, and the French Revolution
5 votes -
Occlusion Grotesque. An experimental, organic typeface
27 votes -
Casino design and why there are no ninety degree turns in most casinos
4 votes -
The great design of the Dutch government
4 votes -
Norway's £500m National Museum to open after eight-year wait – director apologises for delays that have kept Munch's The Scream out of public view
7 votes -
I have no capslock and I must scream
25 votes -
Commercially available chairs from Star Trek
15 votes -
What if phones were actually designed for hands?
9 votes -
Lessons from a can opener: The obscurity of the "Safety Can Opener"
14 votes -
Nautilus (GNOME Files) icon view retrospective and future
5 votes -
This week in GNOME #23 - Modernized settings
4 votes -
Here's why movie dialogue has gotten more difficult to understand (and three ways to fix it)
17 votes -
Beat Saber level design: Skrillex environment
2 votes -
Vintage IKEA! A 1960s armchair just sold for £12k – here are ten other surprising secondhand Swedish hits
4 votes -
LockPickingLawyer keynote at Saintcon
15 votes -
Possibly the worst user interface I've seen all year
This is a webpage for a courier company. This screengrab is the whole page as served to me. If I want to track my parcel I have to enter the details into the pretend phone on the right and pretend...
This is a webpage for a courier company. This screengrab is the whole page as served to me. If I want to track my parcel I have to enter the details into the pretend phone on the right and pretend to use it like a phone, complete with tiny screen and fiddly controls.
I get that they would like me to install their app but this is almost offensively user-hostile design, and pretty much ensures I'll never install anything of the sort. I might consider installing the app of a company who deliver to me regularly and have a good track record of being good at their jobs, if that app offers useful functionality which can't be offered via a web page - but even that's unlikely. But these guys who I have never heard of until today and are pulling this nonsense? No way.
29 votes -
The invisible horror of The Shining
9 votes -
The stunning astronomical beadwork of Native artist Margaret Nazon
9 votes -
The anatomy of Portal - How Portal's puzzles trick you into being smart
5 votes -
Skellefteå has wooden schools, bridges, even car parks – we visit Sweden to see what a climate-conscious future looks like
7 votes -
And you will know us by the company we keep
5 votes -
Neuomorphism — A passing fad or is it here to stay?
12 votes -
Lego has announced it will work to remove gender stereotypes from its toys – research reveals harmful stereotypes still hindering girls, boys and their parents
9 votes