SF’s UNION Design Festival, May 31st

 

Hello Artizens, our next show is huge, and it’s in just a few weeks:


UNION Design Festival is a continuation of the Capsule Design Festival which has been providing a market for Bay Area independent designers for the last four years. the festival focuses on original independent design produced locally and reflective of the creative expression of the individual designer. All designers are screened and approved for participation to assure they fit within the criteria set for the UNION Design Festival.

The event happens twice a year in the Hayes Valley neighborhood. A enclave of SF known for its unique shops, fine dining, and great cafes.

INFO
150 Independent Designer of men’s and women’s clothing, bags, hats, accessories, jewelry, kid’s and baby clothes, inspired t-shirts, paper goods, glass work, and a few other odds and ends.

SUNDAY, May 31st.
11am-6pm
Hayes Valley, SF
Octavia St. @ Hayes.

Cool photo shoot by Del Geromino

 

Great new’s our tees are in a cool new magazine-book: http://www.bleedmagazine.info/

BLEED MAGAZINE : Your SALVATION
DESIGN WITHOUT BORDERS

EDITORIAL: Models: Kara Krauss, Mike Boyd Williams, Tyler Wood, Ryder Darcy, Mischa, Nathan + Aaron Eisenberg.

Taken at: Opel Productions by Nika Tang & Inferno by Alexandria von Bromssen.

Spread Fashion Design: Jamie Cole.

Editorial Fashion Design: KAYO, Cindy Vo, Dandelions & Dean, ARTEFACTURE & EsteFACE. Cameos: Jessica Silverman, Grundgy Mike, Moanalani Jeffrey & Owen Buenaventura






RISD Alumni Art Sale, May 2nd

 

Hot off the heels of Berkeley Earth Day, we’re swinging over to the East Coast this coming weekend for the RISD Alumni Art Sale!

This is a rare chance to see designs representing all the inventory we have in stock, plus closeouts and samples. And once they are gone, that is it, so come on by and pick up a fresh Artefacture tee in time for the dog days of spring.

Info:

RISD Alumni Art Sales feature thousands of items designed and created by alumni from all over the country and the world. Items for sale include fine art, home accessories, greeting cards, jewelry, paintings, furniture, rugs, clothing, photographs, glass and ceramics. Sales occur in the fall, winter and spring in Providence, and in late fall in San Francisco. For more information, contact Alan Tracy at atracy@risd.edu or call 401 454-6618.

ALUMNI SPRING ART SALE 2009: May 2
Benefit Street, 10am-4pm (rain or shine)

Artefacture @ Berkeley Earth Day, 4/25

 

Spring time is here and we’re getting back into gear with a new show over in the East Bay, just a nice bridge ride over from San Francisco. What better place to tout the power of design than an eco-event? We’ll have a booth on the Alliston Way side of the park where our organic and bamboo tees will be front and center, and in ample supply. As always we’ll have a sale so good that it cant be resisted.

The details…..

Berkeley Earth Day
Saturday April 25, 2009, 12 -5 p.m.
Civic Center Park (newly renovated), MLK & Allston

Berkeley Earth Day is an annual event held in April to celebrate the environmental movement and creatively challenge the destruction of our planet. We provide cultural performers, speakers and resources to link individuals and groups with each other in community based ecological activities.

Cultural Performers:

* Shawl-Anderson Dance Center presents Earth Day Dance (12-1pm)
* Alice DiMicele Band (1:30-3pm)
* Chelle and Friends (3:30-5pm)

Activities:

* Demonstrations of biodiesel and electric cars, solar power
* Berkeley Farmer’s Market
* Climbing Wall, Chalk4Peace
* Vegetarian food, craft and community booths

Volunteers Needed! Call 510-654-6346

Please don’t drive. Take Berkeley BART, walk one block west.
Valet Bike Parking by Bicycle Friendly Berkeley Coalition

ArteMix Spring 2009

 

Another installment in the ongoing Artefacture DJ mix series showcasing our favorite artists in a forged “playlist.” This Spring we’ve still been loving the thumping minimal techno but with a twist. Here’s the breakdown:

1. Huba- Plaid’s 15 Years Lost Remix
2. Lowfish- Frozen and Broken Original Mix
3. Minilogue- Jamaica Original Mix
4. Mistral B- Koen Groeneveld Remix
5. Gui Borrato- Atomic Soda Original Mix
6. Gudrun Gut- Monika in Poland
7. Hobo- Failsafe Original Mix
8. Patrice Baumel- Comfortably uncomfortable original Mix
9. Point in Time -Micro- ReverseRide
10. The Tuss- Last Rushup 10F

MP3 File

Furniture design firm now creating “programmable environments”

 

I’m over at Etech in San Jose, a conference focused on the bleeding edge of tech innovation and disruptive business models. I posted this over on my blog at ZDNet, but felt that it would be interesting to visitors to artefacture.com, since it exemplifies how design is mashing with new disciplines to improve lives:

This morning at ETech, Jennifer Magnolfi, the senior integration architect for programmable environments at Herman Miller presented an approach that allows for physical buildings to dynamically evolve and support change. (Herman Miller is known for creating the widely popular Aeron Chair). The initiative, Programmable Environment, is a spatial system designed to evolve over time, interact with the users who inhabit it, and enable a more sustainable building infrastructure. The company created a subsidiary, Convia, to specifically focus on this vision.

The Programmable Environment is a layer that sits on top of two infrastructure stacks in a building, the support structure and the electrical. It includes actuators that activate ceiling elements such as lighting fixtures to create transitional environments suitable to the needs of differing user groups.

Through the use of a wireless wand, users can simply control lights on-demand and virtually rewire a building’s entire lighting system. “The wand is designed to be simple and intuitive to give the user the most direct possible control of the environment,” she said.

The system also includes fabric walls that can be easily moved along the Convia ceiling rail infrastructure. Georgia Tech Library is an example of spaces using the technology to change colors and transform through the movement of curved fabric space dividers.

Magnofil laid out four principles specific to the programmable environment:

* Maximizing the capacity for adaptation
* The time to effect change is ideally zero
* Design is collaborative and includes people who inhabit a space as co-designers
* Everything is recognized as both physical and digital

In her talk, Magnofil acknowledged that the construction industry is a dinosaur so it would take a lot of work to create built environments with flexible building systems delivery that would incorporate infrastructure such as plumbing and ventilation. She said that a distributed control paradigm plays a central role in the development, and the adaption and collaboration essential to the design challenge traditional building techniques because it’s simply too costly and time consuming to make changes after a project.

She said that while the infrastructure was commercialized, a lot of the spacial concepts were research based and experimental. And a significant amount of control given to the user. They had to solve the technical engineering question first so the social component is still an open field.

The software code that runs the system is not open yet since the business decision to do so has not been made.

Kicking off ’09 show season with Chillin’, March 7th!

 

Since ’05, Artefacture has been privileged to take part in this one-of-a-kind event that can only be pulled off in San Francisco. We’ll be on hand next month with steep deals on our current lines. Come and check us out, meet great people, and hear great music!


-Chillin’ site

Molte Cose boutique carrying Arte tees

 


Great news. Our expansion into stores across San Francisco continues. Molte Cose, a fascinating retail concept in the Polk Gulch has started carrying some of our designs. Apart from mens and womens apparel, this twice-expanded store (the owner tells me it’s been around for 17 years) has one-of-kind items that you’ll want to take home.

Stocking new and vintage offerings, Molte Cose and adjoining Bella Cose carry specialty items so unique you’ll swear they were picked out just for you and yours. With sunshine yellow walls and a friendly, helpful staff, Molte Cose is composed of treasures you wish you found in your attic. From vintage cocktail party dresses to antique lamps, jewelry and knick- knacks, Molte Cose has it all. Wander next door and check out the selection of new and vintage men’s clothing for the man who’s not so secretly inspired by Rat Pack fashions. There’s also an assortment of retro desk supplies. If that wasn’t enough, their lingerie section completes the triple threat. Admire their selection – so beautiful it begs to be worn out on the town.

- SFStation

Molte Cose
2044 Polk St
San Francisco
Tel. +1 415.921.5374

Recommended viewing: Objectified

 

Leaping from 2D to 3D, the independent filmmaker Gary Hutwit has a promising follow-up to his well-received film about typefaces (Helvetica). InObjectified Gary takes a close look at industrial design. According to the site, the film:

Looks at the creativity at work behind everything from toothbrushes to tech gadgets. It’s about the people who re-examine, re-evaluate and re-invent our manufactured environment on a daily basis. It’s about personal expression, identity, consumerism, and sustainability. It’s about our relationship to mass-produced objects and, by extension, the people who design them.

Judging by the trailer, this is going to be great so I can’t wait to see it.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S9E2D2PaIcI]

2000.000.00.9

 

We hope you’re having a wonderful and warm holiday season and are full of anticipation and energy for the coming year. Even though the future is here, the state of civilization continues to embrace anti-utopias. So with a jittery marketplace, we are pleased to continue our t-shirt sale as inventory allows.

Artefacture’s 2008 has been remarkable; we released several tee lines, took part in shows monthly, added new boutiques after our exhibition at Pool, received countless nods from the blogosphere and press such as from Boston Weekly and Thrillist, forged a partnership with Design Observer, and more.

Most important we feel great about being connected to and part of a community that includes you. Our shared vision of how design and fashion can interrelate is no longer at an embryonic stage, but rather on strong footing and ready to see new horizons. Happy New Year.

Our final 2008 Show, Chillin Productions in SF!

 

Before we swing into holiday mode next month, there’s one more show that you’ve got to check out (assuming you live in San Francisco or will be visiting). Saturday night, December 6th, we’ll be at Chillin’ Productions with a great sale. Much of our inventory is clearing out for the new year, so get your favorite tee before it’s gone!

ArteMix Fall 08 – Stream/Download Free

 

Here’s a 57-minute mix for you, our supporters and customers. It’s mainly minimal techno from labels like Plus 8 and Get Physical. Highlights include tracks from Deadmau5 and Patrice Baumel.

MP3 File

Big show this month, THREAD-San Francisco, Nov 16

 


Capsule Design Festival, October 19th in SF

 

It’s that time of year again when Hayes Valley transforms into a mega shopping and community festival. This time we’re going to have a primo corner spot on Hayes and Octavia Streets. I’m going to bring loads of tees and will have a special bailout sale so you won’t want to miss this. Opens at 11AM, goes till 6PM. Link

And here is the Artefacture Flickr photo set from last Spring’s Capsule.

Pics from last night’s show

 

Thanks to everyone who came out to see us at Chillin last night! Like always, the work of all the artists and designers impressed those in attendance. Congratulations to Irene Hernandez-Feiks for her coverage in this month’s issue of 944 magazine. The magazine was in attendance at the show. There was also a cool band, Little Yellow Perfect, elevating this arts confab to a whole new level.See you at the Capsule Design Festival in Hayes Valley, SF, in a few weeks!