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contests
Wednesday Jul 16, 2008
Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign may be dead, but she's determined to see this t-shirt contest thing through to the end. After receiving "almost 5,000 amazing entries" and more than 125,000 online votes, the contest has picked a winner (pictured at left). Designed by "Denitza of Weehawken, New Jersey" (which sounds like a circa-1930s purveyor of charming ladies' chapeaux), the winning design is heavy on the text. Set in a Matt Groening-flavored typeface is the catchy slogan: "For everyone who's ever been counted out but refused to be knocked out and for everyone who works hard but never gives up, this one [insert silhouette of Hillary, standing at attention in a pantsuit and kitten heels] is for you!" The "limited-edition t-shirt" can be yours for a $50 contribution, which will go toward paying down Hillary's campaign debt. As for the design, noted Hillary in a letter to supporters, "it won by a landslide." Click "continued..." for a closer look.
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Wednesday Jul 09, 2008
Although our fingers were crossed for Lord Krishna and his trusty cell phone, Smithsonian has chosen otherwise. The grand prize winner of the magazine's fifth annual photo contest is Abhijit Dey of Barrackpore, India, who snapped this shot (at left) of six-day-old Betka Tudu receiving blessings from fellow members of the Santhal tribe in the Indian village of Purulia. Call us cynical, but we could totally see this toward the front of Vogue as a jewelry ad (John Hardy, perhaps? Add a blue bar and it's very Tiffany & Co., color in some of those bracelets in dark orange and it's instant Hèrmes!). Meanwhile, readers preferred older, fully clothed, American excited kids, choosing Rhonda Weiderhaft's photo of a pair of Little Leaguers in antipodal emotional states at the bottom of the final inning. Go here to see the finalists and winners in each of the six categories, culled from 7,000 entries from 50 states and 82 countries.
Tuesday Jul 01, 2008

After 80 years selling rugs, innovation can be difficult, but Karastan is looking to make a statement with its new marketing campaign (cleverly themed "Make a Statement"), and so they challenged students at a handful of art and photography schools nationwide to get out their cameras and start snapping rugs—Karastan rugs, of course, in three specified settings: a residential/home environment, a public place, and an "American" setting. While the scare quotes around "American" seem an invitation to hijinks, the students were up to the task, and the Karastan Rug-ged America Photo Contest is now asking you to help choose the winners. Through July 15, visitors to the contest website can select favorites in each of the three categories. The winning schools (one in each category) will be awarded $3,500 in cash. And of course, all participating schools get a free rug. We've posted a few standout contest photos after the jump, including the Magritte-means-Tony Soprano "American" environment created by students at Maine Photographic Workshops.
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Friday Jun 27, 2008

Bravo's Shear Genius, a Project Runway for hairstylists, is back for its second season. Heavy on the "cut"-related wordplay, the show puts vaguely menacing Danish hairstylist René Fris (who we could swear we once saw in a Mentos commercial) in the Tim Gunn role and is hosted by actress/Kmartist Jaclyn Smith. Shear Genius celebrated its season premiere on Tuesday with a pop-up salon in New York's Times Square and recruited students from the School of Visual Arts, under the guidance of SVA 3D Design Program chairperson Kevin O'Callaghan, to design the temporary salon as well as ten salon chairs that Bravo's "The Dish" blog describes as "pretty damn amazing."
Among the wacky hair chairs is the trio pictured above. Created by Sarah Nguyen, the "DJ" chair (at far right) is a stack of hair-themed record albums ready for playing on its giant turntable base while Kathleen Ugurlu's "Jock" (center) is for the hirsute baseball fan (we think the batting helmet is a nice touch). But we find ourselves unable to resist the garden gnome-accessorized "Backyard" chair designed by Kaori Sakai in a bold palette of green, red, and yellow. It comes with a grass-tufted seat backed by a garden gate, a hose, cooler, and a full grill setup, complete with ketchup, mustard, and corn on the cob. Check out all of the chairs and vote for your favorite here. The winner gets a $5,000 prize, which we're hoping is payable in cash rather than hair products.
Thursday Jun 12, 2008

Someone must has a good marketing department. According to the International Herald Tribune's Raising the Roof blog, big British design and architecture firms like Foster + Partners and Will Alsop will be submitting entries to the Architectural Jelly Design Competition, a contest "which seeks to raise awareness of the relationship between food and architecture." It, of course, is all the brainchild of a gelatin company, and will be a part of the upcoming, month-long London Festival of Architecture (June 20th to July 20th). While the joke might be that clearly there is no connection between architecture and food," we fail to really understand why marketing something that's basically Jell-O to architects and fans of architecture. Is it a market this gelatin company is really hoping to capture? Has someone discovered that this professional group is feeling desperate for a bounce, translucent snack? Or are we thinking too much about something that's just supposed to be all in good, silly fun? Whatever the case, we look forward to seeing Foster + Partners' entry and even more so to see how many millions some company in Dubai will pay for the rights to turn it into some sort of life-sized, lavish hotel.
Friday Jun 06, 2008

Bombay Sapphire has announced the U.S. winner of its 2008 Designer Glass Competition: Mia Ferrera Wiesenthal of Brooklyn created "On the Rocks" (pictured above, at left), a stemless martini glass nestled in a crystal rock-like formation. The design also won the People's Prize Award, receiving the most votes from visitors to Bombay Sapphire's website. Perhaps we just view the world through Koons-colored glasses, but the first thing we thought of when seeing Wiesenthal's design was Jeff Koons's "Diamond (Blue)" (pictured above, at right), the massive sculpture that sold (to Kiev-based billionaire Victor Pinchuk, we hear) for a cool $11.8 million last fall at Christie's. We think the design's Koonsian flair will stand Wiesenthal in good stead as she heads to London this September to represent the U.S. in the global competition. Meanwhile, the national prize nets her $3,000 and an internship with designer Sami Hayek, the brother-in-law-to-be of another Koons fan, François-Henri Pinault.

Thursday May 29, 2008

Like we've said before in the billion posts we've up before on the presidential primaries: we don't like to get political or pick sides or anything, because that's really not our place around here on a design blog. But for every story we've read or posted about the brilliance of the Obama campaign, do you ever wonder why there's none of that about Clinton's camp? Well, judging from the just released Project T-Shirt on the candidate's site, that's why. It's a Threadless-esque t-shirt design competition and you get to vote on the last five, the winner of which will be printed and used in however many weeks this race continues to drag along. The thing is, each of the top five entries are just so painful to look at, each featuring at least two things that will make you cringe and/or turn your head violently away. So, like it or not, if this is the best-of-the-best, Obama still beats Clinton, hands down, in attracting the design talent. Ouch.
Friday Apr 25, 2008

According to a national study, 92% of vacation photos consist of at least three pictures of sunsets. OK, we made that up, but it sounds about right, and so we suspect that Canon will be on the receiving end of oodles of sunset shots as the entries start to roll in for its third annual "Photography in the Parks" contest, which challenges legal U.S. residents over the age of 13 (perhaps there are separate such contests for children and/or illegal aliens?) to submit their shots taken in the vicinity of any park or monument in America. This year's theme is "inspirational nature images." Translation: sunsets!
The grand prize has an intimidating ring to it: "an unforgettable vacation for two in the American wilderness." If that sounds too much like the tagline of a bad Chevy Chase film, aim a little lower. The three runners-up get Canon photo gear. What's the catch? The contest is not open to "professional photographers," which the Canon legal team has defined as "one who has earned 51% or more of his or her annual income by taking, selling, or marketing photographs, whether as an employee or as a freelance photographer." So consult your tax returns to make sure you qualify, and then get to snapping some sunsets. You've got until September 30 to enter.
Wednesday Apr 23, 2008

University of Kentucky, you've just been promised a multi-million dollar gift, what are you going to do next? Start our own international design competition! That's right, prosperous architect of retirement housing Clifford Curry and his wife H. Delight Stone (which we kind of wish were our name) have just bestowed upon Curry's alma mater a gift of "more than $5.5 million dollars," which we've taken the liberty of rounding up to $6 million in the headline of this post. The gift, which will be presented to the university over ten years, will establish the Curry Stone Design Prize and the Curry Stone Chair in Design at the University of Kentucky.
The Curry Stone Prize, to be presented annually, will award $100,000 to exceptional emerging designers "with extraordinary design projects or ideas that contribute positively to living circumstances for broad sections of global humanity." The prize will be presented for the first time at the 2008 IdeaFestival, which takes place this September in Louisville, Kentucky. "We want to give designers an opportunity to be recognized as leaders in innovation and provide financial resources to help the ideas get developed and implemented," said Curry in a statement issued by the university. According to UK College of Design dean Michael Speaks, the prize will recognize outstanding achievements in urban design, architecture, graphic, and product design.
Thursday Apr 10, 2008
Hop on the contest cycle! First up is a two-pronged international design competition for bike parking in New York City, sponsored by the city's Department of Transportation along with our friends at the Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum. The goal of the so-called "CityRacks" competition is to develop attractive, functional, and well-designed sidewalk bike racks (that's contest #1) and to improve bicycle parking inside commercial and residential buildings (designing an in-building parking facility is contest #2). The city will use the winning sidewalk rack as its new standard for bicycle parking (and award $5,000 to the winning designer) and Google plans to install the in-building facility in its Manhattan offices (the winner gets $10,000). And get this, among the contest jurors are the city's transportation commissioner, deputy mayor, and avid bicyclist David Byrne. Register here to receive full contest details.
Continuing with the cycle theme, the sustainability crusaders over at Tricycle are again encouraging you to repurpose sample materials (specifically, carpet samples) in their 2008 Ample Sample contest. The contest deadline is May 10, and if a glance through recent entries is any indication, we advise you to steer clear of cat scratching posts, as that category looks to have been exhausted. Of course, the real question for you multi-tasking UnBeige readers is: how cool of a bike rack can you make out of carpet samples?
Previously
The Search Is on for One Good Chair
Lord & Taylor Needs Your Help Coming Up (with) Roses
Shaking Up (Not Stirring) the Traditional Martini Glass
Electrolux Design Lab Contest Scouts for Home Appliances for "iGeneration"
WHAM-O: Hey Kids, Toys Are Even More Fun When You Design Them Yourself!
See You in Elle: Announcing the Yours by Design Contest
Think You Have What It Takes to Be a Cartoonist? Let Bob Mankoff Be the Judge
Spot the '74 Celebs: Arch. Record Holds Glass House Contest
Best Cubicle Contest Winner Makes Us Look Bad
Ghost of Darwin Demands a New Ironic Fish
Yo Historic Preservation Buffs: Find a Project Worthy of Honor
Heads Up Project Runway Wannabee Contestants
A Contest that Hot Doug's Could Really Love
Virgin's Designs Make Everyone Want To Puke
Make Your Champagne Dreams and Caviar Wishes Come True
The Only Design Contest UnBeige Will Ever Demand You Participate In
Right Now, Spencer Fruhling Is Our Highest Priority
A Long-Winded Rant Concerning the New York/Speak Up Contest
The Goodness That Janet Jackson Brought to Design
The Other Side of a Bad Idea
Vancouver: You Hated the First Round, Now Try Another
Ciao For Now and Those Pesky Poll Results
Design This Man's Helmet Or He'll Run You Over
A Fan Contest Not A Costume Competition
Ten Days in Cape Town, A Life in the History Books
A Little Tin Box or the Impetus For Another Angry Round?
The Kind That Won't Make You Hate Your New-To-The-Internet Family Members
Fill My Wall, Win $4400 In the Process
A Reminder That Our 'Design Our Logo' Contest Is Purely Just for Fun
Putting the D In T-Shirts
Do Not Destroy This Chain Letter!
Notice Anything Different?
Name...That...Chair!
Call For Entries: Redesign UnBeige's Banner (For Real)
Get Your Kicks...And Be Recognized by an International Jury of Designers
A Rough Concept, But You Should Probably Still Enter
Shelter in a Cart
Our Logo Still Needs To Be Changed, And Believe Us, We Haven't Forgotten
We Take Things Very Seriously Around Here
Late-Breaking Entry!
One And A Half Hours To Go On Our Contest Of The Month!
Last Day For Outright Awesome!
Here's Something Else For You Kids To Chew On
Logo Contest: It's A Really Good Thing Smart People Are Entering
This Is Exactly What We Wanted To Wake Up To After A Weekend Without Blog
And With That, We're Back To Some Seriousness
Is It Possible That We're Starting To See A Trend?
We Should Probably Make A Special Prize Just For Enthusiasm
If It's This Exhausting Just To Keep Up With All The Logos, We Have Renewed Sympathy For The Entrants
Looks Like Someone Else Decided To Get All Textual, As Well
Looks Like Someone Decided To Get All Textual Or Something
Man, Are We Still Psyched!!!
More More More!!!
We Can't Tell If We're Getting Dissed Here But Even If We Are, The Joke Is Worth It
We Hope You Haven't Forgotten Our Logo Contest Because We Certainly Haven't
Monday Morning Eye Candy
Logos 4-Eva. That's Double Entendre.
More Logos Than You Can Shake A Stick At
Yeah, Our Logo Contest Is Gonna Pretty Much Rock
Redesign Us!
The Best Contest We Have Ever Invented
Hi All You Fancy Wannabe T-Shirt Designers
White T-Shirt Contest Gone Wild
Architecture And Indecision
The Results Are In
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