Ryan Fritsch • Utopos.net is ready for the rest

Archive of May 2008


Suits me


Israeli suit manufacturer Bagir apparently clothes 1 in 6 European men. And now they are going to start doing it with plastic bottles.

Their new line of Eco-Gir clothing replaces wool and whatnot in favor of recycled plastic bottles. It takes about 30 pop bottles to fashion a complete suit that retails for $200. Lining and all.



No word on what happens if you put Mentos in the pocket of a suit made strictly from bottles of Diet Coke.

I do know what the Harry Rosen men's clothing store intends to do. So says Larry Rosen, Chairman and CEO, in response to my inquiry:

"Thank you for your e mail and for your patronage.

We will certainly be investigating the line of Eco-Gir clothing you mentioned, although we have no immediate plans to carry the Bagir line at this time. A new initiative we have undertaken is to ensure the recyclability of all our bags and boxes this year, as we do feel strongly about the environment."

May 27th, 2008 / 0 Comments / Tags: eco-joy, PVC fashion, do want

Classifying Curiosities

I try not to repost all the glorious tidbits of miscellany I enjoy everyday from BoingBoing, but this piece is too incredible not to pass along.

Takeshi Miyakawa Design has come up with the perfect metaphor for our digital age. In an era when everything is miscellaneous, what better conceptual container than a recursively self-deconstructing fractal cabinet of wonders to put them in?

Cabinets of curiosities (also known by their far superior German name, Wunderkammer)have a long history. They became popular during the renaissance as a way for the wealthy and educated to display their knowledge of the world. Acting as a sort of periodic table of the elements for class, owners would display their finest and rarest curiosities in the upper-most drawers and arrange them based on their relation to other objects, either according to popular pseudo-scientific concepts such as "the humors", Ptolemaic cosmologies, or even Goethe's geologic models of Europe.

Takeshi's cabinet is therefore the perfect contemporary inversion of this concept, having no particular beginning or end and thereby placing every object in an unmediated relation with the others.

May 13th, 2008 / 0 Comments / Tags: Wunderkammer, fractal, miscellany