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Photo Credit: Arris
Arris (Berkeley, Calif., U.S.) developer of Additive Molding technology for the production of high-performance composites in mass-market products, announced on March 3 that it has has won the GOOD DESIGN Award for its carbon fiber-optimized truss structure.
Arris’s first-of-its-kind lattice-type truss uses continuous fiber-reinforced thermoplastic composites (CFRTP) to deliver a structure that embodies two ideals: exceptional strength-to-weight characteristics and exceptional scalability. Arris says this breakthrough replaces old-fashioned I-beams and enables major performance upgrades in all products that move or anywhere that weight matters. The Arris truss is also corrosion-resistant, doesn’t require painting and is completely recyclable.
Jan 20, 2021
This is “Secret Identity-Rachel and Pipes” by Carol Phillips. An exhibition of her work can be viewed on Bay College’s Main Campus in the Besse Gallery through Feb. 24. (Photo courtesy of Bay College)
ESCANABA Bay College has announced the Winter Art Exhibit, “Secret Identity,” featuring the artwork of Carol Phillips.
The art exhibition of Phillips’ work can be viewed on the Bay College Main Campus in the Besse Gallery through Feb. 24.
Phillips began her art education at the University of Idaho where she studied liberal arts. She continued her studies at the Sun Valley Center for the Arts and Humanities, a studio school specifically for clay, located in Sun Valley, Idaho. She later finished her bachelor of fine arts degree with an emphasis in ceramics at the University of Washington in Seattle where she lived for 15 years, working as a chef and later working with commercial photographers as a food stylist.
Jack Lenor Larsen, Innovative Textile Designer, Dies at 93
He blended ancient techniques and modern technology to weave fabrics that are in the collections of MoMA and the Louvre, which gave him a one-man retrospective.
Jack Lenor Larsen in his studio in 1982. His textile designs influenced artists and architects, and his work is in major museums around the world.Credit.Susan Wood/Getty Images
By Julie Lasky
Dec. 23, 2020
Jack Lenor Larsen, a textile designer who blended ancient techniques and modern technology to weave fabrics that enlivened postwar American homes and workplaces and in the process became an international presence, died on Tuesday at his home in East Hampton, N.Y. He was 93.