
Khol 12 Minimalist Infographic Resume Designs | Infographic Resumes A minimalist infographic resume needn’t be boring. When you’ve got a lot information to show, it’s worthwhile taking to time to come up with creative ways to get it on paper without cluttering the space and confusing the reader. These minimalist infographic resumes all use clean designs. Some add interest with dramatic layouts. Others keep it clean and linear. A clean grey background and linear layout make Yushi Lanka’s resume come off as professional and competent. What a creative way to fit everything onto a small sheet of paper. Genevieve Dennis combines the text with minimalist graphics for a timeline that fits a lot of info into a small amount of space. A clean retro look and feel. A combination of shapes make a interesting presentation in this resume. Fluid spirals. Monochrome resume that could probably do with a little more information. I love Giovanni Santoni’s resume. Cool use of a vertical timeline with experience occupying the majority of real estate.
E15 Jandri International Royal Architecture creates minimal interior at KKZ House Japanese firm International Royal Architecture (IRA) minimised partitions and balustrades inside this split-level house in Tokyo to make the interior feel as spacious as possible (+ slideshow). Located on a small corner plot in Setagaya, KKZ House was designed by IRA to provide a generous three-storey residence for a family. To achieve this, the architects developed a split-level plan featuring several double-height spaces. This created a basement floor that boasts clerestory windows, as well as a pair of upper levels with floor slabs that don't meet all four walls. "Connecting these floors with voids, which run through the entrance hall and above the kitchen, makes the residence so spacious," said the architects in a statement. Externally the house appears as a rectilinear box with a white-rendered surface. Inside, a mid-level platform leads up to a simple living room and kitchen on the middle floor, or down to a basement level proposed as a children's bedroom.
&TRADITION Sopyram - Fabrication de Sièges, canapé et fauteuil clubs cuir Nicole Goymann and Christoph John create shoes from silkworm cocoons Threads of silk fine enough to be mistaken for strands of hair form the upper of these shoes by German designers Nicole Goymann and Christoph John. Nicole Goymann and Christoph John wound wet silk threads around a shoe last and used natural silk glue to hold them together as they dried, creating different styles of upper for ladies' footwear. The designers' Léi Zǔ Shoe Collection was named after the Chinese empress who is attributed with inventing the silk reel. Goymann and John sourced silkworm cocoons from the area around Hangzhou, China – where they both live – then spun the silk on a wooden reel using an ancient technique. "The cocoons are purchased from local silkworm farmers around Hangzhou," John told Dezeen. "The cocoons are softened in boiling water to liquidise the silk glue," explained Goymann. The designers came up with the idea after silk threads kept sticking to Goymann's bobbin while she tried to weave them into a textile. "Nobody dared to try them," said Goymann.
B&B . . : : d e s i o : : . . canapés... et autour du canapé Teachbox puts pop-out puzzles for kids on disaster relief supply boxes © Milad Mohajeri and Ali Haji via Tuvie Every year, millions of boxes are shipped to developing countries by organizations like UNICEF, where food and medical supplies are needed. Rather than these boxes going straight into the kindling pile, what if they were designed so that they went to kids first, delivered as toys after being emptied of their supplies? That's what designers Milad Mohajeri and Ali Haji were pondering when they came up with this simple design that would make deliveries of vitals all the more exciting. Tuvie writes, "Upon unpacking, most of these boxes are disposed of while these plain boxes enjoy a powerful potential to be creatively reused. In this concept, a sustainable solution is presented, based on which the simple model of 3-D puzzles is perforated on the boxes sent by UNICEF." © Milad Mohajeri and Ali Haji via Tuvie We love this concept for reusing cardboard boxes in such a fun way, and delivering supplies for both the body and mind in one box.