Norweigan Siren Elise Wilhelmsen recently received the 2010 Time to Design Award for her project Developing Time—Time Developing, a clock that knits 48 meshes per day, and produces one two meter long scarf per year. I love how her clock allows time to becomes a measurable, wearable object.

Norweigan Siren Elise Wilhelmsen recently received the 2010 Time to Design Award for her project Developing Time—Time Developing, a clock that knits 48 meshes per day, and produces one two meter long scarf per year. I love how her clock allows time to becomes a measurable, wearable object.

Norweigan Siren Elise Wilhelmsen recently received the 2010 Time to Design Award for her project Developing Time—Time Developing, a clock that knits 48 meshes per day, and produces one two meter long scarf per year. I love how her clock allows time to becomes a measurable, wearable object.

Norweigan Siren Elise Wilhelmsen recently received the 2010 Time to Design Award for her project Developing Time—Time Developing, a clock that knits 48 meshes per day, and produces one two meter long scarf per year. I love how her clock allows time to becomes a measurable, wearable object.

Posted 1 year ago & Filed under time, grow, 1 note

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a blog devoted to materials and designs that engage the senses, respond to their environments, trigger meaningful interactions, evolve through use, and challenge us to rethink our relationships with objects. tara mullaney is a researcher and designer investigating the connections between our experiences and emotions.

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