These uber high-tech clocks seem like the type of thing you should be able to find at the Sharper Image. In addition to keeping time and waking you up in the morning, these have every feature you could ever possibly want in a clock and then some: projection onto your ceiling, digital am/fm radio, current weather currents, a barometer, thermometer + hygrometer, and last, but not least: moon phases. And they were designed by Phillipe Starck. I assume this is an attempt by the technology company Oregon Scientific to add a little design cache to their brand, Or maybe they just wanted to get into the International Contemporary Furniture Fair, and partnering with Starck seemed the best way. Can’t say I blame them. The clocks aren’t bad either. I’d be happy to have one of these.
Related Posts
-
A few months ago, prolific product design star Philippe Starck shocked the world with his proclamation ‘Design is Dead’, and the announcement of his pending
-
ReCycle Clocks is a company that specializes in turning defunct motorcycle parts into quirky timepieces. The clocks are created using metal scraps from old motorcycles
-
A4A Design’s honeycombed furniture has also been showcased at the Lumina pop-up store in corso Garibaldi 127 alongside Foster+Partners’ new LED FLO lamp series featured
One Response to “PHILLIPE STARCK HIGH TECH CLOCKS”
-
Featured Author
VIDEO: Inhabitots Interviews Dr. Alan Greene About Toxic Chemicals and Your Family’s Health
VIDEO: Boston ‘Bike Czar’ Nicole Freedman Talks Bike-Share & Urban Cycling
INTERVIEW: Inhabitat Chats with Recycled Wood Designers Scrapile
VIDEO: A Look Back at the 2011 Detroit Auto Show and The Green Cars We Loved
-
Read Inhabitat
-
Search Categories
-
Recent Posts
-
Recent Comments
-
Browse by Keyword
follow inhabitat on:
popular today
all time
most commented
more popular stories >
more popular stories >
more popular stories >
© Inhabitat.com 2012 | About Inhabitat | Contact Us | Advertising with Inhabitat | Terms Of Use | Privacy Policy | DMCA | Inhabitat, LLC




















Do you happen to know how long those clocks have been avilable? I bought a similar ceiling projection clock two years ago, though mine wasn’t designed by Philipe Starck (well, what can you expect for 20 dollars?). Still a cool gadget though.