A few months ago, Martin and I were in New York doing the final photo shoot for I Miss My Pencil with Nicolas Zurcher. One of our tasks for that week was to create photography for each of the 3 chapter title pages: aisthetika, punk manufacturing, love + fetish.

We dipped a teddy bear in black latex (love + fetish). We wrote graffiti on a brick wall with yarn (punk manufacturing). For aisthetika, we wanted to represent the idea that objects we see everyday can be part of a multi-sensorial experience…even if it’s unexpected or just plain weird.

We immediately called Andre Yousefi (our master prototyper) and the guys in the IDEO shop. They’re up for anything, and it was not at all hard to convince them to find an old Mac laptop and cut off one corner and ship it to us in the New York office.  IT provided a broken laptop and Jim Feuhrer was at the band saw within minutes, and loving every minute of it. Then we had to glue all the bits back together to give it that perfect assembled look that we just sliced the corner off with a bread knife.

My first thought when I got the request to cut a corner off the MacBook was that it should be a bite or two, literally shaped like you would take a bite out of a sandwich. And this quick experiment could represent us, as designers, biting back at the technology that people are so enthralled with that they don’t realize it takes up so many hours in their life never to be recovered. — Jim Feuhrer

I can’t add too much to the story apart from the absolute joy of cutting the corner off and the look of astonishment on all parties around in the Shop at the time with that look on their face’s “WHAT THE F*** ARE YOU GUYS UP TO!” and “That’s cool…” when they find out that it’s something for the Pencil book. – Andre Yousefi

It is the little things, even the ridiculous ones, that keep us inspired and provoke new thought…and that’s what this book was all about.

I think a large part of the book was an exercise in playing with the absurd and there seemed at the time that chewing on a corner of a laptop was a celebration of that absurdity. Now that the whole thing’s done it seems perfectly normal, like we do it every day. Maybe that’s the great thing about experimentation, weirdness turns to normality and so you continue to push for more stranger avenues of expression to test the limits of good and bad. Plus it is fun to cut up an Apple, they are just as pretty on the inside. – Martin Bone

For more information on the book, I Miss My Pencil, visit http://www.imissmypencil.com

29 Comments:

  1. k0ev

    03/11/2009 at 4:35 am // Permalink

    Wow! PowerBook for desert :-)

  2. William

    03/11/2009 at 5:52 am // Permalink

    I like the juxtaposition of senses this picture evokes. Make sure you chew slowly and keep your mind open.

  3. Joel

    03/11/2009 at 7:21 am // Permalink

    Eat different.

  4. kc!

    03/11/2009 at 8:06 am // Permalink

    Wonderful insight into your creative proceas! I look forward to reading the book!

  5. Andrew MacDonald

    03/11/2009 at 8:55 am // Permalink

    Could you have not got a designer to actually create/photoshop the mac to make it look exactly like the finished result, thus saving you from spending out on a Macbook that you could never use again?

    Either way, the finished result looks brilliant. Well done.

  6. Dan

    03/11/2009 at 9:28 am // Permalink

    Now that’s thinking different, love it, just love it!

  7. Craig

    03/11/2009 at 9:57 am // Permalink

    So what sort of wine do you pair with a Macbook?

  8. Katie

    03/11/2009 at 10:16 am // Permalink

    That’s easy! Apple wine = http://tinyurl.com/y9p79yx

  9. Pablo

    03/11/2009 at 3:35 pm // Permalink

    I cook my sanwiches with my apple laptop:)

    its the I-toast…

    http://www.pabloalbacete.com/index.php?/about-this-site/

    cheers!

  10. Robert Dempsey

    03/11/2009 at 5:19 pm // Permalink

    Pure awesome.

  11. elliot

    03/11/2009 at 8:24 pm // Permalink

    ha funny, but they are missing salt and pepper… or maybe some home made pesto

  12. Zidni

    04/11/2009 at 5:39 am // Permalink

    Beyoutiful on the inside!!

  13. Brasileiro

    04/11/2009 at 9:49 am // Permalink

    Vai trabalhar !!!

  14. Русский

    06/11/2009 at 12:10 pm // Permalink

    У всех тут такие эмоции,а мне жалко!!!

  15. eric

    10/11/2009 at 10:18 am // Permalink

    you are what you eat.

  16. Gustavo Argento

    10/11/2009 at 11:07 am // Permalink

    Coincido con Brasileiro, anda a laburar, find a decent job!!!
    Creo que son un monton de ricachones malgastando dinero.
    Cuando las trescuartos de la poblacion mundial no tiene las
    necesidades basicas cubiertas.

  17. Gerrno

    10/11/2009 at 11:38 am // Permalink

    Hey…like the idea, actually love it… for that last touch you should do it with the sauce (photoshop it or real photo, maybe the real photo would be better don’t know should try both) it would look surrealistic, because those hours spend are tasty! :)

  18. Joshua Brinckerhoff

    10/11/2009 at 2:11 pm // Permalink

    Brilliant!

  19. Jorge Inchaurregui

    10/11/2009 at 2:43 pm // Permalink

    A powerful image to be sure. I would like to see an Apple pie next.

  20. Raymond

    10/11/2009 at 6:00 pm // Permalink

    It’s not a MacBook. I can’t believe as designers they keep calling it a MB. It’s a Powerbook. There’s a difference.

    I do like the idea behind it though.

  21. Robert

    11/11/2009 at 6:25 am // Permalink

    I think I would have gone for white wine… :)

    This is fun – even for an Apple fan such as myself. It’s much better than just photoshopping a MacBook and nice to see somebody crafting such a piece of work with their hands for a change.

  22. Nicole

    11/11/2009 at 12:08 pm // Permalink

    Were you at all worried about the fumes from the cutting of the computer? How did it smell? I would have been worried about breathing in some nanomaterials.

  23. David "Rooster" Claytor

    12/11/2009 at 12:42 pm // Permalink

    Excellent idea, very inspiring. Looks like it was a blast! Who wouldn’t want to band-saw a mac? Didn’t Hendrix burn his guitar?

  24. Gaku

    12/11/2009 at 4:19 pm // Permalink

    yeah andre!

  25. Tee

    16/11/2009 at 3:27 am // Permalink

    …I hadn’t realised that computer use and pencil use were mutually exclusive. They aren’t mutually exclusive in my design world.

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