"If we are successful, we make people feel something as a result of our work," says Crisan, emphasizing the emotional impact of design.
The 1970s were a sweet spot in product design, especially in France, where makers were beginning to marry natural materials like wood with the new optimism of plastic.
The man's voice is menacing, and British, as he says, 'Today we celebrate the first glorious anniversary of the Information Purification Directives' in a 'garden of pure ideology, where each worker may bloom secure from the pests obeying contradictory thoughts.'
Apple has always had this gravitational pull when it comes to design - clean lines, considered materials, and that unmistakable restraint that somehow still feels exciting. It's the reason a whole ecosystem of third-party accessories exists that speaks the same visual language, sometimes so fluently you'd swear they came out of Cupertino.
First, we got iPhones in Hermès orange, and now we might get them in Louboutin red. According to 's Mark Gurman, Apple is already mulling over what the next premium colorway will be for its iPhone Pro models. While we're not expecting iPhone 18 announcements until later this year, Gurman reported that "red is the new flagship color in testing for the next iPhone Pros."