Israeli designer starts “Open Design”

September 11th, 2008
by cnachu

Israeli designer Ronen Kadushin has created Open Design, a new way to design art that he hopes will close the gap between creative design and industrial design.

CC Israel Project Lead Rotem Medzini writes about an initiative to combine computer numerical control (CNC) with CC-licensed design information:

Open-Design is an alternative way of designing art. In his M.A. thesis, Ronen Kadushin felt there was a problem with realizing creativity in industrial designs. Ronen, an Israeli designer that also lectures at the Universität der Künste in Berlin, saw that while in fields like music, graphic design, video, etc., creating became inclusive for all and also independent of publishers or producers — all thanks to the digital technology and the internet. But according to Ronen, it isn’t like that for industrial design. It is being left behind because it has material output that needs marketing investment and support from producers.

To solve all that he came up with Open-Design, which combines CNC production and CC design information for publication and distribution. “It is an alternative method to design and production that in my view, is in touch with the realities of information technology and economics,” noted Ronen. He added that while doing his research, he liked the flexibility, clarity, and simplicity of CC.

Cool.

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Posted in Copyright | Comments (1)

One Response to “Israeli designer starts “Open Design””

  1. conley Says:

    “he liked the flexibility, clarity, and simplicity of CC.” CC definitively has simplicity, but I think they need to work on their clarity a bit more. They’ve been around for 5 years and it’s still uncertain what “commercial use” means.