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You may not be aware of it that it is highly likely that you have already seen, used or owned an item designed by Sir Kenneth Grange - be it a razor, a pen, a train, a camera, an iron...the list goes on...
Now in his 80's, Grange has a body of work that can, and sometimes does, fill entire Museum exhibits.
His design motto to design 'for everyone' led him to design predominantly in the consumer product and transportation space. His designed products are more often than not relatively inexpensive and allows art to follow function.
Yesterday I received a book I've been wanting for quite some time:
"Kenneth Grange - Making Britain Modern"
I brought it with me this morning to my normal saturday-morning-coffee-hangout-place with the intent to browse through it for a while. Two hours later I realize that I have been completely sucked into this 200 page book and its incredible illustrations and copy. There is also a multi-page interview with the man himself that was a fascinating read. I paid $5 for the book, shipped, through Amazon and that was some well spent money.
My fascination and interest in Grange - and this book - comes from, I think, three different places;
1) He has designed some of my favorite razors,
2) He has a very clean almost understated approach to design.
"Form and function must do more than simply co-exist in products - they must be integral", and
3) I love seeing 'how designers think' and there are a high number of sketches in the book from the concept stage showing what ideas there were before settling on the final design.
Below are some examples out of the 200 pages that I think might show his diversity in design and how the book presents them (I admit I did favour the pages focusing on his razor and pen designs)
There might even be some products you remember owning/using yourself
A very familiar typewrite profile;
and some of the sketches leading up to it.
I can't help but wondering what pen and ink he used
Razors
Grange had a relationship with Wilkinson for over four decades that resulted in some razor designs that have stood the test of time. I feel very fortunate to own several of his razors - but have some more I'd like to get.
Here is a bit on how the book shows off the razor designs;
I found this spread to be very interesting.
On the left hand side is a grid showing some prototype razors Wilkinson designed with Grange.
One two of the ones pictured made it to production. Can anyone tell which two?
On the opposite page is the no-name prototype razor that Grange submitted to a design competition - and won. It ended up being the first all plastic encased DE razor ever made.
Btw, does anyone see a slight resemblance between the prototype Grange made back then..and which has been shown in photos over the years...to a certain laser-razor that got pulled from Kickstarter last year?
Grange:
Kickstarter lazer-razor:
Some of the Grange-designed razors that I own - and use;
Now in his 80's, Grange has a body of work that can, and sometimes does, fill entire Museum exhibits.
His design motto to design 'for everyone' led him to design predominantly in the consumer product and transportation space. His designed products are more often than not relatively inexpensive and allows art to follow function.
Yesterday I received a book I've been wanting for quite some time:
"Kenneth Grange - Making Britain Modern"
I brought it with me this morning to my normal saturday-morning-coffee-hangout-place with the intent to browse through it for a while. Two hours later I realize that I have been completely sucked into this 200 page book and its incredible illustrations and copy. There is also a multi-page interview with the man himself that was a fascinating read. I paid $5 for the book, shipped, through Amazon and that was some well spent money.
My fascination and interest in Grange - and this book - comes from, I think, three different places;
1) He has designed some of my favorite razors,
2) He has a very clean almost understated approach to design.
"Form and function must do more than simply co-exist in products - they must be integral", and
3) I love seeing 'how designers think' and there are a high number of sketches in the book from the concept stage showing what ideas there were before settling on the final design.
Below are some examples out of the 200 pages that I think might show his diversity in design and how the book presents them (I admit I did favour the pages focusing on his razor and pen designs)
There might even be some products you remember owning/using yourself
A very familiar typewrite profile;
and some of the sketches leading up to it.
I can't help but wondering what pen and ink he used
Razors
Grange had a relationship with Wilkinson for over four decades that resulted in some razor designs that have stood the test of time. I feel very fortunate to own several of his razors - but have some more I'd like to get.
Here is a bit on how the book shows off the razor designs;
I found this spread to be very interesting.
On the left hand side is a grid showing some prototype razors Wilkinson designed with Grange.
One two of the ones pictured made it to production. Can anyone tell which two?
On the opposite page is the no-name prototype razor that Grange submitted to a design competition - and won. It ended up being the first all plastic encased DE razor ever made.
Btw, does anyone see a slight resemblance between the prototype Grange made back then..and which has been shown in photos over the years...to a certain laser-razor that got pulled from Kickstarter last year?
Grange:
Kickstarter lazer-razor:
Some of the Grange-designed razors that I own - and use;