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The Cube calendar 2024 | Philip Stroomberg | DrukGoed

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The Cube Calendar 2024

Auteur:Philip Stroomberg

Uitgever:DrukGoed

  • In doos
  • Engels
  • 1 nov. 2023

With this beautiful design-calendar for the year 2024, Philip Stroomberg has added an innovative twist to the concept of the tear-off calendar. Not a messy sheaf of paper hanging from a nail on your wall, but a compact object that subtly changes shape in your hands: by tearing off a card each day, you reveal the workings of time.

This chunky object is a great block to put on your table. But it won’t stay there for long: it invites you to pick it up and touch it. Philip Stroomberg’s Cube Calendar looks and feels like a sculpture.

With this beautiful design-calendar, Philip Stroomberg has added an innovative twist to the concept of the tear-off calendar. Not a messy sheaf of paper hanging from a nail on your wall, but a compact object that subtly changes shape in your hands: by tearing off a card each day, you reveal the workings of time.

Divided into six rows, hundreds of cardboard cards line up, held together as a cube by two binding screws. The cards have been punched from two sheets of Algro Design. There’s a card for each day and, every few days, a card with a quote about time – a humorous observation or a philosophical aphorism. “‘What day is it?’ ‘It’s today,’ squeaked Piglet. ‘My favourite day,’ said Pooh.” Or this statement from philosopher Bertrand Russell: ‘The time you enjoy wasting is not wasted time.’

The Cube Calendar comes in a specially designed box that ingeniously folds around the cube without glue or other adhesive. If you lift the lid, the box falls open like origami, leaving the calendar to be picked up.

For connoisseurs, there are all kinds of clever little details to think about and enjoy. Put four boxes side by side, for instance, and you’ll get the name The Cube Calendar. This is a printed matter made three-dimensional.

Binding: binding screws
Format: 75 x 75 x 70 mm
Packaging: 84 x 84 x 80 mm
The calendar is made of recycled carton for environmental purposes.

With this beautiful design-calendar for the year 2024, Philip Stroomberg has added an innovative twist to the concept of the tear-off calendar. Not a messy sheaf of paper hanging from a nail on your wall, but a compact object that subtly changes shape in your hands: by tearing off a card each day, you reveal the workings of time.

This chunky object is a great block to put on your table. But it won’t stay there for long: it invites you to pick it up and touch it. Philip Stroomberg’s Cube Calendar looks and feels like a sculpture.

With this beautiful design-calendar, Philip Stroomberg has added an innovative twist to the concept of the tear-off calendar. Not a messy sheaf of paper hanging from a nail on your wall, but a compact object that subtly changes shape in your hands: by tearing off a card each day, you reveal the workings of time.

Divided into six rows, hundreds of cardboard cards line up, held together as a cube by two binding screws. The cards have been punched from two sheets of Algro Design. There’s a card for each day and, every few days, a card with a quote about time – a humorous observation or a philosophical aphorism. “‘What day is it?’ ‘It’s today,’ squeaked Piglet. ‘My favourite day,’ said Pooh.” Or this statement from philosopher Bertrand Russell: ‘The time you enjoy wasting is not wasted time.’

The Cube Calendar comes in a specially designed box that ingeniously folds around the cube without glue or other adhesive. If you lift the lid, the box falls open like origami, leaving the calendar to be picked up.

For connoisseurs, there are all kinds of clever little details to think about and enjoy. Put four boxes side by side, for instance, and you’ll get the name The Cube Calendar. This is a printed matter made three-dimensional.

Binding: binding screws
Format: 75 x 75 x 70 mm
Packaging: 84 x 84 x 80 mm
The calendar is made of recycled carton for environmental purposes.

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