Apple releases $300 book containing 450 photos of Apple products
Running out of Christmas ideas for that diehard Apple fan
in your life? Well, how about a $299 coffee table book filled with 450
photographs of Apple products. The iPhone-maker unveiled just such a tome
today, announcing that the book will go on sale tomorrow at Apple.com
and in select Apple retail stores. It’s a hardcover edition, bound in
linen, and is available in two sizes: $199 for a smaller 10.20" x 12.75"
version, and $299 for a larger 13" x 16.25" edition. The book is simply
titled Designed by Apple in California — a name that somehow manages to be both humble and incredibly pretentious at the same time.
The photos inside are all new images shot by Andrew
Zuckerman, and will show off 20 years of Apple design "in a deliberately
spare style." In a press statement,
chief designer Jony Ive described the book as "a gentle gathering of
many of the products the team has designed over the years," and hoped
that it would serve as a "resource for students of all design
disciplines."
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While this is a design book, it is not about the design team, the creative process, or product development. It is an objective representation of our work that, ironically, describes who we are. It describes how we work, our values, our preoccupations, and our goals. We have always hoped to be defined by what we do rather than by what we say.
We strive, with varying degrees of success, to define objects that appear effortless. Objects that appear so simple, coherent, and inevitable that there could be no rational alternative.
We strive, with varying degrees of success, to define objects that appear effortless. Objects that appear so simple, coherent, and inevitable that there could be no rational alternative.
The book is published by Apple itself, and is dedicated
to the memory of Steve Jobs. It is, undeniably, an act of corporate
vanity publishing on an impressive scale, but it's one Apple deserves to
get away with more than pretty much any other tech company. No one
denies that when it comes to industrial design, Apple earns the praise
it gets.
That aside, though, the book’s publication does show a
certain amount of self-interest, navel-gazing, and even arrogance from
Apple — themes that were also present in September’s unveiling of the
new MacBook Pros. It’s all very well to feel proud of the successes of
the past, but we'll be interested to see if the company can justify
releasing another such book 20 years from now.
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