Works That Work Magazine No. 10 is available now! We are pleased to announce the new issue of Works That Work. This issue presents a vision of design that we believe in, design as a process that leads to permanent betterment of life and where everyone involved benefits. As examples, we introduce projects that challenge the trend of planned obsolescence and promote the ideas of circular design.
Works That Work Magazine No. 9 is available now! Play is much more than just fun and games.
Works That Work Magazine No. 8 is available now on loremnotipsum.com! The new issue of WTW shows how Bhutan became an inspiration for both developing and developed countries.
Works That Work Magazine No. 7 is out now! This issue of Works That Work strives to probe beyond the visible aspect of design. We look at the invisible organisational principles shaping our lives.
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Works That Work Magazine No. 6 is available now on loremnotipsum.com. Forgotten ideas worth a second look. Many magazines rush to cover the latest news. Works That Work is interested in the impact of design and forgotten ideas worth a second look.
Works That Work Magazine Issue 5 is just out, exploring the fine line between breaking the rules and breaking the laws. The new issue of Works That Work explores creativity on the edge of legality and beyond.
Works That Work Magazine No. 4 is out now. If necessity is the mother of invention, extreme environments must be hotbeds of innovation. Works That Work No. 4 went to find out.
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Works That Work No. 3 is available now on loremnotipsum.com. This issue of Works That Work No. 3 explores how design is affected by time, the articles responding to questions such as: What kind of design can last for centuries?
Works That Work No. 2 is available now on loremnotipsum.com. In this issue we look at inventions as deceptively simple as the shipping container and as staggeringly complex as an intercontinental aircraft.
Works That Work Magazine No. 1 is out now. That first issue contains original, in-depth essays on such diverse topics as graphic design, urban design and business organisation; photo essays about refugee camp gardens and improvised furniture; an interview with translator and editor Linda Asher, and a complete one-act play by David Ives.