Sabi by Yves Béhar

Sabi by Yves Béhar

fuseproject's latest creation Vitality is a line of accessories for medication and pill management A news report from Palo Alto

Designed by the Swiss-born, San Francisco-based designer Yves Béhar and his team at fuseproject, the Sabi products marry superb functionality with simplicity in order to make life's most basic to-do's — from taking daily vitamins to taking out the trash — both more engaging and more enjoyable. The company's first collection is Vitality, a line of accessories for medication and pill management. Future collections — in the household and travel spaces — will be released in the coming months.

"We designed the Sabi brand, products and packaging to express smarter ergonomic functionality, and instill pride of use rather than the stigma of being singled out by daily physical challenges," says Yves Béhar. "The detailed design is beautiful and poetic while increasing the functionality. I believe Sabi will make sense to an older generation in need of solutions, but also to a younger set of users that simply expect good design everywhere."

Sabi is a Palo Alto-based new company founded by entrepreneur Assaf Wand.

Section
Design, News
Published
27 Jan 2012
Location
Palo Alto
Holster Folio,
Weekly pill carrier
Testo alternativo Immagine Holster Folio, Weekly pill carrier
Holster Folio, Weekly pill carrier
Testo alternativo Immagine Holster Folio, Weekly pill carrier

In praise of lost time

Facebook Timeline is an exemplary bit of interaction design that does little to advance the timeline formally. Yet it might alter the nature of human memory itself. A design report from Palo Alto by Dan Hill

An interview with Nicholas Felton

Accompanying our review of Facebook Timeline, Domus interviews lead designer Nicholas Felton about filtering the noise of social media and mirroring personal memory. Features exclusive early sketches of Timeline. A design report from Palo Alto by Dan Hill

Open Source Design 04: The architecture of Facebook

The arbiter of social sharing has decided to release its own designs for Web servers—and the buildings that house them. Detailed instructions and drawings now online. An architecture report from Palo Alto by Alexis Madrigal

Add your annotation here
Testo alternativo Immagine
Testo alternativo Immagine Close
Testo alternativo Immagine