Redesigns of Living
From headphones to whiskey bottles to bespoke furniture, Joe Doucet is reimagining our world—one object at a time

Joe Doucet is a living blueprint for the 21st-century designer. He has produced brand identities for BMW, packaging for Procter & Gamble and concept appliances for Whirlpool and Braun. A fixture of the Brooklyn design scene, he exhibits his work around the world and, in 2010, curated a one-night show of designer-personalised Munny toys at the Ace Hotel New York that drew thousands, including midcentury modernist Vladimir Kagan. The 43-year-old Houston native has also launched Whyte Label, a high-end line of home furnishings made to order through his Manhattan-based Joe Doucet Studio (joedoucet.com), and created AMU, the first mobile phone game that takes place on the screen and in the world around us. Now, Doucet would like to tweak the way you think about his profession.
“Design is not just engineering and styling, but a way of approaching problems,” declares the multidisciplinarian, who rarely begins at the drawing board. “I start by writing a sentence or two about the objective, what the product should make people think or feel or do.”
Doucet, who holds more than 50 patents for his inventions, is particularly adept at reimagining everyday objects. Inspired by a box of letters his grandmother showed him, he developed the BlackBox, a printer for text messages that allows “you to reconstruct a relationship on cash register receipt paper”. The designer’s One Sense noise-cancelling headphones employ what he calls “nature’s warning signals, big jagged spikes and the colour red” in an eye shield suitable for the love child of Star Trek’s Geordi La Forge and Lady Gaga. And the hip-hop oligarchy gave props to Fetish, Doucet’s Brancusi-esque 24-karat-gold-plated ashtray that sells for $3,300. “That really bounced around Twitter,” he says with a laugh.
On weekend trips with his wife and two kids to their 1730s Dutch Colonial house in upstate New York, Doucet often ponders the future of design. “I was working on a stainless steel bar stool, and with rapid prototyping and on-demand manufacturing, I was able to have it made in one day,” he recalls. “Fairly soon, when you need a new silverware set, you will be able to download a pattern and print it out. Right now, the output of designers is things soon it will be intellectual property.”
Panerai, the one-time watchmaker for the Italian navy, created this striking edition of 50 pocket watches ($71,800) for men who appreciate the functionality of clean design—and a clean wrist. But the 3 Days Oro Rosso is not just a pretty face: Turn the 50-mm timepiece over and swing the back cover open to observe the polished finish and workings of the watch’s movement, its bridges and skeletonised barrels. It’s also very cool at night, sharply lit via an internal luminous disc that beams through the hour apertures. And while you’re at it, sure: Jump in and swim away—it’s also waterproof to 50 metres.
When it comes to downloading music, MP3s are cheap, convenient and play well on iPads and other mobile devices. But there’s just one thing: They leave out a lot of the musical information you’d get from a CD. And true high-resolution recordings—using either high bit-per-sample CD technology or Direct Stream Digital—bring you at least 128 times more sonic nuances than ordinary CDs.
Want to hear it? Unfortunately, the converters built into typical CD and MP3 players can’t handle high-res sound’s bit torrents. That’s where the DaVinci DAC (digital-to-analogue converter) comes in: It not only handles the torrent, but has a duet mode to smoothly clarify the sound of ordinary discs, as well.
Most of the DaVinci’s $31,000 price goes
into its circuitry, but Light Harmonic took pains with the design, too—you can rotate the upper deck to cantilever out or stack neatly on top of the lower one. Standard colours are black or silver, but they’ll work with you on that, in a wide array of custom shades. (lightharmonic.com )
Photographs: DaviD ArkyStyle director: Joseph DeacetisStylist: MeguMi eMoto for anDerson hopkins Photo assistant: Bryant carMona
Listen up: The 2015 Energica Ego motorcycle won’t produce that throaty, viscera-jumbling rumble you hear when you fire up a Harley. And it won’t let you feather the clutch as you cruise through town or downshift around a bend. Nor will it let you be the neighbourhood cool guy tuning the transmission in the driveway (for one thing, it doesn’t have any gears). But maybe you’re a different kind of cool guy.
This stunner—the first-ever Italian superbike to run exclusively on electricity—will travel about 100 miles on a full charge. And get you there in a blink: Top speed is 150 miles per hour, and it will jump to 60 mph in just over two seconds. It looks—and corners—the way any proper motorcycle should (brakes by Brembo, ABS by Bosch). But even at $28,000, direct from the factory in Modena, it’s better to be safe than sorry when it comes to judging the fervour behind Italian motorsport. After all, they do go fast.
Döttling also dressed up its safes to meet company. Karl Lagerfeld designed the limited edition Narcissus, which features reflective chrome-plated aluminum another comes adorned in pop art colours (Beyoncé owns one). Then there’s the Liberty Barcelona ($88,000 and up doettling.com ), a masculine, tufted-leather homage to Ludwig Mies van der Rohe’s classic 1929 chair. Döttling produces this showpiece in various sizes and with customised internal configurations. Want to secure that fine watch collection? It won’t just watch over your timepieces—it will wind them, too.