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Explorez tous les épisodes du podcast Design Darlings

Plongez dans la liste complète des épisodes de Design Darlings. Chaque épisode est catalogué accompagné de descriptions détaillées, ce qui facilite la recherche et l'exploration de sujets spécifiques. Suivez tous les épisodes de votre podcast préféré et ne manquez aucun contenu pertinent.

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TitreDateDurée
Analog Nostalgia and a Liminal Longing for 90s Design10 Jun 202600:55:35

We’re living in a moment where recent history feels lost but still recoverable. The 90s are close enough to feel familiar, and distant enough to feel like a mirage in the desert of all things digital. Turning away from the endless algorithmic feeds, we long for that era of the last genuine analog culture. That final decade of the 20th century has become like the secret garden… a walled off sanctuary where things were built by hand, patina’d by imperfection, and steeped over time. While waiting for the photos to develop and the movie to hit VHS, we were using technology without being possessed by it. Can we recover the liminal spaces and a design sense that existed before doom scrolling? 

Topics Referenced: 

Liminal Spaces 

The Lisa Frank Mystery 

Malls coming back

Memphis Design Group

Apple Clamshell Computers

Jonny Ives

Allie Miller is a designer, researcher, and strategist who believes in the power of design to foster understanding and facilitate meaningful change. She holds a Master’s of Industrial Design from Georgia Tech, bringing human-centered thinking and a system lens to every conversation—and your podcast feed.

Robyn Richardson is an experience design strategist, tech consultant, TEDx speaker, and Graduate Professor at Georgetown University. She holds an MFA in Design Management from SCAD and has spent her career making design thinking accessible, opinionated, and a little bit fun.

Wine About Design29 May 202601:00:21

Wine has always been two things at once: what's in the bottle and everything around it. In this episode of Design Darlings, we uncork the full design story of wine. Our guest Matthew Stebenne is a product-developer-slash-sommelier who brings rare fluency in both design craft and what's actually in your glass. He helps us decant each topic, even touching on the graphic design of labels—a surprisingly contested space where tradition, typography, and pure panache collide in a 4 inch square. We dig into ways that regional identity shapes great grapes and discuss why a Burgundy bowl looks nothing like a Champagne flute. Robyn makes a case for postmodernism as a quiet but undeniable force reshaping winemaking. Pour your favorite vino, then press play.

About the Hosts

Robyn Richardson is an experience design strategist, AI product developer, TEDx speaker, and Graduate Professor at Georgetown University. She holds an MFA in Design Management from SCAD and has spent her career making design thinking accessible, opinionated, and a little bit fun.

Allie Miller is a designer, researcher, and strategist who believes in the transformative power of design to solve complex problems. She holds a Master's in Design from Georgia Tech and brings human-centered thinking, a sharp eye for systems, and a commitment to meaningful change to every conversation—and your podcast feed.

About the Guest

Matthew Stebenne is a product manager and design strategist with a Master's in Design Management & Communications from Georgetown University and WSET wine certifications—both earned with Distinction. He sits at a rare intersection of design craft and sensory expertise, which means he can critique your wine label and what's inside the bottle.

Fashion is Art, Design, and Media Machine15 May 202600:55:52

Fashion is a cultural phenomenon. A mix of design, photography, style, and setting, a garment isn't just an isolated confabulation of fabric — it's an experience, an aspiration, a mini movie in a single snap. This episode uses the Met Gala and the long-awaited Devil Wears Prada 2 to interrogate what happens when fashion stops being worn and starts being performed... for the camera, for the meme, for the morning-after discourse. Who is at the helm of the design dialogue? Are the editors and critics steeped in true design knowledge of craft and material science being replaced by an algorithm competing for clicks? In this episode we ask the question: is fashion art, is it content, or have we made it impossible to tell the difference?

The Cult of Big Water Bottle and the Design of Hydration01 May 202600:59:57

Over the millennia, our humble water bottle had a serious glow-up. The modern metal tumbler is an innovation in thermodynamics that you tote from the farmers market to your freeway commute. But somewhere between the Stanley craze and the Hydro Flask wars, this utilitarian object became a full-on totem: color-dropped like a sneaker, curated like a handbag, plastered with stickers that scream I have opinions about oat milk. This episode, designer Vidya Mantrala joins us to unpack how a heat-transfer workaround became the bumper sticker of the body — a walking mood board that also hydrates you.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

Show Note Links: 

The Surprisingly Long History of Bottled Water

Why Did Stanley Water Bottles Suddenly Become a Cultural Phenomenon? 

The Buy Guide - The Story of The Cup

GSD&M Marketing Case Study 

Maker and Machine: The History Behind Design's Most Dramatic Relationship09 Apr 202601:13:06

From the steam-powered chaos of the 18th century to the silicon-fueled frenzy of the digital age, humans have always met technological upheaval with the same cocktail of terror, wonder, and remarkable adaptation. Each industrial revolution didn’t just rewire economies — it rewired identities, aesthetics, social structures, and what it means to be human. Luddites smashed looms and Cubists fragmented reality in response to mechanized warfare. Now, as AI reshapes the landscape yet again, history whispers its familiar truth: the most interesting story was always about us.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

Links and References:

Design Grind: The Aesthetics of Coffee House Culture27 Mar 202601:04:31

This week our hosts discuss a caffeinated story arc covering early 2000s coffee houses to the design-ification of coffee hustle vibes. Did the social media girl boss grind aesthetic hijack the formerly cozy couch setting of your favorite spot? Are we coming full circle with a return to the book store hangout that defined the late 90s? Grab your favorite brew and sit for this open mic coffee house revival. 


At the news desk, we cover the fashion and production design of the 98th Academy Awards, and how a partnership announcement between NVIDIA and Adobe could change our design workflows.

Links: 

NVIDIA and Adobe Partnership Announcement 

Oscars 2026 First Look: This Year, the Stage Is a “Sanctuary of Celebration” 


Light My Fire: How Objects of Function become Markers of Identity20 Mar 202600:48:02

Can something as functional as fire have design? This episode asks how the invention of matches and lighters sparked from a basic necessity–like lighting candles, lamps, and tobacco– into statements of self expression. Join the discussion as we examine how lighters and candles expanded beyond functional objects from the 1800s into modern designs of personal vibes and aesthetics.


A Brief History of Flame

Brief History of Matches and Lighters

BIC Timeline

AD Set Tour- Wuthering Heights

It’s Design, Darling 20 Mar 202600:26:10

This first episode introduces our podcast premise, our hosts, and posits the big question- what IS design?  We consider the 4 orders of design and their place in brand development, while also considering how human cultures developed the original modes of design. Listen for fun and insights from this friendly duo and look to their show notes for inspiration and links to extra content. 

LINKS: 

Wicked Problems in Design Thinking (4 orders of design) 

Dieter Rams 10 Principles of Good Design

Victor Papanek- Design for the Real World

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