biography
Born in Wiesbaden, Germany in 1932, Dieter Rams is a German industrial designer who trained and worked as an architect for a few years until he joined the consumer electronics manufacturer Braun.
As head of design at Braun, Dieter emerged as one of the most influential industrial designers of the late 20th century by defining an elegant, legible, yet rigorous visual language for its products. He is also credited with the memorable phrase “Weniger, aber besser” which basically translates into “Less, but better”. Dieter used graphic design, form, proportion, and materiality to create order within his designs. His work does not try to be the center of attention; rather he allows his work to become part of the environment through precision and order.
During his forty-year tenure at Braun, Dieter and his team designed many iconic devices ranging from record players to shavers and juicers that are elegant and versatile. Rams’ objective was to design useful products, which would be easy to operate. His designs always looked effortless with an exquisite simplicity borne from rigorous tests and experiments with new materials and an obsessive attention to detail to ensure that each piece appeared flawlessly coherent.
In the design circle, Dieter Rams is very well known for his Ten Principles for Good Design, aka Ten Commandments of Design. These ten principles defined Dieter Rams’ approach to “good design.” This was back in the late 1970s, and the principles still apply to how new generations of designers approach ‘good design”.
Dieter Rams remains an enduring inspiration for younger designers, notably Jonathan Ive and Jasper Morrison, who have acknowledged his influence in their work at Apple and Rowenta respectively.
FAMOUS WORK
Ten Principles for Good Design, DL 5 Combi Shaver (1957), Atelier 1 Radio and record player (1957), L 2 Speaker (1958), TP 1 radio/phonograph combination (1959), Vitsoe 606 Shelving Unit (1960), RT 20 Tischsuper Radio (1961), T 1000 World Receiver (1963), KMM 2 Coffee Grinder (1969), HLD 4 Hairdryer (1970), MPZ 21 Multipress Citromatic Citrus Press (1972)