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  1. Max Huber. Max Huber was one of the pre-eminent twentieth century Swiss graphic designers. He designed art covers for music magazines, records and the set stage for concerts. Besides, he exhibited his work internationally and worked as an art instructor. On June 5, 1919, Max Huber was born in Baar, Switzerland.

  2. Aug 24, 2016 · The designer Ralph Rucci, also a friend of Huber's, recalls that when they first met, at an elite dinner party in the West Village circa 1988, "Max became hypnotic, telling his story. He had a ...

    • La Mer Is Born
    • The Death of Huber
    • La Mer’s Secrets
    • Psychic (and Physics) Connections
    • Why La Mer Costs So Much
    • The Future of La Mer

    Skincare is traditionally created by chemists, but Huber was a physicist who understood the effects of light, sound and energy. He lived on the coast in San Diego, and was always drawn to the power and life force of the sea. "The sea covers most of the planet, and algae makes up a huge part of the earth in biological terms," Paul Tchinnis, La Mer's...

    When Huber died in 1991, the secrets of La Mer were left with his daughter, who had worked alongside her father creating La Mer. Or so she thought.The trouble was that Huber had no notebooks—he worked off instinct and his own internal knowledge. It didn't take long for his daughter to realise the brand was destined to die with her father, as she ha...

    When Bevacqua arrived on the West Coast and witnessed where Huber made Crème de La Mer, he was shocked. “[It was the] most bizarre thing I've ever seen. The room was lined with little buckets of cream—there were weird sounds and odours and pulsing light," he recollects. "I spent two weeks with Max's daughter, since she had stood by [her] father's s...

    Given his background as a chemist, Bevacqua was skeptical of Huber’s recordings (that sound like bubbling and gurgling) and the lights he exposed each batch of broth to during the fermentation process. "I was fascinated by the light and sound, but it didn't seem very scientific," he admitted. The trouble was that even with Huber's fermentation, the...

    Crème de la Mer isn't cheap—it costs $360 for 2 oz., while a small .5 oz jar will set you back $95. It's also shrouded in mystery; the brand doesn't share results from clinical trials, and it doesn't really talk about specific ingredients (even though the range draws on actives like retinol and AHA). Instead, purchases are fuelled by positive consu...

    Since its beginnings in San Diego, the La Mer brand has found alternate ways to deliver the broth, be it via a more potent concentrate or in encapsulated powder form in the eye cream, which offers a slow release of the broth into the delicate eye area. There's even La Mer makeup: Skintint SPF30was the first product to really hook me. Since fermenta...

  3. OF THE SEA. Our journey began when Dr. Max Huber suffered burns in a lab accident and was inspired to create his own destiny. Aerospace Physicist by day, star-gazer and dreamer by night, he hoped to unlock the legendary revitalizing powers of the sea he held so dear.6,000 experiments and 12 years of searching led to the epiphany of a lifetime ...

    • Who was Max Huber?1
    • Who was Max Huber?2
    • Who was Max Huber?3
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  4. www.moma.org › artists › 2745Max Huber - MoMA

    Apr 6, 2007 · Max Huber (5 June 1919 – 16 November 1992) was an influential Swiss graphic designer. Wikidata Q612578 View or edit the full Wikipedia entry. Information from ...

  5. May 22, 2020 · These days, product companies seem more interested in refining interfaces and simplifying user experiences. In this ninth issue of Inspired Design Decisions, Andy Clarke will explain how studying the work of Max Huber — one of the less well known but most distinguished Swiss designers — will teach you how to turn mundane subjects into exciting visual communication.

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  7. Max Huber and his graphic works. 1965. Flyer. Born in Baar, Switzerland, 1919. He studied at the Zurich School of Arts & Crafts, under Alfred Willimann. In 1940 he moved to Milan to work at Studio Boggeri and attended the Brera Academy. He brought a major contribution to the Italian graphic design imprinting. In 1942 he came back to Switzerland ...