The designer speaks the language of aesthetic utilitarianism. His personal curation is deliberate, refined and sophisticated. He does not buy things frivolously and he does not buy frivolous things. He sweats details — the taper of a jacket, the visual balance of an end table‘s heft, the draw of a pen‘s ink. Because of this, he is inevitably the hardest man on the holiday gift list to buy for.
The key to mastering the designer’s gift domain is finding goods that have a practical use, are realized with an artistic vision, and are manufactured with quality materials and a plainspoken design. We’re talking about some of the best creations ever, made by men like Charles and Ray Eames, Dieter Rams and Jonathan Ives. But don’t be intimidated. The items below fit the man who seeks out gear with practicality, nuance and durability, all captured unobtrusively, with good design.
Apple iPad Pro

Apple is the postmodern poster child of clean design, and the iPad Pro is their latest device to awe users with its purity in engineering. The sleek tablet packs a hardware punch, with an A9X chip good for 1.8 times the CPU processing speed of the iPad Air 2. It’s compatible with the Apple keyboard and pen, has a battery life of 10 hours and can connect to wi-fi or cellular networks. The 32GB model is laughably light in storage, so make sure you spring for the 128GB version.