British industrial designer (b. 1967), head of design at Apple from 1997 to 2019, whose work — by his own account — draws directly from Rams's ten principles and whose career demonstrates both the principles' influence and the difficulty of sustaining them under commercial pressure.
Jony Ive is the British-born industrial designer whose tenure as head of design at Apple, from 1997 to 2019, produced some of the most commercially successful and culturally influential products of the digital era — the iMac, iPod, iPhone, iPad, and Apple Watch, among others. Ive has publicly and repeatedly credited Dieter Rams as the primary inspiration for his design philosophy, with Apple's early product language — white surfaces, restrained forms, elimination of visual ornament — drawing directly from Braun's design vocabulary of the 1960s and 1970s. The Ive-Rams relationship is both the clearest modern evidence of Rams's influence and a complicated case study in how the ten principles translate — and sometimes fail to translate — across contexts.
Jony Ive
In The You On AI Field Guide
Ive's early work at Apple, particularly the iMac G3 (1998) and the iPod (2001), bore visible stylistic debts to Rams's Braun products. The iPod's