Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Design Apparat at Temporary Museum for New Design 2009


In a preview at the Temporary Museum for New Design 2009, Design Apparat presents its first collection of furniture for the home inspired by a renewed look at Bulgarian design in the second half of the twentieth century. The stylistic traits of Bulgarian interiors of the 20th century provide the starting point for the design approach initiated by a new brand in the furniture sector, Design Apparat. The objective is to elaborate new forms and designated uses, starting from this scenario, in line with the expectations and tastes of the 21st century


Design Apparat is a brand created by Nido –the leading importer of Italian furniture in Bulgaria- and by Valiyan – a manufacturer of both mass-produced and custom furniture for the local market. The collection is designed by Mirko Tattarini, designer and professor at ISIA Florence. The strategic design activities are handled by the Lagos Design Studios, an Italian design consultant that has followed all the phases of the creation of Design Apparat: from the initial concept to the definition of the brand, all the way to the creation of the coordinated images and the design of prototypes, contributing consolidated design methodologies taken from the tradition of “Made in Italy” design.

The Design Apparat products are born of combining elements of local charm with a working method as close as possible to the tradition of Italian design, in what amounts to a local rationalism crossed with a series of later, updated traits of identity. The combination of factors influencing the design is unique, bringing together the privileged situation of local availability (limitation of costs and consumption of the sector) and a painstaking selection of materials – whose points of origin and manufacture are found in the furniture districts of Bulgaria- with technological execution that meets the highest standards worldwide, so as to satisfy the highest expectations of the best possible duration over time, in such as way as to lengthen the lifecycle of the entire project.

Bansko-Boo Collection

Bansko-Boo – Arm Chair & Ottoman

Plywood, chrome steel legs, and polyurethane foam. Available in natural flax, grey corduroy velvet, grey with eco-leather stripes, orange with eco-leather stripes.

Bansko-Boo – Chair

Plywood and tubular steel.

Secret – A Multifunctional Wall Panel

Plywood panel covered with polished, button-padded eco-leather, with special buttons provided with LED internal lighting. A series of accessories get additional features such as clothes hanger, umbrella stand and wall pocket.
Available in white, cream and grey.




Bansko-Boo – Arm Chair & Ottoman




Bansko-Boo – Chair



Images: Fabio Luciani Comunicazione D’impresa

Monday, February 23, 2009

Modern Porch Swing

modern porch swing

This one will stop you in your tracks. The artist-designers certainly deliver to the tag line "modern furniture that hasn't forgotten where it's come from. " The founders of Woodia La Piccolo, Jermey Sisto, Eric Michael Cole and Bruno Acalinas share a love of functional art and a dedication to fine craftsmanship and eco-friendly materials. This modern porch swing is constructed using Forest Stewardship Certifed reclaimed teak and stainless steel components. Stay tuned for an entire line of unique home, office and commerical space furniture.

Clever Cardboard

Some of us need a little help keeping our homes in order. Especially when some of us live with messy musical types who manage to cover any available surface with a combination of spare change, crumpled receipts, cords, keyboards and the occasional guitar.

Wallpockets01

Whilst I'm not too sure how to handle the stray musical instruments that plague my apartment, I suspect the other usual suspects could be taken care of with a few pieces of cardboard and a very clever design.

Wallpockets02

Wallpockets are the creation of Shea Springer and Tim Karoleff, both industrial design students who are already making a name for themselves as Ampersand. Inspired by clusters of barnacles and simple geometric shapes, their die-cut cardboard Wallpockets are part wall art, part ingenious storage solution.

Wallpockets03

With the ability to be manufactured in any combination of colours, these little guys are also designed with a flat pack adhesive-free assembly. What's not to love?

"Garden and Sea"

Architecture by Takao Shiotsuka

The home was built on an angle to make the most of water views. Very minimalist and modern.

Seaside_05Seaside_06Seaside_04Seaside_11 Seaside_22Seaside_16 Seaside_29 Seaside_14 Seaside_13 Seaside_09



Wednesday, February 18, 2009

JUXTAPOSED:Religion

mm_religion_01_large.jpg
5,084,000,000 people 5,360 pages 3,700 years 243 countries 7 books 1 shelf. San Francisco designers Mike
and Maaike have created JUXTAPOSED:Religion the first in a series of Juxtaposed curated bookshelves for
blankblank. The shelves hold the world’s most influential religious texts.
Mike and Maaike Website

Monday, February 16, 2009

Free plans for eco homes



Incorporating green design principles into new or existing homes is increasingly de rigueur among the growing masses of eco-minded consumers, but figuring out the logistics isn't always straightforward. Working on the belief that green design should be available to all, FreeGreen is a new site that offers free, downloadable green house plans.

Free Green's team of engineers and designers works with industry-leading product manufacturers to create home designs that incorporate different combinations of products, materials and vendors. It also provides 3-D images, energy simulations and written descriptions to help consumers find the right fit for their lifestyle. Two models are currently available on the site, with more coming soon. The first, called the Healthy Family model, combines comfortable contemporary living with superior indoor air quality and low energy bills. With functional options such as mudrooms, homework nooks and home offices, Healthy Family homes are intended for young, three- to five-person families in cold to mixed climates. The modern Suburban Loft, on the other hand, features open floor plans and high ceiling loft spaces. Intended for first-time buyers or downsizing baby boomers, the Suburban Loft plan is designed to perform efficiently even in cold northern climates. Coming soon is the Smart Box, which FreeGreen aims to make a 1,200 to 1,400 sq. ft. home that can be built for less than USD 100 per square foot.

Consumers who download FreeGreen's plans get not just the very detailed plan set, but also an energy report specific to the town or city they select and a welcome packet with additional information, tools and resources. FreeGreen's team can also modify or customize any of its plans. Launched just a few weeks ago, FreeGreen relies on paid placement from product manufacturers, but it takes pains to be transparent about the products it displays, offering users ratings from established third-party green certification programs such as LEED and NAHB and research performance data through its own energy modelling reports.

With the clean, eco-friendly look of FreeGreen's designs, there's no doubt they'll fit nicely into what our sister site trendwatching.com would call the new, eco-iconic world of consumers eager to flaunt their greenness. Besides the obvious advertising opportunity for green product manufacturers, the next logical step is to focus on implementation. Builders around the globe: Who will be first to align with FreeGreen as your town's local green building expert...?

Website: www.freegreen.com
Contact: info@freegreen.com

Sunday, February 15, 2009

Reuben Wood Salon - Manchester


Image

Peter Masters of Burned Toast Design is known for his elegant

bent-wood and curved-acrylic tables and chairs, but the Manchester,

UK-based furniture designer can be big, bold and public, if required.

A recent re-vamp of the funky Reuben Wood Hair Salon in Manchester’s

city centre shows that Masters has the talent to create an entire

environment that is eclectic, electric and elegant.

Image

Using simple curved mirrors, he created the storage units necessary to

hide the day-to-day paraphernalia of a busy hair salon. The creation of

the large mirrored surfaces dictated that everything else needed to be

streamlined and toned-down so that the space would not appear too busy

or scattered when clients and staff would populate it.

Image

The long blue table in the middle of the salon is an industrialized version

of Masters’ Horse design. The mirrors in this station are removable

which makes it easy to change the look of the space without destroying

the overall feel. Dashes of pink, green and blue play off the larger

surfaces of black and white, and create focal points in the mirrored environment.

Image

When making and designing furniture, Masters plays with a large variety

of materials, methods and technologies. Laminating plywood, casting resins

and metals, fabricating plastics and upholstery are all familiar to Masters,

as are using a machine created for violin manufacture or hand-crafting

custom pieces from sustainable materials. - Tuija Seipell

Source: www.thecoolhunter.net

Image