Duty-Free Takes to the Skies: The Mile High Shopping Club
Posted in: UncategorizedIn this age of capitalism, it seems if you build something big enough somebody will put a store in it.
Korean Air has recently announced they’ll be installing duty free shops in their forthcoming Airbus A380 jumbo jets. The shops were apparently designed at least in part by cosmetics company L’Oréal’s design department, and while details are light, it appears from the photo that they’ll incorporate a pivoting countertop/display unit that presumably stows away during take-off and landing. And as you can see in the video below, to prevent breakage during turbulence, all of booze bottles will be kitted out with magnets on the bottom, holding them fast to metal shelves.
via flight global
Curated by a group of young Venetian designers, Edition of 6 took the simple idea of pairing Italian artisans with six young international designers to create a limited edition collection highlighting the traditions, materials and high-quality finishes of Italian craftsmanship. Each object plays to the strength of the pairings between design and craft. Master glassblowers, rare and precious marble processing, hand-wrought metalwork all find a place in contemporary design pieces. Check the jump for more images!
Edition of 6
Wannabee Gallery
Via Massimiano, 25
Ventura Lambrate, Milan
“Crystal Ball,” Mateo Zorzenoni with Pietro Viero + Sartori Marmi
Daily Obsesh – Pendleton Meets Opening Ceremony Mens Jacquard Socks
Posted in: UncategorizedIf someone looked at a Navajo blanket through a kaleidoscope, they would find the design on this super awesome sock. Opening Ceremony, the almost nauseatingly hip concept department store found in Tokyo and New York, is working with Pendleton, a nauseatingly hip maker of woolen sartorial treats, to create a capsule collection. Inspired by tribal designs (much like Pamela Love), together they have created a collection of knit items including these wonderful socks. The cool thing about socks is their multi-purpose and multi-occasion usage. Whether with Frye Engineer boots at a festival, with Birkenstocks at Burning Man, or by themselves while you’re making coffee in the kitchen, this accessory adds pizzazz to the moment. Treat your feet! And grab your mama a pair too for Mother’s Day!
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Ask Unclutterer: Can a tchochke-free home be warm and inviting?
Posted in: UncategorizedReader Helen submitted the following to Ask Unclutterer:
In the process of getting rid of dust collectors around the house, I find that it can start to somewhat lack personality. I don’t really like having photos around and quite like having bare walls – I could quite easily become a minimalist. I have a couple of prints but these do look rather mass-produced. I’d love some suggestions for adding warmth and humanity to my home without adding clutterful tchochkes.
I’ve been in some minimalist homes that feel warm and inviting, so I’ve never been convinced that tchochkes are a requirement for comfort. Furniture size and materials play a larger role in creating an inviting environment than ceramic kittens.
As long as your furniture is appropriately scaled for the room, or slightly over-sized, you usually won’t feel like a space is bare or cold. If your furniture is right for the room but you still feel that the space is uninviting, a floor covering might be a better alternative for you than hanging artwork on the wall. A textured carpet could be all you need to warm up the space.
Personally, I’m against the idea of having tchochkes for the sake of having tchochkes. If you have a gewgaw or a decoration in your home, it should be because you love it and find it inspiring or entertaining or treasure it deeply. Your home is your refuge from the outside world, and everything in it should be there because you have consciously chosen it to be a part of your sanctuary.
Also, consider playing with paint color on your walls. A white with a hint of gray in it can feel clean but a little warmer than a bright white. Different shades of white in squares painted directly on a bright white background wall could be interesting, like Kazimir Malevich’s famous suprematist painting. Or, paint one wall in a room an intense, non-white color and keep the other walls white in sharp contrast. In our previous home, we had the walls painted like a Mondrian painting. Most walls were white, but if there was a small wall, we painted it in a primary color.
I hope I was of some help, Helen. Please check the comments for even more suggestions from our readers. Thank you for submitting your question for our Ask Unclutterer column.
Do you have a question relating to organizing, cleaning, home and office projects, productivity, or any problems you think the Unclutterer team could help you solve? To submit your questions to Ask Unclutterer, go to our contact page and type your question in the content field. Please list the subject of your e-mail as “Ask Unclutterer.” If you feel comfortable sharing images of the spaces that trouble you, let us know about them. The more information we have about your specific issue, the better.
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Food, Deconstructed
Posted in: Dale Edwin Murray, david schwen, fast-food, Type SanwichesSynchronicity is an ideal term to describe the chance of stumbling upon these parallel artistic finds this morning. Above we have one of a series titled “Fast Food” by Dale Edwin Murray. Below, represents artist David Schwen’s “Type Sandwiches” collection, whose motto is simply: Make Something Cool Everyday. From what we can see, they’ve both […]
Rui Alves: tour chair
Posted in: Milan Design Week 11, rui alvesThe Designers Accord Sustainability in 7 video series delivers a daily dose of design inspiration by today’s leading sustainability experts. Join in the conversation as they share 7 things every designer should consider when integrating sustainability into design practice.
In our second Friday edition of Sustainability in 7, Autodesk’s Dawn Danby explores life-cycles thinking as a design principle, covering the ground from inspiration to longevity. The message that “we have to look at the whole system” is certainly one we’ve heard before, but Dawn offers suggestions for how to do so.
About Dawn Danby
Recognized by Fast Company in 2009 as one of the 100 Most Creative People in Business, Dawn Danby has spent over a decade working in sustainable design and strategy. With Autodesk’s Sustainability team, she works to integrate ecological and human impact considerations into the design practice and digital tools of 10 million designers, architects, and engineers worldwide. Her team recently launched the Autodesk Sustainability Workshop, an online platform showing young engineers how to apply sustainability to real-world design and engineering problems. Danby has an industrial design degree from RISD and an MBA in Sustainable Business from the Bainbridge Graduate Institute.
Dawn on Twitter: @altissima
Sustainability Workshop on Twitter: @ecoworkshop
The Designers Accord is a global coalition of designers, educators, and business leaders working together to create positive environmental and social impact. Adopters of the Designers Accord commit to five guidelines that provide collective and individual ways to integrate sustainability into design. The Designers Accord provides a participatory platform with online and offline manifestations so that members have access to a community of peers who share methodologies, resources, and experiences around environmental and social issues in design.
Spica Light – Threaded
Posted in: Spica LightInteressante lampada a sospensione disegnata da Iacoli & Mcallister per Thomas Sires. La base è quella della loro tradizionale Spica Light con l’aggiunta di intrecci in cotone colorato. La trovate in vendita qui.
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