Flotspotting: Sleep-Inducing Chair Designs

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Midsummer though it may be, the international design community is as productive as ever, and—excuse the pun, if not the shameless self promotion—our sister portfolio site Coroflot is home to some of the hottest designs out there. I don’t know about anyone else, but I find this current heatwave to be absolutely exhausting, and frankly, a couple of ultra-plush furniture designs are making me sleepy just looking at them.

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First up, Tel Aviv’s Danna Kazir‘s no-frills “Peppi” couch consists of a giant down pillow atop a rocking chair frame.

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A Year from Monday

A classic anthology from the masterful mind of John Cage
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Best known as an avant-garde composer, John Cage spent his entire life writing, a fact often overshadowed by his achievements in music. “A Year from Monday,” an anthology of lectures and poems originally published in ’67, proves that genius is never bound to medium; his written work gives a glimpse into his creative mind.

Much of “A Year” is in the form of a ‘literary mosaic,’ Cage’s method of essentially compiling diary entries into a somewhat cohesive, visually-striking composition. Every fragment serves as a single thought or anecdote, sometimes referring to others but more often not. What results is a clear train of thought, laid out on a beautifully constructed page, allowing the reader to follow his ideas not as something he is telling you, but as an ideology that he is guiding you to find for yourself.

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Perhaps most valuable to fans of Cage’s music, his lecture to the Julliard class of ’52 serves as a manifesto of his understanding of sound. The piece, metrically arranged in columns to time to David Tudor’s piano playing, uses Buddhist anecdotes to attempt to explain his profound understanding of everything musical.

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Pick it up on Amazon to curl up with some brain food.


Sewing Furniture, Part 4: Unusual Medium-Sized Cabinets

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Continuing through the eBay wilderness, we find these unusual-looking pieces of sewing furniture. Check out this roll-top:

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If you look closely, you’ll see something very interesting—the roll-top is not split into two separate pieces, as the “open” photo might lead you to believe.

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Alter Store by 3Gatti Architecture Studio

Alter Store by 3Gatti

Naked mannequins sit on the walls and ceiling of this MC Escher-inspired clothes store in Shanghai.

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Designed by Rome and Shanghai architects 3Gatti Architecture Studio, the store is filled with clashing concrete staircases that display clothes and accessories.

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Fitting rooms and a stockroom are enclosed beneath the ascending stairs at the rear of the store.

Alter Store by 3Gatti

Smaller staircases at the front of the store cantilever out across the floor.

Alter Store by 3Gatti

Lengths of copper pipe provide banisters, as well as rails for hanging clothing.

Alter Store by 3Gatti

Other Shanghai projects recently featured on Dezeen include three aquatics stadiums and an office with a labia-like staircase – see all our stories about projects in Shanghai here.

Alter Store by 3Gatti

Photography is by Shen Qiang.

Alter Store by 3Gatti

Here’s some more text from the architects:


Alter
Concept store in Shanghai

Alter is a project for an alternative fashion store.

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Sonja Long, the owner, had a vision out of the main stream, a vision about inverted values, alternative beauties and subverted point of views.

Alter Store by 3Gatti

Despite the appearance actually Shanghai is a very conservative city, people seems not ready yet to accept many different ideas especially if against the main safe business values that dominate this town.

Alter Store by 3Gatti

Sonja is Shanghainese but she was crazy and brave enough to propose to her customers a new model of high-end fashion store with top quality products but completely alternative at the main global brands accepted by the modern rich Chinese shoppers.

Alter Store by 3Gatti

Francesco Gatti, the architect, is Roman and he was crazy and brave enough to realize into a space those ALTERnative feelings he share with Sonja.

Alter Store by 3Gatti

The design was fast and spontaneous, as usual Francesco designed like a child, without inhibitions.

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The space was small but needed a lot of functions and rooms, so was a natural gesture to develop a stair surface to cover the office and fitting rooms and at the same time exhibit the products in a multidimensional way.

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The philosophy of Alter, as the word say is to be and inspire an alternative world.

Alter Store by 3Gatti

So as a designer Francesco imagined an alternative architectural space like the ones in the drawings of Escher, where gravity and the rules of the normal world doesn’t exist anymore, where there is no “up” or “down”, no “left” or “right”, and where everything is possible.

Alter Store by 3Gatti

Following this idea in the Alter store the stair become an independent element capable to wrap the space or to fold like a peace of paper creating impossible environments… or maybe possible, in the Alter dream.

Alter Store by 3Gatti

Yes a dream; few months after the shop opening Francesco went to the cinema and discovered “Inception”, a movie about dreams where all the concept, from the stairs to the mirrors is strangely the same of ALTER… maybe he will be a good movie director.

Alter Store by 3Gatti

Alter credits:

Architecture firm: 3GATTI
Chief architect: Francesco Gatti
Project manager: Brendan Whitsitt
Collaborators: Kylin Cheung , Bonnie Zhou , Karina Samitha, Danny Leung, Priyanka Gandhi, Zenan nLi , Andrew Chow
Programme: Fashion store exhibition area (for dresses, shoes, jewelery, glasses, design toys, books), lounge area, DJ console, two fitting rooms, office room
Contractor: Suenpui Laam
Client: Sonja Long
Location: Xin Tian Di, Madang Road, Xintiandi Style Mall, Shanghai
Total area: 100 m²
Design period: Spring 2010
Construction period: Summer 2010
Shop opening: September 2010
Materials: Steel structure, concrete bricks, white terrazzo cement, wax, plasterboard, gray cement, epoxy, plywood, leather
Photographer: Shen Qiang


See also:

.

DURAS Daiba by
Chikara Ohno
Algebraic Variations by
Francesco Moncada
Unknown Union by
Rafael de Cárdenas

Device Design Day 2011: Six Questions for Leila Takayama

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In anticipation of Device Design Day 2011, we’ve partnered with Kicker Studio to bring you a series where speakers from this year’s conference reflect on six questions about design and their practice. D3 brings together visual, interaction and industrial designers for a multi-disciplinary conversation about the design of consumer electronics and objects with embedded technology.

As a special thank you to Core77 readers, get 10% off registration for this year’s Device Design Day with the code: FOC77! Register today!!

At this week’s MoMA opening of Talk to Me: Design and the Communication between People and Objects , we were excited to see some more conceptual devices and ideas that have helped drive our contemporary expectation for objects to interact and communicate with us. In two weeks, people who work every day to enrich our experience with technology will be gathering for the multi-disciplinary symposium, Device Design Day 2011! We’ve been chatting with all of this year’s speakers (see below) and today we’re excited to introduce Leila Takayama, a social scientist who’s work focuses on the way people interact with robots! Learn about the importance of flipping a coin, human-robot interaction experiments and the joys of sharing research with the world.

Leila Takayama joined Willow Garage in January 2009 as a Research Scientist in the area of human-robot interaction. With a background in Cognitive Science, Psychology, and Human-Computer Interaction, her current focus is understanding human encounters with robots in terms of how they perceive, understand and interact with robots. Among other things, she is working on teaching the robots some manners.

Read on for more from this year’s Device Design Day speakers:
Six Questions for Liz Bacon, Devise
Six Questions for Charles Goran, T-Mobile
Six Questions for Karen Kaushansky, Jawbone
Six Questions for Mike Kruzeniski, Microsoft
Six Questions for Branko Lukic, NONOBJECT
Six Questions for Cori Schauer, NASA

Kicker Studio: What is the most cherished product in your life? Why?

Leila Takayama: My coffee mug from New Zealand. This was a gift that was given to me to celebrate the publication of my first research paper when as an undergrad at UC Berkeley. My friend and co-author who gave me the mug is from New Zealand. I’m from Hawaii so we bonded over all things Pacific Islander.

She showed me how research is actually done, letting me learn by doing. She was extremely supportive and patient with me, even though she had no historical evidence that I’d actually be able to become a scientist. This was not a time efficient way for her to work on her dissertation, but she took the time out to mentor me through the research process anyway.

This mug is not only a very functional part of my research routine, holding the hot drinks that keep me going, but it’s also a sentimental reminder of what it was like that first time we had a success in getting to share our research findings with the rest of the world. It happens to have a nice fit for my hands, feels substantial without being too heavy and has survived many years of my clumsiness.

What’s the one product you wish you’d designed, and why?

I wish I’d designed the AeroPress. I’ve been using this beautifully simple coffee maker for many years now. It’s self-powered, quiet, easily washable, durable and doesn’t let me make bad coffee.

What excites you about being a social scientist? Why do you keep doing it?

I love learning about people and the seemingly nonsensical things they do, especially when encountering new technologies. I like to be able to prove myself wrong (as often happens with human-robot interaction experiments) and to really test out ideas.

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Daily Obsesh – Zara Wide Stripe Bikini

imageWith so many swimsuits to choose from this summer, why would you want to go with a bikini?


Well, for starters, it shows more skin. And we all know that can be a good thing … depending who you ask.


But second, we found this adorable striped number that we can’t believe costs less than 30 bucks for both the top and bottom! Sales rock.


So get your hands on this itty bitty bikini (and your body in it too) so you can flaunt what your momma gave you on the beach or at the pool. Ahh, we love the summer.



Where to BuyZara.com



Price – $25.98



Who Found ItSusanY was the first to add the ‘Wide Stripe Bikini‘ to the Hive.

Pencut

Raymay Fujii’s genius portable scissor design
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A simple solution for making scissors more portable, the Pencut by Raymay Fujii creatively consolidates to a pen-like form. Just remove the cap and slide up the flexible plastic handles and you’re ready for snipping. As the metal from the blades extends all the way in to the handle, the scissors have a nice weight and good cutting leverage.

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Around since 2008 in Japan, the $15 Pencut is now available for global delivery in green, pink or black from JetPens.com

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LES TWINS “Rug Dealers”

WOW, thats all i got to say

Designers pay tribute to Design Week editor


Dezeen Wire:
in this movie designers pay tribute to Design Week editor Lynda Relph-Knight, following the magazine’s final printed publication last month – see our earlier story.

After 22 years, Relph-Knight is leaving the magazine, which will continue as a web-only publication. Click here to read Relph-Knight’s farewell statement.

Dezeenwire

Back to Dezeen Wire »
Back to Dezeen »

Would You Kickstart a Bench? Orange22’s Dario Antonioni Wants to Know…

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Designer, entrepreneur and Core77 Design Awards Runner-Up Dario Antonioni of L.A.-based design firm Orange22 recently launched a Kickstarter campaign to produce a bench called “Botanist Minimal,” an extension of the established Botanist series (itself a spinoff of Orange22).

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Of course, there’s more to it than meets the eye:

The minimalistic design is based on a reduction based design process where we examined a typical bench and rigorously reduced it into its essential elements. In the case of Botanist Minimal, only two basic components are meaningful to produce a functional bench. Those components are 1) a bent wood top which transitions into the structural legs and 2) a center rib for additional stability and rigidity. The end result is beautiful with the two basic elements working harmoniously together.

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It’s certainly an elegant piece of design work—I’d sit on it and even consider putting it in my home—and I agree that “designing something that’s minimal doesn’t make it easy to manufacture,” but why use Kickstarter? Dario makes his case after the jump…

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