Window Watching

Focus sur Michael Wolf, un photographe allemand vivant à Hong Kong et dont le travail se porte sur la place de l’homme : son mode de vie au sein des grandes villes. Avec cette intéressante série appelée « Window Watching », ce dernier a capturé des scènes de vie de ses voisins qu’il a pu observer depuis chez lui.

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Martell XO Rise Above by James Gray

Voici en exclusivité la dernière campagne pour la marque Martell. Réalisée par James Gray qui collabore pour la seconde fois avec le directeur de la photographie Darius Khondji, cette vidéo « Rise Above » célèbre ceux qui ont su trouver leurs ailes sur une musique interprétée par le London Symphony of Orchestra.

Mention légales : Ce film concerne la promotion de l’alcool et ne doit pas être vu par quiconque n’ayant pas l’âge légal d’achat d’alcool dans le pays de visualisation.

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Table-gami

Origami often has the connotation of lightness and fragility, but the MIura table is capable of holding weight up to an astonishing 176 lbs! The design, inspired by the origami fold of the same name, transforms from a flat sheet of paper into a functional, robust piece of furniture in one quick, straightforward folding process. Easy to transport or store, and even easier to assemble!

Designer: Forrest Radford


Yanko Design
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(Table-gami was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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The Germ-inator

The HH system offers instant hand disinfection for hospital staff and patient visitors in a more cleanly, fast, and efficient process. Users simply place their hands directly over the unit where two functional solutions are distributed- a hydro-alcoholic solution and plastic micro-ball solution. After scrubbing and washing, users can then place their hands under the unit where a UV DEL light indicates with a white glow areas where bacteria may still exist.

Designer: Diacre Nicolas


Yanko Design
Timeless Designs – Explore wonderful concepts from around the world!
Yanko Design Store – We are about more than just concepts. See what’s hot at the YD Store!
(The Germ-inator was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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Goedzak by Waarmakers

Goedzak by Waarmakers

Dutch designers Waarmakers have created sustainable rubbish sacks for discarding unwanted items in good condition, in the hope that they’ll be picked up by a new owner instead of ending up at a landfill site.

Once full, the bags with transparent panels are left in the street along with normal refuse so passers-by can pick them up and make use of their contents. The items are kept clean and dry but still visible, and if they remain in place when the refuse collection truck passes then they will be taken away with the rest of the rubbish.

Goedzak by Waarmakers

The project aims to introduce a more sustainable method of waste disposal along with a benevolent attitude towards providing potentially useful items for others.

“We started out by trying to make a product that would require the least bit of effort for all involved, so lowering the threshold to act altruistically for the user as much as possible by making it the same act as taking out the trash,” Simon Akkaya of Waarmakers told Dezeen.

The word goedzak means “do-gooder” in the Netherlands, and also combines the Dutch words for “good” and “bag”. The designers plan to collaborate with a chain of second-hand shops in Amsterdam called Kringloop Het Goed whereby the bags are picked up and taken to their stores, and the items are sorted and resold or recycled from there.

Goedzak by Waarmakers

Waarmakers comprises Maarten Heijltjes and Simon Akkaya, two graduates of TUDelft in the Netherlands. The Goedzak idea was part of Akkaya’s graduation project entitled Design for Altruism, which aimed to “design products that stimulate people to act to benefit others, preferably complete strangers.”

Waarmakers sent us the following text:


Goedzak is a special garbage bag for items that are still useable. It’s a friendly way to offer products a second chance and stimulate sustainable behavior.

Goedzak by Waarmakers

Whether it’s that purple vase your sister-in-law got you, or that particular coffee-pad-loving coffeemachine (you know the one) that’s been lying in the basement for ages; everybody owns items that are no longer of value to them.

Every now and then we throw out these items, while they still might be of value and/or useful to others. These items disappear in grey garbage bags and end up on trash piles. Goedzak offers these items a second chance. Goedzak stimulates people to dispose of their products in a more conscious and sustainable way. Goedzak can extend the products’ lifetime.

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Bangkok’s Design Houses: Studio Aeroplane, FiF House, OpenDream and Sync

Studio_Aeroplane_Working.jpegStudio Aeroplane hard at work at their Bangkok-based studio. Image courtesy of Studio Aeroplane.

Over the month I spent in Bangkok, I visited three design studios and a fledgling co-working space. All of them were in houses. In New York City, where I have spent my entire creative career, design studios are in spaces…big spaces, long spaces, industrial spaces, tight spaces…but spaces. Office spaces. You make them what you want, but they are fairly raw and often impersonal. Going to a place of design creativity and having it be a home feels very different.

I had been in Bangkok a week and a half, recovering from a month in Myanmar, when I finally met up with some Thai designers. I met Orn from Studio Aeroplane through mutual Facebook friends. Would I be interested in coming to their favorite Isan food stand? They would have to meet me at the subway station and take me the rest of the way…there was no way to really describe the location, tucked under the highway, a block or so from the main road. I’ve added an edited screengrab in case you’re in the area and find yourself hungry.

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And would I mind if she invited some other friends of hers, also designers? No. No…I would not mind at all.

Soon I found myself at a table, staring face to face with a well-grilled snakehead fish, his mouth crammed with lemon grass, my mouth crammed with snakehead fish. Around the rickety table were my new Thai design friends. We shared a wonderful meal and plenty of talk about design and the global economy. Over the next weeks, I would visit some of their studios, visit their student reviews and tour their national design center. This was just the beginning.

Later that week I visited Studio Aeroplane. Like many smaller studios, there are a small number of principals and they scale up with freelancers. The principals, Orn and Saranont, are both Thai natives, who met in New York City. Orn grew up in New Zealand. We got connected because she went to my alma mater, Pratt and it is a small world, after all. Orn worked in New York City for several years in Interior Design before deciding to return to her roots with her boyfriend Saranont, who grew up in Bangkok and stayed for his design undergraduate degree. Saranont went to ITP at NYU and worked at Antenna design. It was slightly surreal to be sitting at a down-and-dirty food stall in the backstreets of Bangkok with two designers with such pedigrees. I was thrilled to get invited to their studio…after a few months of traveling I was starved for creative and intellectual company.

Since I’m from New York I’ll describe my trip there in New York City equivalents…although there is really no New York equivalent to the experience of getting to their studio. Imagine taking a sparkling above ground subway to Union Square, except that Union Square is somehow on the East River. There I met up with Orn and Saronont and took a tiny boat across the river to the Bangkok equivalent of Queens, getting off on a tiny dock onto the back patio of a new high-rise development, with a pool, nice outdoor furniture and a huge parking lot. The boat is just for people who live in their building. The boatman knows your face. If I wasn’t with Orn or Saranont I would have been turned away.

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The studio is more than a studio…it’s a one bedroom on a high floor, overlooking the city and the river. They can sleep there and sometimes do. The rest of the apartment is filled with books and two computers, the walls filled with printouts of interiors they are working on, and posters from past shows. The colors, the textures, the computer programs, all of it felt like apple pie from my mother’s kitchen…comforting, invigorating, familiar. It felt like home in the sense of a familiar feel—it was a design studio, like all other design studios. And it was an actual home. While they didn’t live there, they basically lived there. As you can see from their facebook feed, Studio Aeroplane’s work is world-class.

The interfaces and spaces they’ve designed are clean and classic…which has worked against them from time to time. It seems that their clean aesthetic isn’t always accepted, as there is a desire to clutter them up or dumb them down…all in the name of making things easier to “get” for average Thai person. I have engaged in similar conversations here in the States. Saranont and I had a good rant about de-skilling people through over-design and the dangers of removing any opportunity for discovery.

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PASSAGEN Interior Design Week 2013

An exhibition event focusing on current trends in design –
particularly interior design. The exhibitors are international
manufacturers, fur..