The Oasis of Aboukir green wall by Patrick Blanc

Patrick Blanc, the inventor of living walls, has completed his latest vertical garden, covering the side of a five-storey Parisian block with waves of 7600 plants (+ slideshow).

The Oasis of Aboukir by Patrick White for Paris Design Week

L’Oasis D’Aboukir (the Oasis of Aboukir) is a 25-metre-high green wall by botanist and researcher Patrick Blanc, which covers a building facade in the second arrondissement of the city.

The wall features plants from 237 different species and appears to grow up the facade in diagonal waves. It was planted in the spring and covers the previously raw concrete facade on the corner of Aboukir Street and Petits Carreaux street.

The Oasis of Aboukir by Patrick White for Paris Design Week

“I am very happy to contribute to the welfare and environmental consciousness of the inhabitants of a historic district in the heart of Paris,” said Blanc, who has been creating green walls for more than 30 years.

The Oasis of Aboukir by Patrick White for Paris Design Week

The installation will be officially opened on Tuesday to coincide with Paris Design Week, which runs from 9 to 15 September.

The Oasis of Aboukir by Patrick White for Paris Design Week

Other living walls we’ve featured recently include London’s largest green wall in Victoria that the designers said will combat flooding and a family house that conceals a wall of plants behind its slate-clad facade.

The Oasis of Aboukir by Patrick White for Paris Design Week
Sketch – click for larger image

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The Oasis of Aboukir by Patrick White for Paris Design Week

Photographs are by Yann Monel.

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by Patrick Blanc
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This is My Father’s World

This Is My Father’s World by Vietnamese sand artist Phong-Giao Lê…(Read…)

A Beautiful Time-Lapse Video of Rio de Janeiro

Time-Lapse Video of Rio de Janeiro by photographer Joe Capra.Rio de Janeiro, or simply Rio, is..(Read…)

Rimac Greyp G12 Electric Bike

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Paul Smith Albemarle Street store facade by 6a Architects

Following our story about the extension of fashion designer Paul Smith’s Albemarle Street store, here are some more images of its new cast iron facade by London studio 6a Architects.

Paul Smith Albemarle Street store facade by 6a Architects

6a Architects abstracted Paul Smith‘s hand drawings to create a repetitive relief pattern of interlocking circles to cast in iron, a common material around the British capital.

“Cast iron forms an understated background to the city’s streets; its railings, gratings, balconies, and lamp posts,” said the architects.

Paul Smith Albemarle Street store facade by 6a Architects

Thin edges of the circles are embossed to cast shadows across the surface, which is patinated and marked from the casting process.

The facade covers an existing eighteenth century shop front, and its colour and style provides a sharp contrast to the other Georgian buildings in the Mayfair area of London.

Paul Smith Albemarle Street store facade by 6a Architects

Three small drawings by Smith have been cast directly into sections across the facade.

Curved glass cabinets protrude through the ironwork to display items of furniture, set against a white background.

Paul Smith Albemarle Street store facade by 6a Architects

At the entrance to the shop, the panels curve inward to the large stained oak doors.

Inside, the store features brightly coloured accents to match the designer’s furniture and an accessories room lined with dominoes – see our earlier story about the interior here.

Paul Smith Albemarle Street store facade by 6a Architects

6a Architects has previously completed the renovation of a contemporary art exhibition centre in east London and stripped back a derelict house to expose original structural features.

See more projects by 6a Architects »
See more design by Paul Smith »
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The text below is from 6a Architects:


The new Albemarle Street shop front for Paul Smith builds on a familiar material tradition in London. Cast iron forms an understated background to the city’s streets; its railings, gratings, balconies, and lamp posts. Paul’s brief was an eclectic collection of references, images, textures and traditions, encompassing military medals, woven hats and finely drawn gold ingots alongside sharp tailoring, the soft fall of cloth, craftsmanship and delight in surprise.

Paul Smith Albemarle Street store facade by 6a Architects

The ground floor rustication of the Georgian townhouse and the ornamental language of the 18th century shop front were reinterpreted and abstracted in a sinuous pattern of interlocking circles cast into a new solid iron facade. The repetition of the typical Regency shape brought an optical complexity, which with the play of sunlight and shadow turns the pattern into a deep surface texture. Seen obliquely it seems woven, like a fine cloth.

The surface is further enlivened by the latent makers’ marks of the casting process and the natural patination of the cast iron. A more intimate discovery is to be made in the trio of small drawings by Paul cast directly into panels scattered across the façade.

Paul Smith Albemarle Street store facade by 6a Architects

Curved windows project from the darkly textured iron as luminous vitrines, with a nod to the curved glass of the nearby arcades. A secret door of stained oak lies flush with the cast iron panels: the inverted carving of the timber recalls the mould and sand bed prepared for the molten metal.

The cast iron panels curve in to the recessed oak entrance door, a gently bowed iron step evokes worn away treads. Over time, the iron threshold will polish under foot, recording the life of the building in its material.

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store facade by 6a Architects
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Monkey Series

Hiroshi Watanabe est un photographe basé aux USA qui a imaginé cette série de photographies reprenant l’art de la scène traditionnel japonais Suo Sarumawashi, dans lequel un singe est déguisé dans divers tenues et qui réalise diverses acrobaties et sketches comiques. De beaux clichés à découvrir dans la suite.

Monkey Series-14
Monkey Series-13
Monkey Series-12
Monkey Series-11
Monkey Series-10
Monkey Series-9
Monkey Series-8
Monkey Series-7
Monkey Series-6
Monkey Series-5
Monkey Series-4
Monkey Series-3
Monkey Series-2
Monkey Series-1
Monkey Series-15

Link About It: This Week’s Picks : Cardboard boombox, Ai Weiwei selfies, Greg Packer’s ban and more in our look at the web this week

Link About It: This Week's Picks


1. Selfie Jackpot While we laugh, cry and shake our heads in the midst of the selfie craze, a famed Instagram account featuring loads of ridiculous self-portraits is keeping the mania alive. Chinese artist Ai Weiwei—who is also active in the world of…

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12 Shapes of Paper by Estonian Academy of Arts students

Each outfit in this series crafted from paper by students in Estonia represents a different month (+ slideshow).

12 Shapes of Paper by Estonian Academy of Arts students
January by Leelo-Mai Aunbaum

Tutored by fashion designer Marit Ilison, the group of Estonian Academy of Arts students were limited to using paper from a single company though they had free reign over colours and forms.

12 Shapes of Paper by Estonian Academy of Arts students
February by Triin Uibo

“It was a very quick course, so students had two weeks for research and then two weeks to test and execute real costumes,” Ilison told Dezeen.

12 Shapes of Paper by Estonian Academy of Arts students
March by Eelin Lepik

This photo set styled by Ilison was used to create a calendar for paper brand Antalis.

12 Shapes of Paper by Estonian Academy of Arts students
April by Kerti Pahk

“I selected best 12 outfits from 24 participators, then I proposed the idea of a calendar to Antalis and they liked it,” said Ilison. “Later we selected and decided which photo would portray which month.”

12 Shapes of Paper by Estonian Academy of Arts students
May by Maria Kahnweiler

The first two wintery pieces were made from white sheets, with January’s design comprising layers of circular sections with strips cut out.

12 Shapes of Paper by Estonian Academy of Arts students
June by Marion Piirmets

For the second, long tubes crossed the body to form a scuptural dress while shorter rolls were stacked into a headpiece.

12 Shapes of Paper by Estonian Academy of Arts students
July by Birgitta Silberg

Moving into Spring, floral shapes adorned outfits as geometric seed pods and then scrunched up pink petals.

12 Shapes of Paper by Estonian Academy of Arts students
August by Karl Keskla

July’s offering saw the material edged in red, looped tightly back and forth to create giant ruffles similar to Elizabethan neck pieces.

12 Shapes of Paper by Estonian Academy of Arts students
September by Anna Baboshina

Colours became more somber on the autumnal garments, particularly the collection of brown shapes built up around the body and extended over the head that looked like leaves ready to fall.

12 Shapes of Paper by Estonian Academy of Arts students
October by Jelena Rumyantseva

For December reams of colourful ribbon-like strips splayed from the shoulders and curled up by the ends, with some tied in a bow at the neck.

12 Shapes of Paper by Estonian Academy of Arts students
November by Kati Stimmer

To see more paper fashion, take a look at a Royal College of Art graduate collection that features a dress that expands as you move and a concertinaed handbag.

12 Shapes of Paper by Estonian Academy of Arts students
December by Janar Juhkov

See more fashion design »
See more design with paper »

12 Shapes of Paper by Estonian Academy of Arts students

Photography is by Maiken Staak. Calendar design is by Tuuli Aule.

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Estonian Academy of Arts students
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Paddle boards equipped with LED lights

That’s a bright idea! Inventor Billy Rossini has fitted LED lights to the bottom of paddle boards..(Read…)

A Tour of Core77’s Hand-Eye Supply Pop-Up in Los Angeles

Moving through the space.

Core77’s retail enterprise, Hand-Eye Supply, is deep into the third week of a month long stay at Space 15 Twenty in Los Angeles and things are heating up! More on that in a following post though, for right now we’d like to give you, dear Internet friend, a behind the scenes peek at the making of the first ever Pop-up Institute for Craft and Ingenuity!

The project started percolating in the Fall of 2012 and developed from a simple pop-up shop into a full-on exhibtion and “educational happening” over the course of the Spring of 2013. Core77’s mission has been to promote and recruit for the design professions since its inception in 1995 at Pratt Institute and with the launch of the Hand-Eye Supply store we broadened that mission to advocate for a life of making things in general wether through a DIY project or a trade or craft. It seemed natural then to push the opportunity a bit further and to give Space 15 Twenty’s youthful, broad audience not only a taste of the Maker life and its accoutrements but also a chance to experience its community and practices first hand.

At work, and stylishly attired.

We let the idea of the Pop-Up Institute form both the physical space and the event line-up… The interior is divided into the key environments of creative activity – the workshop, the studio and the classroom – each populated with the appropriate tools and the results of their use. The programming focuses on bringing in local Los Angeles institutions, designers and themes to connect the broader message to moment and place. This effort has lead to, among other things, a film series examining the trials and rewards of creative endeavor, workshops with materials such as felt and wood, and evening activities to connect creative-types and to air ideas and projects. See our Pop-up Institute website – handeye.la – for the full run-down.

Below is a chronicle of our build-out and launch of the Institute – a rather impressive effort, if we do say so ourselves, for it took a 2400 sq ft. space from absolutely empty to fully constructed, stocked and merchandized in four days. After months of inventory purchasing, collateral production, event programming, staff coordination, and environmental design there was only a week-long opening to bring it all together. Odds against that happening grew when the first day of building was lost to a missing shipment of materials. But then the next day, with the lumber on-site, the HES staff tackling odd jobs and the seasoned team of Space 15 Twenty slicing down build-out task-lists with scary efficiency it all started to gel and success seemed possible again. By Friday afternoon it was over, with not an hour to spare, and after a final clean-up it was time to party!

Incredible credit and thanks go to the team at Hand-Eye Supply
Lyndsey Lee Denyer, Project Lead
Laurence Sarrazin, Environmental Design Lead
Tobias Berblinger, Manager
Christine Taylor, Photographer
Also to Emily, Kat, Matthew, Kathleen, Camille and Perry

And credit and incredible thanks to the U.O./Space 15 Twenty crew
Stephen Stonehill, Project Booster and Buildout Lead
Chris Woodhead, Project Booster
Kim Bruckbauer, Merchandizing and Coordination
Beau DeGeorge and Jeff Gauntt, Buildout Samurai

(more…)