Amazing visual effects in Game of Thrones
Posted in: UncategorizedWatch Macklevision’s VFX reel of Game of Thrones Season 4 to see how fake is the new real!..(Read…)
Watch Macklevision’s VFX reel of Game of Thrones Season 4 to see how fake is the new real!..(Read…)
These are a few shots from photographer Jesse Rockwell of the New World Mall in Bangkok, Thailand…(Read…)
La directrice artistique moscovite Luda Galchenko nous invite à rentrer dans son univers graphique avec « Piece of Cake », une création typographique du plus bel effet imaginé pour illustrer son travail et ses différents projets sur son portfolio. Une recherche entre la mise en forme typographique et la composition photographique autour de la nourriture d’une grande fraîcheur à découvrir dans la suite.
Suspended wooden slats cast shadows like a sundial across the central living room of this hexagonal home in Toyota, Japan, by local office Katsutoshi Sasaki + Associates (+ slideshow).
The sculptural ceiling decoration is made from timber battens that line the rafters, creating an ever-changing pattern of light and shadow on the walls as the sun moves across the sky.
“The delicate transition of the sun reflected on the wooden vertical lattice let inhabitants feel the riches and flux of time, and stirs their Japanese sensitivities,” said architect Katsutoshi Sasaki.
Koro House is located on a plot at the corner of two roads. Its six-sided shape was designed to frame a series of small outdoor spaces between the property and the street, as well as to let light in from different directions.
Related story: Katsutoshi Sasaki’s Imai house is just three metres wide
The gaps between the streets and the angular facades accommodate a family garden, a laundry drying area, a smaller private garden and a parking space with storage close to the entrance.
“The number of sides is six, which was decided according to the uses required for the garden and the study of each interior room,” stated Sasaki.
The neighbourhood where the house is located was once a forest, so Sasaki added stones and cherry trees in the garden to evoke its former appearance. “This project made scenery come back,” he said.
Large stone slabs create a step up to the entrance. This leads in through a small porch and kitchen, arriving at the six-sided lounge area in the centre of the residence.
Internal partitions follow the angles of the facades, creating a series of spaces around the periphery of the living room. Alongside the kitchen, these include a washroom with a shower and bath squeezed in behind a shelving unit.
There is also a master bedroom with a walk-in closet, which adjoins a smaller space that can be used as a guest room.
Opposite the entrance, a toilet and washbasin are housed in a space beneath a staircase, which ascends to a first-floor mezzanine.
The mezzanine also encircles the living room. Plywood modules run along the outer walls, divided into sleeping spaces for the children, a built-in study space, a toilet and a closet.
Slatted surfaces above the beds provide additional storage, while clerestory windows below the roof provide views of the sky and ensure natural light enters the interior throughout the day.
“I proposed a plan where we space the roof from the exterior wall, to take in the view of the sky and natural light from the whole circumference of the house,” said Sasaki.
Katsutoshi Sasaki founded his architectural studio in 2008. Since then, he has completed a house for a three-metre-wide site, a triangular residence, and a house with four wings arranged around its living room.
Photography is by the architects.
The post Wooden slats create a sculptural ceiling
inside Katsutoshi Sasaki’s Koro House appeared first on Dezeen.
In the far reaches of space, an American pilot named Peter Quill finds himself the object of a..(Read…)
Designers at Swedish fashion brand COS have created limited-edition shoes for its partnership with this year’s Serpentine Gallery Pavilion (+ slideshow).
The Serpentine Shoes designed by COS for both sexes are minimal lace-up brogues in black leather.
Related story: Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2014 by Smiljan Radić opens
“Based on the shape of our classic brogues, these shoes are a slip-on style with a neat lace-up front and cut-out back,” said COS. “With a stacked leather sole and heel, they have a padded leather insole for comfort.”
The backs of the women’s shoes are cut off from the tongue to the base of the heel, creating slip-on designs that retain the lace-up fronts.
For men, the designs feature simple stitching details that run across the uppers and around the backs.
“The shoes draw inspiration from the COS brand ethos and are ultimately reworked classics encapsulating timeless style,” said COS head of menswear design Martin Andersson.
The shoes are only available online, at The Serpentine Galleries and from the COS London Regent Street store. Proceeds from their sale will be donated to the Serpentine Trust.
COS is supporting this year’s Serpentine Galleries Park Nights programme – a series of events on art, music, literature and film held at the pavilion in London’s Kensington Gardens. Last year the fashion brand created two shirts to mark its sponsorship of the talk programme at the 2013 Serpentine Gallery Pavilion designed by Sou Fujimoto.
Opened late last month, the 2014 Serpentine Gallery Pavilion was designed by Chilean architect Smiljan Radić, who wanted the structure qualities of a giant hand-made model.
COS teamed up with Japanese design studio Nendo to create an installation of framed white shirts for Milan design week earlier this year.
The post COS launches The Serpentine Shoes
to coincide with pavilion opening appeared first on Dezeen.
The “Pneumatic Sponge Ball Accelerator” is installed at the Tschumi Pavilion in Groningen..(Read…)
If I lived in San Francisco, I’d go to this!
A l’occasion du festival de musique Rock Werchter qui a eu lieu en Belgique du 3 au 6 juillet dernier, North West Walls a proposé l’exposition de créations de différents artistes choisis par Arne Quinze. Parmi les différents artistes, le belge ROA a su tirer son épingle du jeu pour nous proposer des gigantesques représentations d’animaux sur des conteneurs.