Design Job: Hello Kitty! Sanrio, Inc. is Seeking a Creative Director in El Segundo, CA

Job Description/Duties: Define and drive Sanrio’s overall Creative vision while maximizing Brand integrity. Establish Company’s Creative philosophy, objectives and strategy and create cohesion and synergy for the Company. Provide strong Creative direction and leadership. • Must have multifaceted creative leadership experience with Brand image,

View the full design job here

Incredible Typewriting Artwork by Marko Morciano

Marko Morciano est un passionné d’écriture. Pour lui, l’écriture est une forme d’expression simple et immédiate, touchant directement son lecteur. À travers l’écrit, il relate ses pensées, ses expériences, il décrit sa vie au quotidien et ses amis. Après avoir fait une école de communication, sa passion pour l’écriture n’a fait que grandir. C’est pourquoi il a décidé d’apporter une touche pop et intelligente à la voiture Nissan Micra, un modèle dynamique et jeune s’ouvrant à plusieurs formes d’expression.




A $19,500 Sea Urchin Inspired Spiky Leather Bean Bag Chair

This is the Large Urchin Bean Bag Chair designed and sold by purveyors of entirely-too-expensive leather chairs, Blackman Cruz. It costs $19,500 and is covered with leather spikes. I’m not sure how it actually feels to sit on…but I know it is too expensive…(Read…)

Justice : a Visual Cross Story

A l’occasion de la sortie de leur troisième et nouvel album Woman, Fubiz consacre sa première « long story » à l’imagerie de Justice. Au fil des années, Gaspard Augé et Xavier de Rosnay se sont appropriés cette fameuse « croix » à chaque sortie d’album, et de clip. Pour en savoir plus, Fubiz est allé à la rencontre des interprètes de D.A.N.C.E. ainsi que de leur entourage (Mr Oizo, Charlotte Delarue, Pedro Winter), afin de comprendre comment et qui a façonné l’image et le graphisme de l’un des groupes électro les plus connus de leur génération.

Suite de l’histoire ici.

Découvrez ici-bas en exclusivité les photographies du live à Mexico le 19 mars 2017.

Woman Cover / Charlotte Delarue

SO ME

Toni Francois

Toni Francois

Toni Francois

Toni Francois

Toni Francois







Made in Ratio to launch bamboo-topped Stellar Nova table during Milan design week

During this year’s Milan design week, London studio Made in Ratio will present an environmentally sustainable table with recycled aluminium legs and a bamboo top.

Made in Ratio will be returning to Milan design week for the fifth time, presenting its products – both old and new – at an exhibition named Equilibrium in the city’s Brera district.

Milan: Stellar Nova table and Element light by Made in Ratio

Among the new releases is the Stellar Nova table, an evolution of the brand’s Supernova table. It features legs made from recycled aluminium that has been sand-cast into biomorphic shapes.

The tabletop has been crafted from bamboo plywood, chosen because bamboo is considered more sustainable than other timbers and grasses. The brand does plan to release more tabletops in solid woods and stones later this year.

Milan: Stellar Nova table and Element light by Made in Ratio

Each of the legs is designed with a triangular attachment point, which means that they can support the structure in any formation once the tabletop is in place.

An LED lamp joins the studio’s Element collection, and will also make its debut in Milan.

Milan: Stellar Nova table and Element light by Made in Ratio

The floor lamp has a triangular solid marble base and a long, bent stainless steel mast. An LED tube sitting atop of the long pole is uncovered, allowing the light to radiate in all directions.

“The simple arrangement of a solid marble base and top, united by a stainless steel stem creates a carefully reduced form that is both elegant and anthropomorphic in silhouette,” said Made in Ratio founder Brodie Neill.

Milan: Stellar Nova table and Element light by Made in Ratio

“The almost primitive geometry gives the table a nimble versatility whilst being able to mix and match the tones of marble allows it to suit any interior,” he continued.

Made in Ratio will also present its Alpha chair in a new leather version, as well as the Elements side tables rendered in three distinct materials, which first launched at Biennale Interieur last year.

Milan: Stellar Nova table and Element light by Made in Ratio

Australian designer Neill recently created his home country’s display for the inaugural London Design Biennale – a terrazzo-effect table made from recycled ocean plastics.

His Made in Ratio studio is based in London and often explores experimental processes, as in its stackable Alpha chair, carved from a single block of wood through CNC cutting.

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Job of the day: senior architect at OMA

Our job of the day from Dezeen Jobs is for a California-licensed architect at OMA, which won a contest last year to transform a site in Downtown Los Angeles into a public parkMore ›

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Romanian designers champion "clumsy, simple but honest" furniture

Romanian designers say they are about to storm the world stage – and they’re not going to let the lack of home-grown brands, manufacturers or heritage stop them.

Speaking to Dezeen at the IMM Cologne fair earlier this year, young designers from the eastern European nation said their inexperience would not hold them back.

“A couple of us youngsters decided it was time for us to do something on an international scale,” designer Mihnea Ghildus told Dezeen.

“We’re finally ready for this market.”

Mihnea Ghildus Romanian brand Dizainar showcased a range of craft-focused design at IMM Cologne, including papier-mâché lamps

Among Romanian brands exhibiting in Cologne was Ubikubi, founded by designer Dragos Motica, who said that the ability to make something out of nothing is what defines the Romanian design aesthetic.

Motica agreed that his country’s design scene is “slowly but surely taking shape” and that the lack of sophistication in Romanian products is their greatest strength. He described the local style as “clumsy, simple, innocent but honest”.

“In all these products it is quite easy to observe some ingenuity and innocence, that are materialising in some simple and honest objects,”  he said.

The Bucharest-based designer kickstarted his own career with a concrete lamp that is supposed to be smashed. His brand’s latest offerings include a lamp that is turned on and off by moving a metallic sphere from one indentation to another.

Other products by Dizainar include Dare to Rug’s textiles, which feature traditional Romanian patterns

According to Motica, the Romanian design scene had struggled in the past because there weren’t enough manufacturing resources to support the country’s young designers. But brands like his, which keep prototyping and production in-house, are changing that.

Romania’s cultural resurgence creates growing interest in design

Romania’s cultural identity has been building ever since it broke away from communist rule until 1989.

Located in southeastern Europe, the country was under a suppressive regime for 47 years. As a result, residents were placed under severe austerity measures, which squashed flourishing art and design groups.

Its transition back towards democracy and capitalism resulted in an economic boom in the 2000s, and encouraged the growing middle and upper classes to invest in design. This cultural revival will see the country host the European Capital of Culture in 2021 in Timișora, a city in western Romania.

As part of Romania’s cultural resurgence, this year IMM Cologne invited the country to exhibit as part of a segment established for companies that are too small to have their own stand.

After successfully exhibiting in previous years, Romania was one of the top 10 exporters in the section, which also includes India, Indonesia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Taiwan, Russia, Moldova, Kosovo and Ukraine.

Romanian design
Bucharest designer Dragos Motica launched his career with a concrete lamp that is designed to be smashed

Both Ghildus and Motica were exhibiting as part of the 14 designers representing the country’s national pavilion.

Ghildus’ Bucharest-based design brand, Dizainar, showcased an array of crafts-focused furniture like chairs covered with traditional Romanian patterns, papier-mâché lamp shades and stools carved from tree-trunks.

“We are exploring and discovering a lot of new things,” Ghildus explained.

“The Romanian design identity is very versatile. There’s a saying in Romania that we can make something out of nothing and make it work as well.”

Romanian Design Week champions the country’s entrepreneurial spirit

Since 2013, Romania’s fledgling design scene has also been boosted by Romanian Design Week, a small but growing festival that takes place in the capital city Bucharest each May.

Mihai Gurei, who curated the craft design section of last year’s Romanian Design Week, said the annual exhibition has pushed local designers to think critically about the market for their designs, in preparation for global design events.

“There is a very young, entrepreneurial spirit here,” Gurei told Dezeen.

“I am pretty sure that next year you are going to see Romanian designs at international fairs in Paris or Milan, that’s for sure, I can guarantee you,” he said.

Although admitting the design scene is “still at the beginning”, Gurei, who runs a design store in Bucharest called Intro, claims that Romania’s craft-driven aesthetic taps into the growing international interest in the use of natural materials in design.

Romanian design
Other products Motica has created for his brand Ubikubi include an LED light that turns off with a metal ball

Cork, ceramic and wood are popular materials among local designers, along with a focus on contemporary updates to traditional Romanian craft, Gurei said.

“In Romania you still cannot create products in plastic, because we still don’t have manufacturing for plastics, so you’ll see mostly natural materials,” he said. “But this is a good thing for us, because it goes with international trends.”

“There is a lot of enthusiasm, some traditional influences, and also an aim to align to international tendencies,” he continued. “It is shifting fast and is trying to adapt to local customers’ craving for new trends.”

The success of the design week has also helped to change the perception of design in the country and expose the designers to a growing local audience, Gurei added.

Romanian design
Romanian designer Cosmin Cioroiu, who co-founded Noidoi, has already broken onto the global market with its Pulse daybed

“Until 2013 there was no feeling regarding a local design scene,” he said. “The general public was not aware there were Romanian products available on the market, and young designers were thinking that it was impossible to start a career in Romania.”

“But there is more pragmatism now, the quality improved a lot, and more people are starting to work in the design field,” he added. “We have now local brands and smaller manufacturers willing to collaborate with designers.”

New workspaces and production facilities help Romania hold onto talent

Gurei also noted that the capital has seen a rise in the number of co-working studios that have offered the design community tools and spaces for collaboration.

One example is NOD Makerspace, billed as a “playground for young designers to use different tools and create things”. Its services include 3D printing and furniture production.

The company is based in Bucharest, but is considering opening branches around the country.

“The emerging of NOD Makerspace project one year ago is the proof that interest in design culture is increasing,” said assistant manager Irina Mocanu.

These new facilities are encouraging the country’s young designers, many of whom move abroad to study, to bring their talents back home.

Romanian design
After studying in London, fashion designer Iona Ciolacu has based her studio in Bucharest to make the most of cheap production

Among them is architect-turned-fashion-designer Iona Ciolacu who studied at London College of Fashion before working in the UK capital for world-renowned designer Stella McCartney.

Ciolacau moved back to Bucharest to make the most of the low cost of production after finding it “almost impossible” to establish her own brand in London.

“I realised production is really nice in Romania,” she said. “I can actually see [the process] and the people I am working with. Prices aren’t that high, so I can sell cheaper.”

One Romanian designer who has already burst onto the global market is Cosmin Cioroiu. He co-founded Oslo-based product design studio Noidoi, which has showcased at Stockholm Furniture & Light FairMilan design week and NYCxDesign.

Although aware that Romanian design will face tough competition at an international level, Cioroiu believes there is a positive future ahead in the hands of its ambitious designers.

“There is a certain hunger in Romanian designers and the brands to come on the market, and they want that,” he told Dezeen. “The scene is at its beginnings, but it is blooming. I am excited to see what happens next.”

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Huge inclined roof spans cathedral built by John McAslan + Partners on Kenyan tea plantation

John McAslan + Partners has built a cathedral on the edge of a tea plantation outside Nairobi, Kenya, featuring a tiled and angled roof lined with wooden slats.

Kericho Cathedral by John McAslan

Kericho Cathedral is the latest in a string of worship spaces designed by John McAslan‘s London-based team, which is also working on Britain’s largest mosque.

Located around 250 kilometres southwest of the Kenyan capital, in the town of Kericho, it is surrounded by the vast plantations that make the area one of the world’s biggest tea producers.

Kericho Cathedral by John McAslan

The cathedral’s most striking feature is its large pitched roof, which is covered in red tiles and lined in ribs of timber.

It inclines steeply from the entrance towards the pulpit, where the nave broadens to accommodate a congregation of 1,500 for communion.

Kericho Cathedral by John McAslan

“The building’s palette of materials honours and respects the faith and frugality of this rural African context,” said the studio, who completed the church at the end of 2015.

“The aspiration was to create a structure that integrated seamlessly with its landscape setting, in both aesthetic and functional terms,” added the architects.

“The cathedral’s tiled-roof is now a distinctive form in the rolling panorama of Kericho’s hills and valleys.”

Kericho Cathedral by John McAslan

Rows of wooden pews flank the central aisle, which is skylit by a long clerestory window set into the apex of the roof. A further columnar window above a sculpture of christ on the cross provides further natural lighting.

Kericho Cathedral by John McAslan
Photograph by Aernout Zevenbergen

Wooden doors along the flanks of the church hall open out to naturally ventilate the space and allow the congregation to flood out onto the gardens surrounding the building.

Kericho Cathedral by John McAslan

“We believe our response is distinctive and universally welcoming. The ascending vaulted volume contained under a vast roof fuses African and ecclesiastically historic references,” said the architects.

“Care has been taken to shape the cathedral’s space and express the building’s structure – the stone plinth, simply articulated, arched concrete frames and timber-ribbed vaulting are exposed in a strikingly crafted and honest manner.”

Kericho Cathedral by John McAslan

Other projects in and around Nairobi include a house with walls of chiselled limestone by Jonathan Woolf Architects and a pavilion designed by Spanish studio SelgasCano that has been repurposed as a school in one of the city’s largest slums.

Photography is by Edmund Sumner unless otherwise stated.


Project credits:

Architect: John McAslan + Partners
Executive architect: Triad Architects
Contractor: Esteel Construction
Multi-disciplinary engineers: Arup
Structural engineers: Eng Plan
Electrical and mechanical engineers: EAMS
Client: Diocese of Kericho
Quantity surveyor: Barker and Barton
Furniture design and entrance doors: Studio Propilis
Stained glass and artworks: John Clark

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Colorful and Creative Drawing by Ayellowark

Le projet Ayellowmark est né sur Instagram en 2014, sa mission est de peindre le monde en jaune. Pour le lancement de la Micra nouvelle génération en partenariat avec Nissan et Fubiz, l’artiste italien, qui a toujours était fasciné par le design et la couleur jaune, a dessiné sa version de la Micra. En dessinant tout d’abord la citadine aux finitions soignées, au crayon, puis au stylo noir, l’artiste ne cesse d’accentuer le contraste du fond jaune au fil de son dessin.

 



Poetic Pictures of Horizon Lines by Sze Tsung Leong

Le photographe américain Sze Tsung Leong photographie, pour sa série Horizons, les lignes d’horizon sur la planète. Il offre un bel équilibre entre ciel et terre pour donner un résultat poétique à ses clichés. Entre minimalisme, terre et mer, il nous transporte au coeur de la beauté de notre planète de par les points de vue intelligemment choisis.