More than ‘Just another lamp’

My professor in design college told me something that really resonates with me even today. You don’t decide when to get an idea. The idea decides when to get to you. The mark of a creative person is their ability to catch the ideas that come to them. The JAL (Just Another Lamp) was born from that very moment when a fleeting idea was caught by a designer as he doodled his way through a meeting. Obviously, the meeting then went off-topic, and the JAL was refined and developed into what it became today!

Designed to look like an hourglass, but one filled with light, rather than sand, the JAL is rather appropriately named because its conception wasn’t intentional. It’s beautiful no doubt, but its inspiration seems so casual, it’s almost comedic that something this aesthetic developed from it.

Designed to look like a martini-esque hourglass with an ambient lightbulb in it, the JAL’s beauty arises from its simplicity and its ability to be whatever you want it to be. The glass comprises two conical containers in the hourglass shape, that can be used to store anything, making the lamp a rather versatile piece of decor (rather than ‘just another lamp’!). The bulb can be oriented either way, allowing you to use the lamp in any orientation that you’d like. The JAL comes in multiple sizes and even colors and finishes. The small lamp is ideal for shelves and tiny side-tables (or even around greenery), while the larger one can be used as a stand of sorts or even as a part of the decor should you go for the frosted JAL or the tinted Prussian blue (my personal favorite remains the JAL with the Bonsai cactus underneath it).

Each hourglass component of the JAL is handblown by renowned glass blower Ferran Collado in Barcelona. It comes with a slight notch in its rim to allow the lamp’s cable to slide through. The light itself is an LED bulb, so it won’t ever heat up, making the JAL an ideal stand for your pencils, plants, or bits and bobs. You even get to choose the color of electrical cord you want with the JAL.

Designed to be simple and pure, but also infinitely versatile, the JAL can be any type of lamp you want it to be. It’s the sheer number of possibilities with the JAL that make it more than ‘Just Another Lamp’. A rather marvelous thing to come out of a doodle, I’d say!

Designer: MOS Design

Click here to Buy Now: $118.00

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Click here to Buy Now: $118.00

Pure Black and White Tattoos

À Madrid siège une tatoueuse aux traits rares. Des traits d’une pureté que peu sont en mesure de reproduire. Cette artiste, c’est Marla Moon. Spécialisée dans le noir et blanc – gris, à la rigueur – elle manie son aiguille tel un pinceau pour encrer des oeuvres à la fois douces et puissantes. En revanche, succès oblige, il est impossible de la contacter jusqu’à nouvel ordre.











A Winter Sunday In Munich

Munich est encore plus belle d’hiver. Une fois recouverte de neige, que la nuit s’installe de plus en plus tôt et que seuls les lampadaires font office d’éclairage. Cette beauté, le photographe Skander Khlif la raconte à travers une série de clichés qui respirent la douceur, le mystère et la quiétude.

















Design Job: Innovate and Inspire as Herman Miller's Global R&D Innovation Kitchen Design Director

You can make a salary. Or you can make a difference. Or you can work as the Design Director, Global R&D Innovation Kitchen at Herman Miller and make both. About this Opportunity As the Design Director, Global R&D Innovation Kitchen, you’ll be responsible for

View the full design job here

2017 Best of Auto Design, Part 1: New Stuff

This year we saw a lot of fantastic auto design work, in at least two categories: Brand-new stuff, and retro-tastic. Let’s start with the new.

BMW unveiled a sexy roadster version of their i8:

Toyota pulled the wraps off of this toolbox-based truck design:

The designers from Jaguar’s Special Vehicle Operations team created this insane kitchen on wheels for a celebrity chef:

We got to see inside Porsche’s design studio, to take a look at how their designers are tackling their upcoming Tesla competitor:

Bollinger showed us a cool design trick in their B1 electric sport utility truck. With no engine, you can have complete pass-through storage:

We saw a $250,000 car, the 911 Turbo S, being assembled largely by hand:

Bentley showed off their crazy trim package for falconry enthusiasts:

These folks here actually built a traffic-straddling Jeep Cherokee:

Nissan showed off their concept vehicle for dog lovers:

Netflix shone a light on Ralph Gilles and the auto design industry with an entire episode in their “Abstract: The Art of Design” series:

Stay tuned for the retro-tastic.

2017 Best of Auto Design, Part 2: Retro-tastic

Auto design is one of those fields where we can learn just as much looking backwards through time as we can looking forward to the future. Here are our favorite auto design stories from 2017 with a retro-tastic twist:

We got to see a wicked animated visualization of the Porsche 911’s design evolution:

And a similar animation of the long-lived Honda Civic:

Speaking of the Civic, Honda showed off their old/new retro-electric version of the car:

And speaking of Porsches, Singer Vehicle Design optimized this 27-year-old 964:

We asked you what the best model year was for the venerable Pontiac GTO:

Another classic muscle car whose evolution we looked at was the Chevy Chevelle:

Infiniti’s retro-futuristic auto design experiment was a real socks-knocker-offer:

We learned the surprising history of the Porsche Boxster, “Made by Mazda, built by Toyota, in Finland:”

German car, Roman candles, American yuks. We saw a couple of nutjobs turn an old BMW 3-class into a rolling Fourth of July celebration:

We sang the praises of the interior design brilliance of the much-loved Honda Element:

And incredibly, a bunch of enthusiasts managed to re-launch an updated production version of Pontiac’s defunct Trans-Am:

Best of CH 2017: Cocktails: Mixed drinks that truly tingled the tastebuds this year

Best of CH 2017: Cocktails


Like every other art, cocktail-making continues to move forward with incredible creativity. We sometimes tend to dismiss mixed drinks—or food and drink in general—as nothing more than temporary stimulation and indulgent libation. But really, the way……

Continue Reading…

Reiulf Ramstad Arkitekter reveals visuals of tiered copper tower for Norway

Reiulf Ramstad Arkitekter has revealed renderings for a copper ziggurat-like housing tower designed for the site of a former military camp in the Norwegian town of Ski Vest.

The Oslo-based architects designed the tower to be wrapped with linear terraces made from copper perforated with a lace-like pattern.

The top floors are shown stepped back at intervals and together with the undulations of the terraces gives the tower the appearance of a ziggurat or a Japanese wooden temple.

When completed the tower will house 50 apartments, each with high ceilings and sheltered terraces thanks to the geometry of the staggered terraces and the sequence of set backs used for the uppermost floors

The tower designed for the developer Solon Eiendom will be set on the site of a former military camp, and according to the architects the new building will blend with the existing 1980s structures nearby to form a new green neighbourhood.

Reiulf Ramstad Arkitekter is as well for its idyllic renderings of its speculative projects as it’s completed work. Among them are picturesque visuals of a trio of timber and glass cabins on the Norwegian coast and a kiln-inspired learning centre in Denmark’s Jutland region.

Completed works have included a network of pathways zigzagging leading to a tourist centre amongst the rugged mountains and deep fjords in rural Norway, and a jagged, mountain-like climbing centre in the country’s Romsdalen Valley.

The post Reiulf Ramstad Arkitekter reveals visuals of tiered copper tower for Norway appeared first on Dezeen.

Design Society museum in Shenzhen surveys the industry's development with opening exhibitions

A timber pavilion constructed by a robot and a flat-pack chair from the 18th century are among the objects included in the first exhibitions at the V&A-backed Design Society museum in Shenzhen, within spaces designed by MVRDV and Sam Jacob.

Design Society Shenzhen, Sam Jacobs Studio

Design Society officially opened to the public on 2 December 2017, in a building designed by Japanese architect Fumihiko Maki for a site on the city’s waterfront.

The museum’s inaugural exhibition, titled Values of Design, launched on the same date, together with a second show called Minding the Digital.

Values of Design looks at how design is regarded across the globe and what principles influence in the industry. It is being held in the permanent gallery space of the V&A museum, which is a “founding partner” of Design Society.

The 250 objects in the show are organised into seven themes – performance, cost, problem solving, materials, identity, communication, and wonder – which intend to highlight their shared design values.

Design Society Shenzhen, Sam Jacobs Studio

For example, a lacquered chair that was shipped from China to the UK in the 18th century as two flat planks is shown with a stool by Open Desk that can be locally manufactured, illustrating designers’ efforts to create furniture that can be cleverly distributed and assembled.

A 19th-century plastic comb is also displayed alongside an ethically-produced smartphone from Amsterdam-based tech company Fairphone, showing the industry’s changing attitudes towards making sustainable resources.

Design Society Shenzhen, Sam Jacobs Studio

When it came to designing the exhibition space, Design Society tasked London-based Sam Jacob Studio with creating an environment that touched on the multitude of design values presented in the show.

To do this, the studio decided to employ a variety of materials. In the performance-themed area walls have been crafted from dichroic glass, which appear to change colour as visitors pass by.

Design Society Shenzhen, Sam Jacobs Studio

Panels of perforated metal form the Problem Solving section, while marble has been used in the Cost rooms to echo the material palette of the entrance hall in London’s V&A building.

The gallery has also been arranged as a sequence of open-ended rooms, to allow visitors to “create their own non-linear path” throughout the show.

Design Society Shenzhen, Sam Jacobs Studio

“The new V&A gallery presents design as more than just a matter of ‘good’ and ‘bad’. Instead the show creates an arena of different and sometimes conflicting possibilities,” said studio director Sam Jacob in a statement.

“The design of the gallery organises space, material and media to make this argument both intellectually rich and experientially visceral.”

Design Society Shenzhen, Sam Jacobs Studio

The second exhibition, Minding the Digital, explores how the design industry is responding to digitalisation and advances in technology.

Comprised of 60 works from Chinese and international creatives, the show hones in on three key issues – the crossover of human and machine intelligence, consumers’ relationship to design objects, and the influence of design on communities.

Design Society Shenzhen, Minding the Digital

Highlights include a robot-built pavilion, which comes out of a collaboration between University of Stuttgart‘s Institute for Computational Design and Construction, and the Digital Design Research Center that is based at Tongji University in Shanghai.

When drawing up the concept for the wooden structure, which is called The Sewn Timber Shell, the two organisations experimented with robotic sewing.

Design Society Shenzhen, Minding the Digital

They closely studied the use of robotics in clothing design and industrial sewing techniques, hoping to “re-interpret them in a new material context”.

As a result, fabric has been traded for rippled sheets of plywood, which weave together to form diamond-shaped openings along the walls and ceiling of the pavilion.

Design Society Shenzhen, ICD

Other works featured include a 3D-printed chair by Dutch designer Joris Laarman, which was designed to emulate the structure of cells, and dresses by Montreal-based fashion designer Ying Gao, which move and light up when under someone’s gaze.

Design Society Shenzhen, Minding the Digital

For the spatial design of Minding the Digital, Design Society briefed Dutch practice MVRDV to create an exhibition setting that visually reflected the “multiple design directions generated by digital thinking”.

On the first floor of the exhibition hall the architects implemented a series of interconnecting, maze-like rooms. They have each been illuminated with different colour lights to give the impression of individualised zones.

Design Society Shenzhen, Minding the Digital

The second level features several sets of white steps, which ascend to small display areas fitted with glass floors so that visitors can observe exhibition rooms below.

“We have created here a labyrinth, a mini village for all the digital artists with each room adaptive to the art, ideas and products,” said MVRDV co-founder Winy Maas.

Design Society Shenzhen, Minding the Digital

The exhibition continues until 3 June 2018, with the Values of Design open until 4 August 2019.

Photography is by Zhang Chao.

The post Design Society museum in Shenzhen surveys the industry’s development with opening exhibitions appeared first on Dezeen.

Med Storage Made Easy

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You might think that all medication is as a simple as taking a pill every morning, but many ailments or conditions require a regimented prescription process to control symptoms or even keep people alive. For them, the Smart Medical Box makes it easy and safe to store all their sensitive medications.

It features two dedicated compartments: one for storing items at room temperature and the other for medicines that require refrigeration. It syncs with the users smartphone as well as the patient’s medical office to monitor supplies. Medical professionals or nurse practitioners can receive direct notifications when it’s time to refill prescriptions or if a patient seems to be forgetting to take their meds. Easily locked directly from the app, it’s also childproof and safe. Compact enough to carry when you’re traveling, it’s the most convenient and reliable way to store and transport time-sensitive medication yet.

Designers: Ye Jin Won & Su Jin Yun

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