YD Spotlight: The Organic Ornaments of Fitchwork

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I guarantee you will never find work more incredibly intricate and ornate than those by Travis Fitch. Truly pushing the boundaries of design, art, science, nature, mathematics, and technology, Travis Fitch (under the moniker Fitchwork) creates some of the most mind-numbingly beautiful objects. Completely embodying Charles Eames’ quote, “The details are not the details. They make the design.”, Fitchwork’s creations empower designs through repetitive details, creating patterns you’ll rarely (if not never) have seen in man-made designs. Using art and geometry in a way that makes it feel like Mother Nature meets 3D printing, Fitchwork’s products utilize a unique design process combines user customization with new fabrication technologies to create distinct and personalized items. With a wide variety of patterns that combine geometry with organic design, Fitchwork creates products that are molded but look woven. Each of the patterns is scalable, and products, ranging from ornaments to home decor, come in both ceramic and metal variants. I could go on about how unreasonably beautiful these designs look, but I’d rather let the work speak for itself. Scroll down to witness some of the most awe-inspiring design details your eyes will have ever seen.

Designer: Travis Fitch (Fitchwork)

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A post shared by Travis Fitch (@fitchwork) on Oct 6, 2017 at 3:05pm PDT

When Coffee and Mechanics collide!

Essentially the most simplified version of a french press, the Newton is effortless because it uses a Type 2 Lever to reduce the amount of effort needed to extract every single bit of goodness from your grounds. This rather fresh looking device sits on any table-top or even wall-mounts, not letting a small or cluttered kitchen stop you from getting your daily fix. The steps are pretty simple too. Start with a nice hot cup, place and press your coffee grounds into the lower chamber of the Newton. Screw the lower chamber into place and pour hot water into the upper chamber before pulling the lever up. Then delight in the hipster routine of pumping the water through the grounds and out the bottom into your toasty hot coffee cup. The entire process is fun, non-electric, and effortless.

The Newton uses high-quality seals, piston design, and a leverage system to give you 8-10 bars of pressure. Depending on how hard you press down on the lever, and how coarse or fine your coffee grounds are, you should be able to perfect the art of making coffee that’s a 100% product of your work. Plus, its unusual wood, black sheet metal, and orange anodized aluminum color combination will definitely add a splash of energy to your kitchens and your mornings!

Designer: Hayden Maunsell

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Nike's Mercurial Superfly and Vapor 360 Wrap the Entire Foot in Flyknit Thanks to New Material Combination

Unveiled last night, here’s a look at Nike’s latest additions to their Mercurial line—the Mercurial Superfly and the Mercurial Vapor 360.

There are two main design details to note here, the first being the Flyknit innovation that allows the full boot to be wrapped in the material. Nike explains this best:

“Previously, All Conditions Control (ACC) was applied on top of the finished Flyknit product, creating a thin layer. Now, ACC is embedded into the yarns prior to knitting, eliminating the additional skin without compromising the performance benefit. The result is a matte finish on a texturized upper that is softer to the touch but can still battle the elements.”

In other words, Nike merged their all weather conditions technology with Flyknit yarn, creating a super-knit that can withstand the elements. The treatment also allows for elimination of the soleplate altogether.

The second design detail is more obvious: the forefoot and heel stud structures look ridiculously cool and remind me of a futuristic Galaga enemy.

Here you can see where the ACC-embedded Flyknit meets the regular Flyknit.

At this point, it’s unclear whether the ACC-embedded Flyknit will hold up overtime. Let’s just hope Nike doesn’t have another NBA jersey-like incident in the near future.

If you’re interested in learning more, Nike Football Senior Design Director Jeongwoo Le, speaks a little bit about the Mercurial 360’s design process in this brief video:

ListenUp: PJ Harvey + Harry Escott: An Acre Of Land

PJ Harvey + Harry Escott: An Acre Of Land


Drawn from the soundtrack of the forthcoming film Dark River, “An Acre of Land” demonstrates a timelessness to PJ Harvey, with her voice unmooring itself from genre and era. A collaboration with composed Harry Escott, the track truly stuns with its……

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Teeling's 34-Year-Old Vintage Reserve Single Malt Irish Whiskey: The oldest single malt to be bottled in Ireland

Teeling's 34-Year-Old Vintage Reserve Single Malt Irish Whiskey

When Jack Teeling founded the Teeling Whiskey Company in 2012, his mission was to revive a family trademark. His family has been involved in the Irish whiskey world since 1782, doing everything from operating small, craft distilleries (and opening……

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Latest Dezeen Mail features Lufthansa's new logo and a "super-black" Olympic pavilion

This week’s edition of our newsletter Dezeen Mail includes the so-called darkest building on earth, designed by Asif Khan for the Pyeongchang Winter Olympics, and the new blue logo for LufthansaSubscribe to Dezeen Mail ›

The post Latest Dezeen Mail features Lufthansa’s new logo and a “super-black” Olympic pavilion appeared first on Dezeen.

Hay explores the creative workspace during Stockholm Design Week

Danish brand Hay has used its furniture and accessories to create turn a Stockholm showroom into an office-like installation exploring the future of creative workspaces. 

The Hay Workspace 2.0 installation is taking place at the showroom of Scandinavian agent Gulled – which represents Hay, &tradition and Magis in Sweden and Finland – during this year’s Stockholm Design Week.

The installation features new furniture pieces by London-based studio Simon James, and Copenhagen-based studios Iskos Berlin and GamFratesi  – all collections intended for use in both the home and office.

The new designs are designed to reflect the move towards more homely office setups in recent years, as employers seek to create intimate workspaces that are designed to look more residential than corporate.

“Workspace 2.0 is the evolution of the creative working environment and the designs that support innovation and productivity,” said the brand, which was founded by husband-and-wife team Rolf and Mette Hay.

“Hay together with today’s best designers has developed customisable and adaptable solutions for meeting the specific needs and demands of the everyday workspace,” they continued.

Launching during the week, the Triangle table and bench by Kentish Town designers Simon James feature lozenge-shaped tops mounted on triangular legs.

By rounding off the ends of a rectangular table top, the designers said they were able to create a more “sociable” design that can seat more guests.

Made from solid oak with an oiled, soaped or clear lacquer varnish, the Triangle series is designed to be used in both office and domestic environments.

The existing Soft Edge Collection designed by Iskos Berlin in 2017 was the result of exploring innovative developments in moulded plywood. At Hay Workspace 2.0, the collection will be presented in polypropylene for the first time.

Comprising a stackable chair, as well as high and low bar stools, the pieces all feature organically shaped plastic seats available in a variety of colours.

All the edges of the ultra-thin, soft-formed seats are bent away from the body, designed to optimise comfort for constant shifting and movement.

GamFratesi’s new Silhouette Sofa series features smoothly curving backs and piping details across the upholstery. The collection comprises sofas in different sizes and heights, including raised backs to provide privacy in public areas.

In addition to the new furniture, the brand will also debut a series of Moroccan handblown glass vases featuring clashing bands of colour, a simple powder coated steel toolbox with a storage compartment in its handle, and a family of split trays that can be used for storing small everyday items such as pens, pencils, letters and keys.

The new pieces are on display alongside pieces from Hay’s existing collection – such as Stefan Diez‘s New Order shelving and storage system, which forms the framework of the installation.

Hay Workspace 2.0 is open throughout the duration of the Stockholm Design Week. The installation will play host to a series of lectures by designers Stefan Scholten, Rolf Hay, Stefan Diez and GamFratesi that will focus on how design can support innovation and productivity in the office environment.

Elsewhere in the city, Form Us With Love is inviting festival-goers to provide feedback on a series of prototype designs installed at a co-working space.

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Productora builds Mexican centre for archeology and textiles using tinted concrete

Mexican architecture firm Productura has used pigmented concrete walls, brickwork steps and timber-framed windows to construct this museum and library in Oaxaca.

Productura designed the Community Cultural Centre for Teotitlán del Valle – a small village at the foothills of the Sierra Juárez mountains.

Teotitlan del Valle Community Cultural Center by Productura

The project aims to celebrate the heritage of the community, which was established in 1495 and is known for textile production – particularly weaving and natural dying techniques. The area is also home to a large archeological site that is a popular tourist destination.

Built as two separate volumes on a stepped site, the museum and library comprise a material palette chosen to complement the hues of nearby buildings – like red brickwork and orange rendering – and stone-paved public plazas around the village.

Teotitlan del Valle Community Cultural Center by Productura

Concrete walls are pigmented and textured with the imprints of vertical wooden planks, and also remain exposed inside. Other materials – including timber, brickwork and clay – are all sourced locally from the surrounding area.

“In formal terms, the project is governed by the aesthetics of the immediate context, which determine the height, colour, and materials used,” said Productora. “The architectural volumes present austere, neutral facades.”

Teotitlan del Valle Community Cultural Center by Productura

Curving at the front of the site to face the town’s main square, the museum occupies the largest and most prominent volume.

A large set of brick steps with a timber handrail occupy a large void in the building, to join the plaza with another on the lower level.

Teotitlan del Valle Community Cultural Center by Productura

“This helps to improve the pedestrian routes passing across the site and connecting with the main square, inserting the new public spaces created by the Cultural Center into the circuit of existing plazas that define the urban structure of the village,” said the studio.

The stairway separates the three-story building into two areas, with the reception and gift store, archeology storage and a multi-purpose room on one side.

Teotitlan del Valle Community Cultural Center by Productura

The other side hosts three floors of exhibition spaces, which are accessed by a curved concrete staircase. At the top, glazed doors open onto a terrace that is also carved out of the building’s shape.

The two-storey library has a more simple layout, with separate reading areas for children and adults on the ground floor, and a computer room on the level above.

Teotitlan del Valle Community Cultural Center by Productura

Productura’s choice of board-marked concrete walls and sloped roofs for the Community Cultural Centre has many similarities to the firm’s triangular concert hall in Cuernavaca, central Mexico, which is also located beside an archeological site.

The studio said that along with aesthetic aims, the design aids natural air flow in the building to make it a comfortable space in Mexico’s warm climate.

Teotitlan del Valle Community Cultural Center by Productura

“The form and material character of the building, including double-slab sloping roofs, 30-centimetre-thick concrete walls, and controlled openings, create a passive system that responds to the adverse climatic conditions,” said Productura.

“This basic strategy helps to regulate the temperature inside the building and provides users with a comfortable space to read a book, work or visit the museum, and at the same time eliminates the need to install air conditioning systems.”

Photography is by Luis Gallardo.

Project credits:

Architects: Productora
Project team: Carlos Bedoya, Wonne Ickx, Abel Perles, Víctor Jaime
Collaborators: Rosalía Yuste, Josue Palma, Pamela Martínez, Antonio Espinoza, Andrés Rivadeneyra, Iván Villegas
Contractor: Bonarq (Ismael Rojas)
Structural engineering: Kaltia Consultores (Verónica Correa) and DAE (Juan Felipe Heredia)
Technical engineering: BioE (Alejandro Lirusso)
Landcaping: Entorno Taller de Paisaje (Hugo Sánchez)

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Priveekollektie at NOMAD in St. Moritz

Priveekollektie Contemporary Art | Design proudly presents Dutch and International design at NOMAD St. Moritz 2018. The Chesa Planta kitchen space is ..

One Hot Smartphone Accessory

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This infrared camera concept by Neo Dong allows anyone to see their world in a whole new way. Designed as a peripheral attachment to your IOS or Android smartphone, it snaps on in an instant and works by translating thermal energy (infrared light) into a visible image on your phone.

It can be used to enhance outdoor adventures, assist in DIY home fixes like water leaks and drafts, as well as spot from human or wild animal intruders. With its twisting focus, you can take aim and work with precision or zoom out for a comprehensive thermal reading on landscapes. About the same size as a screwdriver handle, it’s also compact enough to throw in your toolbox or carry in a backpack pocket.

Designer: Neo Dong

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