Charles Trevelyan exhibits pebble-like benches and spindly tables in New York

Works by Australian designer Charles Trevelyan, including skeletal-looking furniture and monolithic marble benches, are currently on show at New York’s Carpenters Workshop Gallery.

Trevelyan, who runs London-based Studio Trevelyan, came up with the concept for the Fuse benches when walking along the coastline in his native Australia. He spotted “surf-rounded pebbles that had fractured off from the larger outcrops” and envisioned assembling them together.

Charles Trevelyan at Carpenters Workshop Gallery

“The concept that formed was the theoretical exercise of picking up a handful of these stones and then crushing them together in your hands such that they fuse into a singular sculptural form,” Trevelyan told Dezeen.

The benches are made from Hotavlje stone sourced from a quarry in Slovenia – which turned out to be located just 50 metres from the stoneworks where the pieces were produced.

Charles Trevelyan at Carpenters Workshop Gallery

A large chunk of the material was sliced into thick slabs and refined into pebble shapes with a mix of computer numerically controlled (CNC) cutting and hand-finishing. Cutouts were left in the individual segments so that they slot back together, creating the two different sized benches.

Contrasting these chunky designs are delicate bronze tables and lamps, which also feature in the exhibit at the Carpenters Workshop Gallery in New York – Trevelyan’s first solo show in the US.

Charles Trevelyan at Carpenters Workshop Gallery

Spindly and knobbly legs allude to natural forms – although less explicitly than the marble designs – and form coils around some of the standing and table lights. Other lampshades are cupped, while tables are topped with slender pieces on metalwork.

“The forms have many different resonances with natural forms,” said Trevelyan. “Tree branches and roots, skeletal-like forms, and sculpted musculature are all present to a certain extent. But my desire with the work was to do so in a way that results in a degree of ambiguity in the final form that allows the viewer to draw their references.”

Charles Trevelyan at Carpenters Workshop Gallery

In keeping with the aesthetic, the designs are cast in either patinated bronze or gilded bronze that is marked to look like rough texture. In earlier experiments, Trevelyan used sand-cast aluminium that was is powder-coated white, but dropped this in favour of a weathered look.

“Bronze also provides the opportunity to experiment with patinas to subtly alter the character of the works and give them a very tactile, and over the long term, mutable finish that responds to both the environment and the usage of the piece over time,” he said.

Charles Trevelyan at Carpenters Workshop Gallery

In the gallery, the resulting mix of white, black, golden and silver are complemented by walls coloured in blocks of dark blue and pink.

Placed in front of a pink-hued backdrop at the entrance to the exhibition is a timber and fibreglass lamp. It comprises two angular legs that appear to kiss, with a flat shade at the top, and is covered in several layers of a Jesmonite and graphite mix.

Charles Trevelyan at Carpenters Workshop Gallery

Trevelyan’s more recent material experiments include a collection of tables called Composite II. In each, individual oak chair legs are fixed together with colourful, triangular resin blocks, and topped with a piece of circular resin.

“The resin pieces start with between three and five loose pieces of timber that are placed into moulds into which the resin is cast,” said the designed. “Each resin element is cast separately, gradually fusing the timber elements together and forming both the joints and tabletops.”

Charles Trevelyan at Carpenters Workshop Gallery

Fuse opened at the Carpenters Workshop Gallery, 693 Fifth Avenue, on 13 September 2018 and runs until 27 October 2018.

Previous exhibitions of contemporary artists and designers at the gallery have included Vincenzo De CotiisWonmin ParkVincent Dubourg and Maarten Baas.

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Harry Parr on Designing Multi-Sensory Experiences and Starting a Business You're Truly Passionate About

This interview is part of a series featuring the presenters participating in this year’s Core77 Conference, “Now What? Launching & Growing Your Creative Business” , a one-day event aimed to equip attendees with tangible skills and toolkits to help produce and promote their products or services.

By now, everyone is probably familiar with what we’re calling the “Ice Cream Museum phenomenon”—you know, those outrageous environments designed strictly to look good on people’s Instagram feeds. As our phone and social media obsessions grow, many artists and brands have been turning towards this form of immersive marketing to capture our attention, but London-based multi-sensory design studio Bompas & Parr has always aimed to do more since their founding in 2007. Their mission of actually educating the public about food through their immersive experiences has made Bompas & Parr pioneers in their field and has set them apart from competitors since day one. Since their founding in 2007, Bompas & Parr has brought a variety of noteworthy experiences to life, including Alcoholic Architecture (an inhabitable cloud of gin and tonic), a multi-sensory fireworks display for London New Year’s Eve 2013, the Taste Experience for the Guinness Storehouse in Dublin, the British Museum of Food and more.

Jelly Parlour of Wonders: Before focusing on more immersive experiences, Bompas & Parr started off as a small stand in a market, specializing in making jellies in unique flavors and shapes

How exactly did Bompas & Parr become the influential design studio they are today? We’ll leave that dynamic story for Harry Parr, Co-Founder of Bompas & Parr to tell during his keynote presentation at the 2018 Core77 Conference, titled “Have Your Cake and Eat it Too: How to Create a Business You’re Actually Passionate About”. In the meantime, we sat down with Harry to learn more about Bompas & Parr and their mission to educate and inspire through immersive food experiences:

What are some of your favorite projects that Bompas & Parr has worked on over the years?

In terms of scale, probably the fireworks that we did in London in 2013. Multi-sensory fireworks are actually amazingly simple—you see a red firework in the sky and you smell strawberry, or perhaps you see gold fireworks and edible banana confetti rains down from the sky. But there were so many different considerations involved. Some of them went into the world of new age scientists, about how people experience flavor. When we started the project, we wanted to do a deconstructed English trifle as our flavor to go with the fireworks, but then we realized that would be a bit complicated. If you’re in an open environment and suddenly these flavors are coming at you, how are you going to know what they are? So we thought we’d use fruit instead, which is something quite universal. 

Machine used to create multi-sensory fireworks

Using this basic strawberry flavor was fine, but then we had to work out how to reinforce this flavor. So, we projection-mapped a picture of a strawberry a hundred feet high onto building across the river so people could see a picture of the strawberry when they saw the red fireworks. We also had a scratch and sniff program to remind them what strawberry smells like. It sounds crazy, but without visual references, you wouldn’t really know. 

On the same level, how do you put flavor into the mouths of a quarter million people? What about allergies? What about alcohol potentially evening the taste out? There was a whole load of work, including re-engineering a bunch of flavors that would be suitable for this. Clean-up was another consideration. The non-eaten confetti needed to be cleaned up somehow, so we made a special edible confetti that would biodegrade within a certain timeframe. There was also pollution of the river to consider. So it was really a project where everything had to come together seamlessly.

Notice the strawberry projected onto the building on the left!

Then on a smaller scale, I’d been speaking to this artist in Syracuse for years who makes lava artificially, but he had never cooked on it. So one time, we were in New York and thought, “let’s go to upstate and see if we can cook over lava”. We just made really simple, good steak, but it was amazing because there was no burning flavor. It’s actually pretty unlike grilling meat on a hot grill, a gas grill or a barbecue because there’s no smokey flavor. It was just pure heat, which created an incredible flavor.

As someone with a design background, and now a food background, when did you start realizing that working with scientists to accomplish your goals was necessary? 

A working “Flavor Organ” in conjunction with Johnnie Walker

I think that the nice thing about working with scientists is that they have very particular areas of interest. They don’t necessarily know how to communicate in a way that people are interested in—they’re often a bit dry. But I think when you combine the kind of work that we do, with the work that, say, neuroscientists are doing, there’s a whole platform to experiment with. And the subject matter’s fun because it’s food, it’s drink, it’s real people having these experiences. I think together, you can do interesting work.

How your work evolved, or not evolved, based on people’s increased social media use? 

It has changed hugely in terms of the way people approach things. We’ve always been interested in praising work that people learn from. We often work with collaborators who are very interested in historical stories. Some work in science, or a similar industry, where there can be a whole layer of information that informs a project. We like to explain this to people, but not force it down their throats. So the information is always there if they’re looking for it. 

“It doesn’t really matter what you do, as long as you’re passionate about it. Frankly, you just need to work harder than the next person. If you’re not willing to do that, then you won’t get anywhere.”

Historically, our work has always been about the moment, the reveal, when people come to an event—that wow factor when they see something they don’t expect. That sense of awe ties quite nicely into people’s current obsession with taking photos of everything. So of course we’ve designed with that in mind. Now it’s more important than ever, but it’s always been there. For us, it’s more about trying to make sure we don’t lose the interesting narratives and the research that goes on behind our projects, and trying to get people interested in that information again. Many people have forgotten that there’s more to things than taking photographs.

What are some techniques you use to try to remind people of the deeper context behind your work?

Besides the subject matter, whether it’s working with actors or staff, it’s all about having people at our events who are really passionate about them. We try to do lots of things that are interactive. Whether it’s making or experiencing something, it’s about trying to force people slightly out of their comfort zones and giving them a reward for doing so. When we design, risk and reward are really important factors that we think about.

You and Sam Bompas also founded the British Museum of Food in London. How did this project come about?

The Chewing Gum Factory in Dubai, where visitors were able to make their own chewing gum

Over the years, we’ve been interested in education and entertainment. We were putting on these immersive events that were unusual and different, but that also had the flair of study and research behind them. It’s also always struck us that there was no museum of food at the time. There wasn’t one in the UK, and there really aren’t any in the world. Of course, just recently, in New York, you have your Museum of Food, but it’s really coming from the same point: Why are we not celebrating food and putting it in the right context? 

Food is some of the post popular, frequently posted content on Instagram, but I think people need to really learn more about the food and have a more balanced opinion about it. We tend to get quite led by sights and sensations, diets and so on with food, but I think people that really immerse themselves and have enough information are able to come to the right conclusion about things. So the education aspect, making people aware of all the different approaches to food, is important. It’s not about what’s good or what’s bad, it’s about saying, “This is the world of food, it’s wonderful” We’re all consuming, all the time. It’s just, we should know more about what we’re doing and have more views on it as well.

So our idea with the museum, really, is to make it a modern museum. It’s much more about having an experience, and exploring things from a different angle. It’s not about huge bits of information, and so on. It’s really about opening people’s eyes to the world of food and letting them have the space to come up with their own conclusions and thoughts about things.

Unique molded ice cream created for SCOOP: A Wonderful Ice Cream World

That’s what we’re doing with our ice cream show in London at moment, SCOOP. The Museum of Ice Cream is huge in the States, but this is different because it’s not just an Instagram museum. It actually starts with a historical collection of 14,000 objects, and then we use those to tease out subjects that are relevant to people now. It’s a different context.

Bompas & Parr has grown from two people to around 20 people over the years. What has scaling up been like, and how did you decide it was time to expand your team?

It’s been an adventure, really! I think it’s more about trying to do as many different projects as possible and being exposed to different experiences. So for us, we just needed a larger team. But we also want people to be able to contribute to the company as well. It’s not like Sam and I come up with all the ideas—we try to share things around as much as possible. It’s all about innovation, doing things that are new, and testing ourselves all the time. That way we can always do something difficult that someone else wouldn’t try. 

What do you think is one of the most common misconceptions people have about starting your own business?

The mysterious scene at Alcoholic Architecture

I don’t think anyone thinks it’s easy, but of course you have no idea what the challenges might be. You have to be quite resilient. The tricky thing is, as you grow, you become more removed from the actual reason why you started the project in the first place. It’s hard to keep growing  while also keeping your wit and keeping things challenging. It’s not particularly easy! But you can choose what to do everyday, so that’s good.

Is there anything you in particular wish you had known before getting into this?

No, I think not, because Sam and I have enjoyed being totally naïve about all sorts of things. Because otherwise, we wouldn’t have done all the projects that we’ve done. We would have thought, “That’s impossible for the budget,” or, “Technically that’s too hard,” or, “That’s not how it works.” Growing up with the business has been beneficial.

Do you have any words of advice, especially young people, looking to start their own business?

You can do anything—just try it out, and people will be interested. You can see what works. Really, most of our projects just start with having an idea and persuading someone to give us the space to do it. Then we go, “Oh shit, how are we going to do it?” And then we work it out. Having the event date as a deadline, or any deadline to help get stuff done, is important. It doesn’t really matter what you do, as long as you’re passionate about it. Frankly, you just need to work harder than the next person. If you’re not willing to do that, then you won’t get anywhere.

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You want to start a creative business. Now What? Come to our 2018 Core77 Conference to learn more about launching & growing a product line or design studio of your own on October 25th in Brooklyn!

Buy “Now What? Launching & Growing Your Creative Business” Tickets here.

Elvie launches wearable breast pump that's silent and wireless

Technology company Elvie has launched a cordless breast pump designed to be worn inconspicuously in any nursing bra.

Unlike most devices for expressing milk, Elvie‘s breast pump is compact and wire-free, so new mothers can move around freely without being bound to sit by a power socket.

Breast pump by Elvie

It also promises a “revolutionary technology that eliminates noise”, meaning people who have recently had babies can more discreetly pump in public. Elvie describes it as “the world’s first silent wearable breast pump”.

The design features a hub that contains the pump mechanism, with a reusable bottle that attaches below to form an oval shape.

Breast pump by Elvie

The bottle holds a little over 150 millilitres of liquid, and there are two in every Elvie breast pump kit.

Optionally, the breast pump can be used with an accompanying smartphone app that monitors milk volume in real time, shows pumping session history and allows remote control over the device.

It fits in any standard nursing bra and comes with a bra adjuster toggle so the wearer can easily loosen the garment when they want to wear the device. It is electric and rechargeable.

Breast pump by Elvie

The breast pump is the second product from Elvie, which was founded in 2013 by women’s health expert Tania Boler, in partnership with entrepreneur and investor Alexander Asseily, a co-founder of Jawbone.

The company’s first product was a smart Kegel trainer to help tone the pelvic floor muscles post-pregnancy.

“We approach problems as women and solve them as engineers, scientists and designers, starting with a real need and innovating around it,” says Elvie on its website.

Breast pump by Elvie

“Women shouldn’t have to make do with shoddy design or pink spin-offs when there are self-driving cars in the world,” continues the company.

The promise of inaudibility and the compact design is a point of difference between Elvie’s breast pump and another cordless model by Willow. The design also features a reusable bottle instead of disposable milk sacks that need to be replaced.

Breast pump by Elvie

Elvie launched the breast pump last week accompanied by a music video made by creative agency Mother featuring a dance troupe of new mothers and lyrics that bemoan their being made to feel like dairy cows while expressing milk.

It is currently running a wait list for orders for the pump, with new stock expected in October.

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Reader Submitted: A Table Lamp Inspired by a Pickup Needle Placed on a Vinyl

Athens-based ADD Architectural Studio’sReverse Pickup Table Lamp’s design was inspired from the concept of transmission of sound as a vinyl rotates on the pickup needle. The vinyl was replaced by the translucent marble discus which was placed standing, thus producing the “reverse pickup” table lamp. The concept becomes complete with the bronze arcs, which in combination with the discus’s final position depict the archetype of the pickup needle placed on a vinyl.

Reverse Pickup Table Lamp received the 2017-2018 Silver A’ Design Award
Credit: ADD Architecture Studio

The design was inspired from the concept of transmission of sound as the vinyl rotates on the all time classic Pickup.
Credit: ADD Architecture Studio

The vinyl was replaced by the translucent marble discus which was placed standing,thus producing a reverse pickup table lamp
Credit: ADD Architecture Studio

The concept becomes complete with the bronze arcs which in combination with the discus’s final position depict the archetype of the Pickup needle placed upon a vinyl
Credit: ADD Architecture Studio

The form of the two bronze arcs emanates from the desire to enclose the discus and accentuate the notion of movement and the play between light and shadow
Credit: ADD Architecture Studio

The uniqueness lies into the featuring of an elegant discus consisting of translucent marble.As the discus rotates along the base it gradually lights up
Credit: ADD Architecture Studio

The further the discus rotates by the user from the starting point,the more it gets illuminated
Credit: ADD Architecture Studio

As the mood changes,all you need to do is “play” your favorite discus
Credit: ADD Architecture Studio

Three different discuses,each made from a different colored marble were chosen to match the users’ aesthetics and mood
Credit: ADD Architecture Studio

Elevation and Cross-Section
Credit: ADD Architecture Studio

View the full project here

Biodegradable natural plastic Nuatan can safely be eaten by fish

A type of compostable bioplastic made of corn starch, sugar and used cooking oil, created by Crafting Plastics Studio, could replace “all the packaging we know”, according to its designers.

Nuatan, which was presented at an exhibition during London Design Festival, is more durable than previous bioplastics and degrades harmlessly when composted or ingested.

Designer Vlasta Kubušová of Crafting Plastics Studio said that once the material has been granted a food-safety certificate, it could be used for food and drink packaging, meaning its uses could be almost limitless.

“Once we have the certificate, it can replace all the packaging we know,” she said.

Biodegradable natural plastic Nuatan by Crafting Plastics Studio
Nuatan was exhibited at the London Design Festival

Nuatan is the result of six years of research conducted with material scientists at the Slovak University of Technology. It is a blend of two different biopolymers.

Polyacid Acid (PLA) is a natural plastic derived from corn starch while Polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB) is made from corn starch that has been metabolised by microorganisms.

Fully biodegradable bioplastic

The two ingredients are blended according to a patented recipe to create the new material, which can be injection moulded, 3D printed and blow-formed like traditional plastics.

The designers claim the material can withstand temperatures of over 100 degrees Celsius without losing integrity and has a lifespan of up to 15 years.

Biodegradable natural plastic Nuatan by Crafting Plastics Studio
The designers claim that the material is fully biodegradable

“For the first time, a fully bio-based, biodegradable material can be considered as a competitor in terms of properties and processability,” they state.

It could be used to replace all single-use plastic products such as water bottles, carrier bags and drinking straws – all items that have attracted negative attention recently due to their impact on the environment.

Fish can eat it

Unlike plastics made from carbon-based raw materials, Nuatan is biocompatible, meaning it is harmless to living creatures. “It degrades inside the human body or animals,” Kubušová said. “If fish eat it, it just degrades in their bodies.”

The material is also biodegradable, and can be broken down in industrial composters.

Biodegradable natural plastic Nuatan by Crafting Plastics Studio
The material can be digested by fish

However, the cost of producing the material needs to fall before Nuatan can be widely used. The designers are seeking partners to help develop new products to increase demand, which they hope will lead to a reduction in the price.

We are hoping to find collaborators who want to include it in the right products, and not combine it with other materials, so it’s a mono-material,” said Kubušová. “If we can find the right collaborators, it can change things a lot.”

Bioplastic eyewear

The designers started out demonstrating Nuatan with luxury products, which are less affected by raw material costs. Two years ago the studio developed eyewear featuring frames coloured using natural pigments such as coffee waste, turmeric and indigo.

“We started with value-added products where the material price doesn’t make too much difference,” Kubušová said. “We hope that these products can create bigger demand so the price can come down.”

Biodegradable natural plastic Nuatan by Crafting Plastics Studio
Nuatan has been used to create a collection of glasses

Now they are looking to develop a wider range of industrial products and claim Nuatan can be used for everything except the most demanding uses, such as exterior parts of cars.

Suitable for 3D printing and blow forming

“We started with eyewear and now we’re using it for 3D printing, injection moulding and other plastic manufacturing technologies,” the designer said.

The material and its uses were demonstrated at an exhibition in London as part of the London Design Festival last week. Called Feel Free to Consume, the show was part of the Brompton Design District.

It comes at a time of rising interest among designers in exploring solutions to the problems of plastic pollution. Examples include multiple projects that make use of ocean plastic and other experiments with recycling plastics.

“There is more than one solution [to the problem of plastic waste], but this is one of the solutions we know can work within circular design,” said Kubušová.

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Casa R by Felipe Lagos provides a mountain refuge in Patagonia

Chilean architect Felipe Lagos has created a pointy black cabin for his family, with several design elements that help it endure extreme climatic conditions.

Casa R by Tu Croquis

Casa R is located in the town of Vilches in southern Chile, about halfway up the Andes Mountains and part of the Patagonia region that spans into Argentina. Nearby attractions include Maule Lagoon, Colbún Lake and several nature reserves and national parks. The 96-square-metre dwelling serves as a vacation home for Lagos and his family.

Casa R by Tu Croquis

The cabin sits on a remote site in the forest and looks north toward a river valley. The dwelling rises two storeys in order to “rescue views of the valley above the tree foliage and landscape,” said Lagos, who leads the Santiago-based architecture studio Tu Croquis.

Casa R by Tu Croquis

Rectangular in plan, the cabin has a sharply gabled roof, which helps prevent snow accumulation. In order to minimise the disturbance to the landscape, a large portion of the cabin is lifted above the ground. This is particularly evident in the rear of the dwelling, where steps lead up to ground level.

Steel was used for the structural frame due to its fire- and water-resistant qualities, and exterior walls are wrapped in black-painted wood. On the north side of the cabin, a window wall offers a strong connection to the landscape. The cabin’s materials were carefully studied “as a way of integrating the architecture into the context”.

Casa R by Tu Croquis

The front of the dwelling features a “chiflonera” – an area between the interior and exterior of a building that helps regulate temperatures. These buffer zones are commonly found in the region, where climatic conditions can be extreme.

Casa R by Tu Croquis

Inside, the ground level contains a compact kitchen and living area, along with a bathroom. A spiral staircase leads to the A-framed upper level, where the Lagos placed a bedroom, a sitting area and a work desk. Dark structural beams were left exposed, providing a contrast to white walls and wooden flooring.

Casa R by Tu Croquis

For the interior layout, the architect used four different prefabricated modules, some of which are repeated. One module is fully enclosed by walls, while the other three are open. The modules can be placed “side by side in an open plan or open space”, said Lagos, adding that bedroom modules could be added to the cabin’s perimeter if needed.

Casa R by Tu Croquis

The finishes and decor are meant to be durable and easy to maintain. In the kitchen, the architect used plywood, acrylic and stainless steel. Other spaces feature plastic furniture from the Chilean company Muebles Sur and wooden chairs designed by Charles and Ray Eames.

Casa R by Tu Croquis

Other getaway spots in the Chilean mountains include the La Leonera Mountain Retreat by Del Rio Arquitectos Asociados, which features a pointy roofline, and a bright red cabin by Felipe Assadi Arquitectos that sits within a lush, verdant site.

Photography is by Felipe Lagos.

Project credits:

Architecture: Tu Croquis (Felipe Lagos)
Interior design: Tu Croquis (Ramón Vallejos)
Construction: Tu Croquis Ltda

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Abstract chess set and blue tableware created for London's Ace Hotel

An abstract chess set made from recycled materials and a set of blue-powder-coated tableware are two of the five objects commissioned by the Ace Hotel for the fourth edition of Ready Made Go.

The objects, which will be integrated permanently into the interiors of the hotel, were shown in the Ready Made Go exhibition in the lobby of the Ace Hotel in Shoreditch during the London Design Festival.

Five commissioned products by London designers are introduced at London's Ace Hotel
The Ace Hotel commissioned five items that will be incorporated into the hotel

For the fourth year designers were commissioned by the hotel team, alongside Ready Made Go curator and Modern Design Review editor Laura Houseley, to create objects and furniture.

The project begins with a wish list of objects from the hotel, which can range from basic items such as door handles to more outlandish ideas such as a climbing wall. Houseley is tasked with matching up the items with the London-based studios who are best suited to designing them.

Five commissioned products by London designers are introduced at London's Ace Hotel
Minimalux designed a two-tier cake stand that will be used at the Ace Hotel

“Trying to match an object with somebody who is already working with a particular material or method is part of the challenge,” Houseley told Dezeen.

“Each year we have designers who are well known and some who are very much not. I hope Ready Made Go gives a good overview of what is going on in design in London at the moment.”

Five commissioned products by London designers are introduced at London's Ace Hotel
Alusid created an abstract chess set made from recycled materials for Ready Made Go

Following on from last year’s Ready Made Go 3 collection, where each of the objects were made from recycled materials, sustainable surface material specialists Alusid returned to Ready Made Go.

This time Alusid worked with Marco Campardo and Lorenzo Mason of M-L-XL, to create a games table in cast Silicastone – a material made from fused recycled glass and ceramics.

The table features a unique white-to-black gradient surface inspired by the black-and-white checkered pattern of the traditional chessboard, and comes with a series of matching oversized chess and draught pieces made in the same material.

“Our ethos is rooted in our attention to modes of production and local resources, and we are particularly interested in making as a form of knowledge-production,” said Campardo and Mason.

“That is why our work explores the use of different materials and traditional craftsmanship, bringing those forms of knowledge to life in the contemporary context.”

The polished quartz and hand finished brass will be used in the Hoi Polloi restaurant

Designed for use in the hotel’s Hoi Polloi restaurant, London-based design brand Minimalux contributed a minimalist two-tier cake stand made from polished quartz and hand finished brass.

“In general it is always very nice to be given a brief… it can be challenging and open new, perhaps surprising, channels of thought that otherwise wouldn’t have arisen,” commented Minimalux founders Mark Holmes and Tamara Caspersz.

“The result is a design that we’re proud of.”

Five commissioned products by London designers are introduced at London's Ace Hotel
Designed by Laetitia de Allegri the tableware will be used for special events at the hotel

Swiss-born, London-based Laetitia de Allegri‘s sturdy tableware is cut from sheets of blue-powder-coated stainless steel, which are then welded together.

Named Secant, after the geometry that inspired it, the collection features straight lines that cut perfect curves in two or more parts. “The aim for me was to create pieces that are practical, yet elegant and carry a story,” said de Allegri.

Secant includes a cutlery/napkin holder, bread basket, caddy, and large and small trays, all of which will be used in the hotel for special events on the seventh floor.

Five commissioned products by London designers are introduced at London's Ace Hotel

Recent Kingston School of Art graduates Will Drye and Dom Postlethwaite of industrial design studio WD-DP created a set of wall hooks made using the simple process of tube pinching.

Tubular steel, with a 19 millimetre diameter, is bent and partially flattened to allow the hooks to sit flush to the wall, while the back is fitted with a wooden block that prevents the hangers from scratching the wall surface.

“By celebrating these off-the-shelf materials and common processes, we aimed for the object to place a higher value on industrial materials and simplicity of manufacture,” said the duo.

Five commissioned products by London designers are introduced at London's Ace Hotel
Abigail Booth created a bedspread called Raised Ground for the collection

The collection of items was completed by co-founder of craft studio Forest + Found Abigail Boot, who has made a bedspread called Raised Ground using a natural homemade dye.

The unique taupe-coloured dye was made by Booth using clay that she sourced from the foundation of a nearby building in east London.

Five commissioned products by London designers are introduced at London's Ace Hotel
The exhibition included all of the items from previous years’ Ready Made Go exhibitions

For the first time, this year’s Ready Made Go showcase also includes a retrospective exhibition in the hotel’s lobby. Gathered together in a single display for the first time, the retrospective takes a look back at all 18 products that have been created for the Ace Hotel across the project’s three previous editions.

“All of the pieces are still in use and I love that they are always here,” explained Houseley. “When we commission the designers we are very clear that the items have to have longevity.”

“The door handle by Philippe Malouin is one of my favourites. It’s made from an industrial Allen Key and it’s the most perfect shape and size,” continued Houseley.

“For me that is the spirit of the project – a really awkward brief with really tough constraints that requires a solution with ingenuity that doesn’t require spending a lot of money.”

Other exhibitions at London Design Festival, which ran from 15 to 23 September, include an exhibition of furniture by emerging Uruguayan design studios at Aram Gallery, and another of work by Japanese master metalworkers at Japan House.

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The Vuz Moto Tent shelters the rider and the ride

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Imagine heading out for a weekend in the wilderness. You’ve packed your bag, strapped your helmet on and mounted on your ride. GoPro docked on the side of your helmet, you’re capturing the journey there, and you notice something. Gray clouds above you, the sky’s overcast, and it’s getting a little windy.

Soon it begins to rain and you’re at the campsite. You’ve set the tent up for yourself, but your motorbike’s out there in the rain, getting completely drenched and possibly even covered in mud and grime. Now that’s what I call an undesirable experience… which can be easily avoided by the Waterproof Motorcycle Shelter by Vuz Moto. Designed to be 12 feet long, the tent has a dedicated shelter for up to 3 humans, as well as one for your motorcycle, allowing you (and anyone accompanying you) and your ride to escape the elements. With a completely waterproof construction, the shelter keeps both rider and ride dry, even giving you a dry floor to sleep on. Four access points allow you to enter and exit from any direction, as well as park your bike in any way you see fit, given the circumstance. When the weather’s good enough to hit the road again, the entire shelter folds up neatly into a carryable package that weighs no more than 14 pounds. And that’s what I call a desirable experience!

Designer: Vuz Moto

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An Exhibition in London Celebrates the Skate Culture

Une exposition qui ne montre exclusivement que des photographies de skate, voilà qui est original. “Against the Grain” est un exposition décalée qui cherche à mettre en lumière le travail très spécifique des photographes et des vidéastes dont le travail est dédié à la “culture skate”. Loin des clichés attendus, ces images montrent un univers sportif et exigeant, parfois surréaliste, à travers les yeux de célébrités comme Glen E. Friedmann ou encore Spike Jonze. Des figures, des roulettes, de la sueur et un soupçon d’envie qui nous traverse, voilà une exposition que l’on espère bien voir voyager en Europe !










Cattelan Exhibited at Louis Vuitton’s Foundation

Alors même que l’on commençait tout juste à l’oublier, le très provocateur artiste contemporain italien Maurizio Cattelan a de nouveau choqué le public lors de la réexposition de La ballata di Trotski à la fondation Louis Vuitton cet été. Cette oeuvre, littéralement un cheval (empaillé) suspendu au plafond par un harnais, est supposée représenter l’échec de l’utopie communiste de Léon Trotsky, théoricien du parti communiste sous Lénine puis sous Staline. Créée en 1996, elle a de nouveau déchaîné la critique, toujours pas insensible aux penchants taxidermistes de Maurizio Cattelan.