A Harmonious Mix Between Digital Paintings and Photography

Basé à Maceió, dans la région d’Alagoas au Brésil, Tullius Heuer a réalisé la série «The Living Sketch». Un travail très original, qui combine la photographie et la peinture numérique. Ce talentueux artiste autodidacte joue avec ces deux techniques, dans une très bonne harmonie. Il en résulte des caractères qui semblent tenter d’échapper aux pages sur lesquelles ils se trouvent ou d’être bien placés à la frontière de deux mondes. Grâce au mouvement et à cet effet d’esquisse que leur donne Tullius, les créations ont l’air de prendre vie. «Mes œuvres personnelles consistent en mes pensées et mes sentiments sur la vie et l’existence. Je n’ai pas de thème spécifique à aborder dans mes difféerentes pièces, mais la plupart d’entre elles ont généralement des liens émotionnels forts avec des messages positifs», explique-t-il.

 

 

 

 

 





Baubax’s organic Travel Shoes are designed by man but produced by nature (coconut & bamboo)

Earlier this year, Baubax set on a mission to revolutionize the fashion industry with clothes that put comfort beyond everything else. The Travel Shoes represent a final piece in that puzzle, after having previously launched travel jackets and travel pants that combine comfort, durability, stain-resistance, and style. Just like Baubax’s apparel, the shoes are designed to be everything you want from your footwear. They’re grippy, durable, water-resistant, come in a variety of styles with both laced and laceless variants, but most importantly, are extremely comfortable. Borrowing entirely from nature and natural materials, Baubax’s travel shoes are organic from top to bottom, carefully picking and choosing materials that best fit the shoe’s needs.

The rubber outsole gives the shoes the friction it needs to firmly grip onto even the slipperiest of floors, while a coconut coir and natural latex insole mimic the feeling of having a cushy mattress underneath your feet. Sitting between the insole and your feet is a layer of Australian merino wool, a breathable fabric that keeps your feet feeling ventilated, while letting you commit the otherwise cardinal sin of wearing your shoes without socks. Merino wool, however, possesses anti-bacterial properties too, so your feet stay healthy and your shoes don’t end up developing an odor. Sitting above everything is the Travel Shoes’ bamboo-fabric upper, which keeps your feet cool at all times, just like open-toed sandals, but without being a fashion faux-pas.

Just like the rest of Baubax’s apparel, the shoes are designed to be worn everyday, everywhere, every time. Available in multiple styles, from the kind you’d wear to work, to the kind you’d holiday in, Baubax’s Travel Shoes are water-resistant, stain-resistant, odor-free, while being some of the most lightweight footwear ever made, thanks to the comfortable coconut-coir insole. The laced variants come with elastic laces too, allowing you to slip on and slip off the shoes anywhere, anytime. Given Baubax’s commitment to building a fashion brand that puts something as demanding as travel-comfort on the top of its list, the Travel Shoes take the best bits from sports shoes, formal shoes, and comfortable orthopedic footwear, while literally borrowing from billions of years of natural evolution for some of the most advanced yet organic materials known to our kind!

Designers: Hiral Sanghavi & Yoganshi Shah for Baubax

Click Here to Buy Now: $100 $150 ($50 off). Hurry, only 7/360 left. Raised over $1,000,000!

TRAVEL SHOES by BauBax

Made from Coconut Coir, Natural Latex, Merino Wool and Bamboo. These shoes are grippy, durable, water-resistant, come in a variety of styles with both laced and laceless variants, but most importantly, are extremely comfortable.

Three Styles for Men and Women

Lists of Features and Benefits

Lightweight.

Stain Resistant.

Water Resistant.

Breathable.

Bouncy and Cushiony.

Grippy.

Odor Control.

Cool to the Skin.

Soft and Cozy.

Durable.

Supportive.

Sizing Chart

The shoes are made as per standard US sizing. In case you are between sizes, then it is suggested that you size up for a comfort fit, or size down for a snug fit.

In case you follow EU sizes, we recommend you measure your foot length in Cm or Inches and select your shoe size from the chart above.

Materials Overview

Colors – Dressy Men

Colors – Dressy Women

Colors – Loungy Men’s and Women’s

Colors – Breezy Men’s and Women’s

Click Here to Buy Now: $100 $150 ($50 off). Hurry, only 7/360 left. Raised over $1,000,000!

Most Buzzed Designs of August 2019

Below you’ll find the most popular designs we’ve tracked over the last 30 days – an overview of designs you shouldn’t have missed in August 2019.

The Cineorama by Erika Hock is an outdoor viewing space with projectors.

This Avengers-inspired Infinity Saucelet™ brings all your fast food dreams to life in one snap of your fingers. The gauntlet can wield the power of all of your favorite fast food sauces all at once.

This Mac Pro by Semin Jun challenges Jony Ive’s cheese-grater edition successfully.

The evaCHILL is a portable personal air conditioner without the release of Carbon Dioxide!

These earphones sit around your neck, magnetically attached to a chain, giving the earbuds a more fashion-forward approach.

Never seen before: A brand-new design combining the portable wireless charging with aromatherapy diffusion. Buy now!

Taking inspiration from the rounded bodies of F1 cars and cafe racer motorcycles, the Ducati è rossa comes with a carbon-fiber chassis on the inside and a wide, curvaceous body on the outside that gives the bike its temperamental demeanor.

Who needs a display when this keyboard projects your screen directly on your retina?

I have to hand it to designer Pei-Ju Wu, for the clever way he has integrated a planter, side table and lamp, into this amazing piece of furniture that you can place in your living room.

The Volvo PV has an adaptable seating position; the user has the option of how they would like to travel, they may find a standing position for short distances more comfortable than the more reclined position that’s advised for longer journeys.

This iMac integrates a wireless charging for your iPhone, AirPods, TouchPad… both from the top and the side of the stand, is simply clever.

Xbox Cloud’s controllers attach to your phone for a handheld Xbox-gameplay experience!

Rama Estudio embeds Casa Patios into rural Ecuadorian landscape

Casa Patios by Rama Estudio

Two stone-walled volumes with grassy roofs are embedded into a rural site in Ecuador to form this house, designed by Quito’s Rama Estudio.

Casa Patios by Rama Estudio

Casa Patios is secondary family home located in Lasso, a small rural municipality in the province of Cotopaxi.

It comprises two offset volumes that are partially sunken into the landscape, with a third structure adjoining them in the middle. Patios located on either side of this central volume give the house its name.

Casa Patios by Rama Estudio

Thick stone walls flanking the main volumes prop up gently sloped roofs covered in vegetation. Additional walls are formed from bahareque, a construction made of soil and straw packed onto a wooden and metal mesh frame – similar to rammed earth or adobe construction.

“These serve as enclosure and have been used for centuries in our country,” Rama Estudio said, adding that the walls were built with soil from the building site itself.

Casa Patios by Rama Estudio

It follows a number of residences in the small South American country that are designed to make the most of local materials. Examples include a house by Rama Estudio, featuring rammed-earth walls, and Emilio López’s Don Juan house, which uses amarillo and asta woods.

In Casa Patios, Rama Estudio chose the bahareque to improves the thermal and sound insulation properties of the interior.

Casa Patios by Rama Estudio

The warm tones of the walls also complement an exposed structure, comprising steel elements, and beams and columns made of eucalyptus wood. According to Rama Estudio, eucalyptus is abundant in the area, and local workers know how to work with the material easily.

The glazed space between these enclosed areas serves as the access to the home, and contains the main social spaces.

Casa Patios by Rama Estudio

An open-plan living and dining room is framed by tall glass doors on either side, within close proximity to the kitchen, which is visually separated by a wooden room divider.

“The social area articulates the two parts of the house through a transparent space, which physically and visually connects the two exterior courtyards,” the practice added.

Casa Patios by Rama Estudio

In addition to the outdoor spaces on either side of the living and dining room, there is also a covered area for barbecuing just outside the kitchen.

Two bedrooms are contained within one half of the residence, and separated from each other by a media room. On the other side, there is a children’s bedroom with a separate play area.

Casa Patios by Rama Estudio

Minimal furniture with clean lines features throughout the home, and uses a similar palette to the home’s materiality. In addition to being used for the structural columns and beams, eucalyptus wood also forms the floorboards and other finishes.

Photography is by JAG Studio.


Project credits:

Architectural design: Carla Chávez, Felipe Donoso, Carolina Rodas
First builder: Manuel Alpusig
Carpinter: Vicente Tixe
Work resident: Gustavo Recalde
Mechanical services and plumbing: Edison Parreño
Structural calculations and metal assembly: Pedro Ospina Larrea
Floor and wall finishes: Edy Guillén
Floors and screens: Maderas Guerrero
Metal components: William Romero
Stoves: Falco
Kitchen and stainless steel: Andrés Vasco
Illustration: Carlos Valarezo

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Pink marble core cuts through concrete interiors of Portuguese house

Casa do Monte by Leopold Banchini and Daniel Zamarbide

Architect Daniel Zamarbide and Leopold Banchini Architects have designed a concrete house in Lisbon with a central core of local pink marble.

Called Casa do Monte, meaning Hill House, the project is located at the top of a steep and narrow stepped hill characteristic of the Portuguese capital.

Casa do Monte by Leopold Banchini and Daniel Zamarbide

A restoration of an abandoned and fallen down building, the three-storey house has a plain white outer appearance, similar to that of its neighbours. But inside the house is a dramatic contrast of concrete and pink marble.

“The regular rhythm of the historical openings in the white facade of the building is preserved, but the interiors are carved to create larger volumes and play on light and views,” explained Leopold Banchini Architects.

Casa do Monte by Leopold Banchini and Daniel Zamarbide

On each of the three levels a large marble core contains what the practice call “elementary needs” such as a fireplace, kitchen units, a bathroom and even a double bed. This frees up the surrounding spaces to become flexible living areas.

Sliding wooden doors in these areas allow for pockets of private space to be created when necessary, such as enclosing the bed to create a bedroom.

Casa do Monte by Leopold Banchini and Daniel Zamarbide

Curved cuts in the corners of the plan create double-height spaces that draw natural light into the home and create a connection between the floors, which can also be enclosed with fabric curtains.

Each level of Casa do Monte is connected by a thin steel spiral staircase finished in blue that winds its way up the house to the roof terrace.

Casa do Monte by Leopold Banchini and Daniel Zamarbide

Throughout the interiors, materials and finishes have been kept simple, with the raw concrete structure of the home left exposed. Slabs of marble have been used to create shelving.

At ground floor level, the living, dining and kitchen space opens onto a shaded patio clad with traditional Portuguese tiles or azulejos, with openings in the walls overlooking the city below.

Casa do Monte by Leopold Banchini and Daniel Zamarbide

On the roof of Casa do Monte the marble-tiled terrace is surrounded by a thin pool, which provides dramatic panoramic views of Lisbon.

Shade is provided by three umbrella pine trees, similar to ones planted by the monks in front of the nearby chapel of Nossa Senhora de Monte.

Casa do Monte by Leopold Banchini and Daniel Zamarbide

Leopold Banchini Architects has previously worked with Daniel Zamarbide in Lisbon to design Zamarbide’s own home, Dodge House, with an abandoned-seeming facade hiding bright, double-height living spaces.

Photography is by Leopold Banchini.

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Hoggs & Lamb recreates features of ancient Babylon in Sydney restaurant

Babylon restaurant and bar by Hoggs & Lamb

Recessed arches, free-standing stone plinths and hanging rooftop plants are designed to recall the ancient ruins of Babylon inside a restaurant and bar in Sydney.

The restaurant, which takes its name from the city of Babylon, is located on the rooftop floor of Westfield shopping centre. Hogg & Lamb designed it with numerous arches and niches from travertine and natural stone to recall the ancient city.

Babylon restaurant and bar by Hoggs & Lamb

Overall Babylon has been arranged as a miniature city, with different zones designed as urban districts containing enclosed groups of tables that are the buildings.

“We researched Mesopotamian cities and artwork which helped influence the planning, the buildings, streets and arcades were helpful to create a locale, we were carful not to make a ‘museum’, but rather a place where people can have fun, relax even misbehave,” said Hogg & Lamb co-founder Greg Lamb.

“Cities generally break down into quarters or districts each with their own character, we tried to reflect this in the way the venue is planned by adjusting the volume and materials of the various spaces,” he told Dezeen.

Babylon restaurant and bar by Hoggs & Lamb

Blocks containing the central kitchen, where Middle-eastern cuisine is prepared, and the bar spatially divide the floor area.

Roofs of the other structures within the restaurant are disconnected from the ceiling to enable plants to hang over the edges.

Babylon restaurant and bar by Hoggs & Lamb

Travertine plinths and vaults throughout the design meet the timber parquet flooring, where the similarities in appearance were intended to reinforce the concept of an excavated entity.

“An excavation-like style is exactly what we had in mind for some areas,” said Lamb. “We’re mindful that Babylon is above a shopping centre and so creating that level of authenticity was always going to be a challenge.”

Babylon restaurant and bar by Hoggs & Lamb

Materials including terracotta, clay and natural stone embellish the interior, designed to reflect the old Babylonian city landscapes.

“The contrast of historical archetypal references juxtaposed against refined and luxurious finishes deliver a feast for the eyes and the appetite,” continued Lamb.

Babylon restaurant and bar by Hoggs & Lamb

A permeable screen hand-cut from terracotta blocks stands at the front of the restaurant, where imperfections on the tiles were adopted by the studio to add texture to the facade.

Framed within a masonry structure, the screen helps maintain privacy and comfort but enable glimpses to outside for customers dining behind.

Babylon restaurant and bar by Hoggs & Lamb

Timber-slatted barrel vaults are suspended from the ceiling in the second dining area, where the lower ceiling height provides more intimate spaces.

In the bar, wine is stored in a wire frame on the northern travertine wall. Seen behind the intentionally spaced out bottles, the stone is left unfinished by the studio to exaggerate the appearance of excavated spaces.

Soft sheer curtains conceal the rest of the masonry interior, complementing the soft lines of the curved timber vaulting and arches in the space.

Babylon restaurant and bar by Hoggs & Lamb

Mesopotamian architectural styles were followed to inform the technical details. Hogg & Lamb chose to use simpler butt joints to more sophisticated mitre joinery, as a “more honest” construction that demonstrates Babylonian characteristics.

Dining experiences within the monolithic, cave-like Nikunotoriko restaurant in Tokyo is created by its restricted material palette, whilst a bar in Kilkis uses arches and exuberant stone detailing to devise a mosaic of spaces.


Project credits:

Architect: Hogg and Lamb
Project team: Greg Lamb, Michael Hogg, Lucia Castro Perez, Kasia Jarosz.
Project management: Mantle Group
Builder: Xenia
Services engineer: BSE
Retail design manager: Scentre Group
Lighting design: Tim Barry Lighting and Design
Structural engineer: MPN
Stylist: Stewart Highfield

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This week, we unveiled Dezeen Awards shortlists

This week on Dezeen, we announced the shortlisted architecture, interior and design projects that are in line to win Dezeen Awards in 2019.

Now in its second year, Dezeen Awards recognises the world’s best architecture, interior and design projects, as well as the studios and individual architects and designers producing the best work.

This week we revealed the shortlisted projects ahead of the ceremony in October, including a house in England made from recycled cork, Europe’s first underwater restaurant, and the world’s first silent wireless breast pump.

John Pawson pares back Barbican apartment to “a state of emptiness”

Another prize-worthy project that was popular with readers this week was John Pawson’s overhaul of a London Barbican estate apartment, to which he applied his signature minimalist aesthetic.

Pawson employed the idea of “paring away everything to a state of emptiness” when designing the flat, which now features pale surfaces and a handful of furnishings arranged around a central timber volume.

Lamborghini’s first hybrid production supercar will be its “fastest car of all time”

From minimalism to maximalism, Lamborghini revealed its first hybrid supercar to go into production this week, which it claims will be its “fastest car of all time”.

The Lamborghini Sián boasts a combined thermal and electric power of 819 horsepower (602 kilowatts), and is able to accelerate from zero to 62 miles per hour in under 2.8 seconds.

Jony Ive and Marc Newson's all-diamond ring revealed
Jony Ive and Marc Newson’s all-diamond ring revealed

Another lavish project that hit the headlines was a ring designed by Apple’s departing design chief Jony Ive and industrial designer Marc Newson.

Pictures of the ring, which is made from a single enormous diamond, were revealed after it was crafted bespoke for the anonymous buyer who purchased it at a Sotheby’s auction in December 2018 for US$256,250.

Snøhetta completes office on Norwegian Fjord that produces twice the amount of energy it uses
Snøhetta completes office on Norwegian Fjord that produces twice the amount of energy it uses

Over in architecture news, Snøhetta completed the sustainable Powerhouse Brattørkaia office in Trondheim, Norway, which produces more than double the amount of electricity that it uses per day.

The studio hopes to set an example for other architecture firms in light of the climate crisis by using 3,000-square-metres of solar panels to provide sustainable energy for itself, neighbouring buildings and city transport.

Kohn Pedersen Fox slots raised gardens into Robinson Tower in Singapore
Kohn Pedersen Fox slots raised gardens into Robinson Tower in Singapore

Global architecture firm Kohn Pedersen Fox completed the 175-metre-high Robinson Tower in Singapore this week.

Designed in collaboration with local practice Architects 61, the Robinson Tower is split into two sections with a gap in between, which has been used to create a green roof terrace shaded by the tower above.

Michigan high school designed to reduce impact of mass shootings

In America, architecture firm Tower Pinkster has designed the Fruitport High School campus in Michigan with the aim of reducing the number of student casualties in the event of a mass shooting.

The school is designed in segments that are divided by fire doors that can be closed at the push of a button to close off compartments.

Large expanses of glazing also open up the sight lines into the school, while indoor hallways will be curved to cut off the shooter’s line of sight, and concrete wing walls will provide barriers for students to hide behind.

New details of Álvaro Siza's first US project revealed in images
New details of Álvaro Siza’s first US project revealed in images

Elsewhere in the US, new renderings of Álvaro Siza’s luxury condominium tower in New York were revealed, offering a full look at the Portuguese architect’s first project in America.

The images show the interior and exterior of the 37-storey residential building on 611 West 56th Street, which boasts a stepped form with pale Turkish limestone cladding on its exterior, and minimal decor inside comprised of pale stone and marble, bright white walls and wooden flooring.

Bornstein Lyckefors builds pale green cabin on rural Swedish island
Bornstein Lyckefors builds pale green cabin on rural Swedish island

Other projects popular with Dezeen readers this week were a set of midcentury emojis by American design retailer Death by Modernism, Bornstein Lyckefors’ pale green cabin on a rural Swedish island, and SO&CO’s skinny office building slotted between two buildings in Tokyo.

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Petra bathroom collection is made from stain-resistant concrete

Petra concrete bathroom furniture by Marco Merendi and Diego Vencato with Gypsum

Designers Marco Merendi and Diego Vencato have collaborated with Italian firm Gypsum to develop a dirt-resistant concrete, which they used to create a collection of bathroom furniture suitable for outdoor use.

Milan-based architect Merendi and Veronese industrial designer Vencato used the new material to create the Petra collection of bathroom furniture for Italian brand Agape.

Petra concrete bathroom furniture by Marco Merendi and Diego Vencato with Gypsum

The collection comprises a washbasin available in a countertop or freestanding version, along with a separate countertop surface for the sink to sit on and a shower tray. The freestanding sink is fixed to a column incorporating the accompanying brassware.

Petra features on the longlist for the Dezeen Awards 2019 in the Furniture design category, alongside a range of furniture and homeware made from marble and volcanic stone, and a flat-pack furniture collection produced using recycled plastic bottles.

Petra concrete bathroom furniture by Marco Merendi and Diego Vencato with Gypsum

Vencato and Merendi had proposed a range of concrete products to Agape back in 2014 but the company had yet to identify a type of cement with appropriate characteristics for this application.

The designers worked with Emanuele Perego of plaster and stone specialist Gypsum to develop a high-performance concrete called Cementoskin that is resistant to any sort of dirt and can be moulded to create delicate forms.

Petra concrete bathroom furniture by Marco Merendi and Diego Vencato with Gypsum

“It is a new material, a mixture of cement enriched with carefully selected aggregates,” the designers explained.

“The new form of concrete is a conglomerate with high-performing technical and structural characteristics, even when used in very thin layers,” they added. “And, very importantly, it’s a water-based material so is completely eco-friendly.”

Petra concrete bathroom furniture by Marco Merendi and Diego Vencato with Gypsum

The studio used the material to create a collection featuring shapes inspired by smoothly eroded pebbles. The natural aesthetic of the products is reinforced by the soft-touch quality of the concrete surface.

The concrete is dyed with oxides during the mixing process to produce a range of 12 different tones, including three neutral greys and a variety of greens, blues and warmer hues that all evoke colours found in nature.

Petra concrete bathroom furniture by Marco Merendi and Diego Vencato with Gypsum

The material’s unique properties make it suitable for indoor and outdoor use in a range of contexts including private and public environments. It is resistant to staining, chemical corrosion, extreme temperatures and salt mist.

The designers outlined various potential usage scenarios for the Petra products, including “large gardens and small terraces” as well as more typical bathroom environments.

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The Best Viral Videos of the Week

This week we caught the most adorable porch pirate red-handed, I mean red-pawed. Trust me it’s really funny. We also got a family who picked the wrong day to take the top off the car, a bison that hates cars, and a skydiving cow…(Read…)

The Best Pet Videos of the August 2019

Enjoy hilarious hungry lizards, cat fails, riveting animal rescues, heartwarming puppies and much much more in this new episode of Best Pets of The Month!!!..(Read…)