Student-friendly furniture designs that make your room insta worthy!

When you’re living alone, you tend to choose home spaces that are compact and tiny, befitting the needs of one. Hence, it becomes extremely important to fill up your living space with space-saving and efficient designs that help you make the most of your living situation. Designers have been coming up with cool and innovative designs that not only meet all your solo household needs but also manage to look pretty aesthetic! Check out our collection of bachelor-friendly designs that will take you one step closer to your dream home setup!

Designed to be compact enough to fit into any space, yet comfortable enough to have you sink right in with your favorite book, the Conch comes with a molded-plywood inner body and a dual-density foam outer body, giving it structure as well as supple softness. The chair’s form conforms to the contours of the body, allowing you to sit comfortably, while also conveniently having a storage unit right under you for everything from books to a cushion to other bric-a-brac. It’s the perfect reading spot for one!

The Drawer mini-fridge snugly fits underneath desks! Looking more like a piece of furniture, than a home appliance, Drawer can be easily placed under a desk or any other convenient nooks and crannies in your home. With sufficient space to store beverages, bottles and some food items, Drawer is perfect for a single-person household wherein refrigerable items are few. However, Drawer’s most interesting feature would be its cooling cup holder!

When it comes to kitchen appliances such as microwaves and ovens, they do tend to be bulky and space-consuming. However, the Wall-Mountable Oven is a smart microwave, that as its name implies can be mounted upon a wall. You simply press a button that brings down its front cover, which doubles up as the platform to place your dish upon. You then pull down the main cover, enclosing your dish within the microwave!

At first glance, Elmer looks like a simple storage cabinet, and though it is one, it also doubles up as a desk! When the door is shut, Elmer looks like a regular cabinet, upon which you can place miscellaneous items. However, once you open it, it reveals spacious storage space, with the door functioning as a neat little desk. It’s the perfect multifunctional piece of furniture for tiny living spaces!

The Bed For One by Dominic Wilcox is, well, perfect for one. For those bachelors who live by themselves, and have no need for larger beds, the Bed For One is ideal!  Though I do wonder where it truly stands when it comes to the comfort level, all said and done, it is indeed an intriguing one-of-a-kind bed design.

The Book Chair by Sou Fujimoto is in fact a bookshelf with a chair embedded in it! The chair can be slid in and out, due to a chair-shaped section in the bookshelf. When fitted into the shelf, the chair acts as a storage space itself. But when pulled out, you can hop onto it and read your favorite book in peace. This multifunctional piece of furniture is perfect for single-person homes whose residents are major readers!

The Low Table IV by Kai Takeshima has a little secret! Once you lift the tabletop, you can easily access a compact storage space, add its wooden Japanese-inspired aesthetics to the mix, and it could be the perfect minimal addition to your compact living space.

sho_bed_to_sofa_layout

sho_05

In just a couple of simple steps, SHO transforms from sofa to sofabed in seconds by taking control of the cushion! The design utilizes a unique metal frame that snaps together to hold a twin-size latex mattress in an upright position that’s perfect for sitting and reading. Simply undo the clasp and unfold the mattress to create a proper lounger where you can extend the legs and relax while enjoying the back support. With its small footprint, it’s perfect for the micro-est of micro-living spaces!

The Corner Desk is a space-saving compact desk that will fit perfectly in one corner of your home. Designed by Michael Hilgers, the powder-coated aluminum piece provides a private spot for you to sit and work peacefully in. Not to mention it saves a whole lot of precious space!

The Bloom Phone Vase by Stak Ceramics not only perfectly displays fresh flowers, but is also a cool spot to store your phone. Keep this on your bedside table, and wake up not only to your phone alarm blaring away but to some beautiful flowers!

Forensic Architecture founder denied US entry to attend his own exhibition opening

Forensic Architecture founder Eyal Weizman has been prevented from entering the United States ahead of the opening of his studio’s Miami exhibition that explores the “arbitrary logic of the border”.

Weizman, who was made an MBE in the Queen’s New Year Honours list earlier this year, sent a statement to Dezeen revealing that he was not able to attend the opening of the exhibition at Museum of Art and Design in Miami yesterday. The statement was read out at the event on his behalf by his wife Ines Weizman.

According to the statement, the British-Israeli architect was told at an interview at the US Embassy in London that his Electronic System for Travel Authorization (ESTA) visa waiver, which offers entry to the US for periods of up to 90 days for two years, had been retracted due to an alert triggered by an algorithm.

“The officer informed me that my authorisation to travel had been revoked because the ‘algorithm’ had identified a security threat,” Weizman said.

“[The officer] said he did not know what had triggered the algorithm but suggested that it could be something I was involved in, people I am or was in contact with, places to which I had travelled (had I recently been in Syria, Iran, Iraq, Yemen, or Somalia or met their nationals?), hotels at which I stayed, or a certain pattern of relations among these things.”

Incident highlights issues at borders

Wiezman is the founder of Forensic Architecture, a research group based at Goldsmiths University in London that uses architectural methods to investigate claims of human rights violations. It has carried out research for Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, Doctors without Borders and the United Nations as well as defending a human rights group accused of colluding with people smugglers.

He said the incident was an example of the issues of borders that his studio is aiming to highlight with its exhibition, which is called Forensic Architecture: True to Scale.

“This incident exemplifies – albeit in a far less intense manner and at a much less drastic scale – critical aspects of the ‘arbitrary logic of the border’; that our exhibition seeks to expose,” explained Wiezman.

“We are being electronically monitored for a set of connections – the network of associations, people, places, calls, and transactions – that make up our lives,” he added.

“Such network analysis poses many problems, some of which are well known. Working in human rights means being in contact with vulnerable communities, activists and experts, and being entrusted with sensitive information.”

“These networks are the lifeline of any investigative work,” he continued. “I am alarmed that relations among our colleagues, stakeholders, and staff are being targeted by the US government as security threats.”

According to his statement, Wiezman was asked to provide names of people in his network that might have triggered the alert in order to speed up a visa application, but the refused.

“I was asked to supply the Embassy with additional information, including fifteen years of travel history, in particular where I had gone and who had paid for it,” he said.

“The officer said that Homeland Security’s investigators could assess my case more promptly if I supplied the names of anyone in my network whom I believed might have triggered the algorithm. I declined to provide this information.”

Forensic Architecture launches investigation into Florida detention centre

The Forensic Architecture: True to Scale exhibition marks the research group’s first large-scale showcase in the US and includes investigations into a CIA drone strike in Pakistan, Israeli bombing of Rafah in Gaza and the Chicago police’s killing of African American barber Harith Augustus.

The exhibit will be accompanied by a programme of events that will include a panel discussion on the architecture of borders.

Wiezman said that he was set to also use the opening of the exhibit to announce a new investigation into human rights violations against migrant children held at a detention centre in Homestead, Florida.

Forensic Architecture’s other projects have explored allegations of links between human rights organisations and human traffickers, ethnic cleansing of the Yazidi people by ISIS in Iraq and the fatal Grenfell Tower fire in London.

Read Eyal Weizman’s statement in full below:


Homeland Security “algorithm” prevents me from joining you today

Today (19 February) I was meant to be here with you at the Museum of Art and Design in Miami to open Forensic Architecture’s first major survey exhibition in the United States, True to Scale.

But on Wednesday, 12 February, two days before my scheduled flight to the US, I was informed in an email from the US Embassy that my visa-waiver (ESTA) had been revoked and that I was not authorised to travel to the United States. The revocation notice stated no reason and the situation gave me no opportunity to appeal or to arrange for an alternative visa that would allow me to be here.

It was also a family trip. My wife, professor Ines Weizman, who was scheduled to give talks in the US herself, and our two children traveled a day before I was supposed to go. They were stopped at JFK airport in New York where Ines was separated from our children and interrogated by immigration officials for two and a half hours before being allowed entry.

The following day I went to the US Embassy in London to apply for a visa. In my interview the officer informed me that my authorization to travel had been revoked because the “algorithm” had identified a security threat. He said he did not know what had triggered the algorithm but suggested that it could be something I was involved in, people I am or was in contact with, places to which I had traveled (had I recently been in Syria, Iran, Iraq, Yemen, or Somalia or met their nationals?), hotels at which I stayed, or a certain pattern of relations among these things. I was asked to supply the Embassy with additional information, including fifteen years of travel history, in particular where I had gone and who had paid for it. The officer said that Homeland Security’s investigators could assess my case more promptly if I supplied the names of anyone in my network whom I believed might have triggered the algorithm. I declined to provide this information.

This much we know: we are being electronically monitored for a set of connections – the network of associations, people, places, calls, and transactions – that make up our lives. Such network analysis poses many problems, some of which are well known. Working in human rights means being in contact with vulnerable communities, activists and experts, and being entrusted with sensitive information. These networks are the lifeline of any investigative work. I am alarmed that relations among our colleagues, stakeholders, and staff are being targeted by the US government as security threats.

This incident exemplifies – albeit in a far less intense manner and at a much less drastic scale – critical aspects of the “arbitrary logic of the border” that our exhibition seeks to expose. The racialized violations of the rights of migrants at the US southern border are of course much more serious and brutal than the procedural difficulties a UK national may experience, and these migrants have very limited avenues for accountability when contesting the violence of the US border.

As I would have announced in today’s lecture, this exhibition is an occasion to launch a joint investigation with local groups into human rights violations in the Homestead detention center in Florida, not far from here, where migrant children have been held in what activists describe as “regimented, austere and inhumane conditions”.

In our practice, exhibitions are treated as alternative forums for accountability, ways of informing the public about serious human rights violations. Importantly, they are also opportunities to share with local activists and community groups the methods and techniques we have assembled over years of work in the field.

To that effect, this exhibition includes an investigation into a CIA drone strike in Pakistan that was presented by a UN Special Rapporteur in the General Assembly; an analysis of the Chicago police killing of a barber that lead to an investigation by the mayor and the city’s police department; and an inquiry into the Israeli bombing of Rafah in Gaza that informed the International Criminal Court’s recent decision to open an investigation into the possibility of Israeli war crimes in occupied Palestine—all alongside other investigations we have conducted with communities and human rights collaborators in Germany, Venezuela, the Mediterranean, and Syria.

These works seek to demonstrate that we can invert the forensic gaze and turn it against the actors – police, militaries, secret services, border agencies – that usually seek to monopolise information. But in employing the counter-forensic gaze one is also exposed to higher level monitoring by the very state agencies investigated.

I would like to thank all those who showed enormous commitment to make this exhibition possible, especially Sophie Landres, Francisco Canestri, Gladys Hernando, Nicole Martinez and Rina Carvajal from MOAD, members of Forensic Architecture here and there, friends who helped through this process, Ines for reading this statement, and you all for coming.

Mostly though I would like to thank our partner communities who continue to resist violent state and corporate practices and who are increasingly exposed to the regime of “security algorithms” – a form of governance that aims to map, monitor, and – all too often – police their movements and their struggles for safety and justice.

The post Forensic Architecture founder denied US entry to attend his own exhibition opening appeared first on Dezeen.

Claesson Koivisto Rune converts 1920s bank building into K5 Tokyo hotel

K5 Tokyo hotel by Claesson Koivisto Rune loft

Swedish studio Claesson Koivisto Rune has unveiled a boutique hotel in Tokyo, featuring 24 new design products.

K5 Tokyo occupies a converted bank building next to the Tokyo Stock Exchange, which survived bombing during the second world war.

K5 Tokyo hotel by Claesson Koivisto Rune junior suite

Claesson Koivisto Rune‘s team adopted an “everything-is-possible attitude” to design and delivered the hotel in just 14 months.

As well as overseeing the architecture and interior design, they designed all kinds of products, from a pencil to a bespoke Tokyobike.

K5 Tokyo hotel by Claesson Koivisto Rune loft

Studio co-founder Ola Rune said that K5 Tokyo is the best project they have ever worked on.

“This is emphatically how we feel at the moment,” he told Dezeen.

“The attitude of all involved has been unlike any previous project that we have been involved with,” he said. “Yet, gratifyingly, the result is a coherent (and sometimes deliberately disparate) whole, that has not left any details to chance.”

Switch Coffee

The design is based around the idea of “aimai”, a Japanese word used to positively describe things that are ambiguous, obscure or vague. It inspired a layout where furniture, textiles and plants are used in place of walls, to create more subtle divisions.

Contemporary details and furnishings help to brighten up the building’s ageing but characterful interiors, while plants are intended to create the feeling of an urban oasis.

Switch Coffee

“The concrete structure survived world war two fire-bombing raids; its raw interior spaces have a noticeable character and inform the atmosphere of the space,” explained Rune.

“This concrete structure has been left exposed in many of the completed spaces, creating a tough, almost brutal, element with which the rest of the interior architecture strongly contrasts.”

Caveman restaurant

The hotel is organised over five levels. The ground floor and basement contain a series of spaces for eating, drinking and socialising, while bedrooms occupy the three upper floors.

The most plant-filled space in the hotel is the Switch Coffee shop, which doubles as a florist. Just beyond is a wine bar and the Caveman restaurant, set against a backdrop of green, blue, pink and clear glass.

Ao cocktail and tea bar

Designed in the spirit of a speakeasy, the atmospheric Ao cocktail and tea bar features a small library, while the Brooklyn Brewery is a basement beer hall that fuses Scandinavian, Japanese and German influences.

“Many of the spaces have multiple functions,” said Rune. “These functions do not run in parallel, rather one function hands over its space to the next as the day wains into night time.”

Brooklyn Brewery

Claesson Koivisto Rune created several furniture designs for these spaces, including a long sofa upholstered in deep red leather, a small wooden stool and a low coffee table.

There are 20 guest rooms in total, featuring even more bespoke designs.

Beds are framed by hand-dyed curtains, featuring a sky-like gradient of blue and white. These are hung in circles, framing just the bed and a custom paper lamp suspended overhead.

A red “love seat” is positioned alongside a more generously sized sofa, in bright, contrasting colours. Larger rooms also feature a custom carpet manufactured by Kasthall in the style of a Japanese tatami mat.

K5 Tokyo hotel by Claesson Koivisto Rune loft

Bathrooms feature cedar wall panels, black sinks and tiled floors.

The same tile, produced by Marrakech Design, can be spotted in different configurations elsewhere in the building, including in the reception and corridors.

K5 Tokyo hotel by Claesson Koivisto Rune bathroom

“We developed a new tile design that was inspired by the existing wood parquet found in some areas of the original building,” explained Rune.

“This tile design allowed for a wide range of design possibilities when being laid, meaning that the tile pattern is new is every separate space it is used in.”

K5 Tokyo hotel by Claesson Koivisto Rune reception

Stockholm-based Claesson Koivisto Rune has worked on several other acclaimed hotels, including the Nobis Hotel in its home city and Villa Terminus in Bergen, Norway.

But Rune believes they have set the bar even higher with K5 Tokyo.

K5 Tokyo hotel by Claesson Koivisto Rune exterior

“The response to the project has vastly exceeded the expectations of the clients and tenants from the get-go,” he concluded.

Photography is by Yikin Hyo.

The post Claesson Koivisto Rune converts 1920s bank building into K5 Tokyo hotel appeared first on Dezeen.

Make uses bronze and stone for St James's Market redevelopment

St James's Market redevelopment by Make

Make architecture studio has completed the first phase of St James’s Market redevelopment, featuring a block with a ribbon-like stone and bronze facade and the restoration of a late 19th-century building, as shown in this video produced by Dezeen.

Located on Regent Street St James’s – formerly known as Lower Regent Street – the scheme creates 2,000 square metres of new office space for one of London‘s main shopping areas.

St James’s Market also includes six flagship stores, seven restaurants and half an acre of public space.

St James's Market redevelopment by Make
Make has completed two buildings in stone and bronze for St James’s Place redevelopment

Make were commissioned by The Crown Estate and Oxford Properties to regenerate the historical site and create a new public destination.

These two buildings, though notably different in style, compliment one another with a shared material palette consisting of Portland stone and bronze detailing.

St James's Market redevelopment by Make
One of the buildings was constructed in the late 19th century

The late 19th-century building, known as 1 St James’s Market or 1SJM, features a Grade II-listed Portland stone facade with punched windows and a mansard roof.

Extensive restoration work included careful reinstatement of dormer lead work, timber window mouldings and ornate lead cartouches.

St James's Market redevelopment by Make
1SJM underwent extensive restoration with the addition of an eight-storey glass wall

In addition to the heavy refurbishment, 1SJM also required structural modification.

The roof was raised an extra 1.2 metres to accommodate a new ceiling, while an eight-storey glass wall was erected to connect the old frontage to the corner of the neighbouring building at 22 Regents Street.

Embedded with woven copper mesh, the glass wall also provides a new entrance to 1SJM.

“The wall flows into the building becoming the soffit of the double height reception lobby continuing the external material palette with soft pale limestone complemented by dark textured floor, and champagne coloured metal trims,” said Make.

St James's Market by Make
The lobby of 1SJM features a showpiece staircase

Suspended behind the lobby is a statement cantilever staircase, flooded by natural light from the roof and accented with bespoke lighting.

In contrast to the linearity of 1SJM, its counterpart 2 St James’s Market takes a more organic form, with an oscillated exterior resembling a stack of horizontal bands.

St James's Market redevelopment by Make
2SJM features a ribbon-like stone and bronze facade

The multi-purpose block, which is also referred to as 2SJM, was built from Portland stone to echo 1SJM.

Its facade is inlaid with strips of bronze to emphasise the curvature of the stone and nod to the 7.5-metre-high bronze shopfronts that occupy the ground floor of both buildings.

St James's Market redevelopment by Make
Both buildings have bronze shopfronts on the ground floor

2SJM’s upper floors are given over to column-less open plan office spaces with views across London.

The two buildings enclose a public square and sit within half an acre of pedestrianised public space that stretches from St Alban’s Street to Norris Street.

St James's Market redevelopment by Make
The two buildings were designed to compliment each other

“St Alban’s Street and the central square have been repaved in Yorkstone, which features granite ribbons and metal plaque inlays denoting the re-established St James’s Market,” said Make.

British artist David Thorpe was commissioned to decorate one of the walls of the square created by the exterior of 1SJM with floral ceramic tiles.

St James's Market by Make
Artists and designers were commissioned to enhance the central public space

The scheme also includes four pieces of public seating by interdisciplinary design duo Studio Swine, which are situated along Norris Street.

East London architecture practice Studio Weave were brought in to design a pavilion that sits in the south-eastern corner of the square.

Make was founded by architect Ken Shuttleworth, who is a partner at Foster + Partners.

The firm’s previous projects include a pair of office buildings in the City of London with a series of pocket gardens, and the addition of 16 bronze escalators as part of a revamp of the entrance hall at London department store Harrods.

Photographs are by Make.

The post Make uses bronze and stone for St James’s Market redevelopment appeared first on Dezeen.

Creosote Rosemary Cream

Made from wildcrafted Creosote (the “quintessential desert scent”), organic rosemary and jojoba oil, beeswax and mango seed butter, Sonoran Rosie’s aptly titled Creosote Rosemary Cream carries notes of sun-soaked wood and wild herbs. Creosote heals sunspots, soothes sunburns, repels mosquitoes and other bugs, and aids in the prevention of infection, as the plant boasts antibacterial and antimicrobial properties. Plus, this cream helps to heal tattoos and supports skin after other moments that leave it particularly vulnerable. Available in two or four fluid ounce packages, each cream is made to order.

Has the ad world embraced same-sex love stories at last?

The last 30 years has seen the advertising world try to catch up with the rest of society in terms of its portrayal of modern relationships. Here, CR investigates whether the love stories it tells are truly representative of the LGBT+ community

The post Has the ad world embraced same-sex love stories at last? appeared first on Creative Review.

Gaming meets high-fashion in new Karl Lagerfeld collaboration

High-end fashion, retro computer games and cats aren’t perhaps an obvious trio. But a new project from digital agency Smack proves that the three divergent interests can work together rather beautifully in the name of gamified brand awareness in Maison Karl Lagerfeld.

The online and in-store digital activation for the fashion brand is a little like a pixel-based, 21st century take on 90s TV classic Pets Win Prizes, created to promote Karl Lagerfeld’s new Pixel Collection. The late fashion designer behind the eponymous brand’s famous cat Choupette (who’s clocked up more than 270,000 Instagram followers on the fan page @ChoupettesDiary), is the star of the game.

The aim of the PacMan-style game is to help a little digital Choupette “collect this season’s most covetable accessories” in pixel form, with users offered the chance of winning a Karl Lagerfeld shopping experience every week until 13 March, to the tune of a €250 (around £208) gift card. In an old-school approach to online gaming, players use their computer’s arrow keys to move the wee kitty around, collecting ‘Karl Koins’ to protect him from various menacing dogs.

Smack was briefed to create a digital activation that would complement the 8-bit style pixelated designs of the new range, and approached the project by keeping the brand’s familiar iconography at its centre – Choupette navigates a simplified version of the brand’s headquarters at 21 Rue Saint Guillaume in Paris, with the maze he has to move through based on the architecture of the building. The physical site’s signage, fence and plants are shown to underscore the surroundings and keep the brand’s heritage and its founder at the fore in what might seem to many to be an unusually playful move for Karl Lagerfeld.

The agency also created new animations and promotional videos for use on the Karl Lagerfeld Facebook and Instagram pages, its newsletter and in-store promotions. “Fashion and beauty brands are increasingly looking to games and gamification as another way to engage fans and broaden their experience of the designs and styles they love,” says Smack creative director Lubna Keawpanna. “Consumers enjoy seeing their favourite brand in another context, and they want to be able to share something unique with their friends.”

The gameplay is familiar to anyone who’s ever played PacMan, with chip-tune-style intro music and game sounds to add to the arcade feel. Maybe it was my personal incompetence with gaming, or my painfully slow internet connection, or maybe the game is still slightly buggy, but the arrows seemed to rarely work and my own Choupette fared very poorly; quickly falling prey to the hounds and often remaining stuck in his original position. It’s unclear whether or not the score affects the users’ likelihood of winning the prizes; though by submitting your name and email at the end users are automatically signed up to the Karl Lagerfeld newsletter in a smart marketing move.

The game was designed on HTML5 and can be used across desktop, tablet and mobile devices until the promotion ends on 13 March on the devoted page on the karl.com global flagship store, which currently reaches 96 countries.

The Spring 2020 Pixel collection launched on 13 February with a range comprising ready-to-wear pieces and accessories featuring pixelated artworks of Karl and Choupette in primary shades of red, yellow and blue. Pieces include a bag with a monochrome depiction of the late designer’s sunglasses; a bum-bag (or ‘waist bag’ in the brand’s terminology) with a QR code artwork that links to the brand’s homepage when scanned; and pieces such as a wallet and T-shirts bearing square-based depictions of Lagerfeld’s distinctive ponytail-sporting face.

@ChoupettesDiary; smack.agency; karl.com

The post Gaming meets high-fashion in new Karl Lagerfeld collaboration appeared first on Creative Review.

Five provocative projects by artist Max Siedentopf

Five provocative projects by artist Max Seidentopf

Artist Max Siedentopf caused outrage with his depiction of people wearing various everyday items as coronavirus masks. Here are five of the artist’s provocative works.

Namibian-German artist Siedentopf later apologised for his coronavirus mask series, but has courted controversy before with projects including his installation of binoculars at Tate Modern to allow visitors to see into adjacent flats.

“Most of my work takes a critical and often ironical look at our surroundings,” Namibian-German artist Siedentopf told Dezeen following the controversy surrounding his masks.

“It’s important for me to take people out of their comfort zone and see things from a different perspective, both positively and negatively. But, ultimately, it’s up to them to interpret my work as they want to.”

Here are five of Siedentopf’s works that aim to challenge people’s views:


Five provocative projects by artist Max Seidentopf

Tools To Secure School Safety And Security, 2018

For this photo series, the artist created weapons from everyday items of stationery and other items commonly found in schools.

According to the artist, the series “tries to illustrate in a lighthearted way how the innocence of fun, home-made weapons has been taken from us”.


Five provocative projects by artist Max Seidentopf

Funny Money, 2016 

Siedentopf’s Funny Money photo series aims to draw attention to the common practice of tourists in Africa paying to take a photo of people. For the series, he gave Namibian people the amount of money they requested and let them pose however they wanted with it to show a more natural aspect of their personality.

“A lot of westerners and white Africans want to photograph the locals in Africa,” explained Siedentopf.

“Unfortunately, the truth is that they rarely want to document the reality of the person in front of them, rather they want a photo that reinforces their ‘idea’ of a stereotypical ‘African’.”


Five provocative projects by artist Max Seidentopf

Please Respect Our Neighbours’ Privacy, 2018

Siedentopf installed a series of binoculars at Herzog & de Meuron’s extension to Tate Modern to give visitors a better view into the adjacent Neo Bankside housing.

The guerrilla art installation was created to highlight the fact that the Tate Modern was being taken to court by residents of neighbouring building for invading their privacy.


Alternative Coronavirus masks by Max Siedentopf with orange peel

How-To Survive A Deadly Global Virus, 2020

This provocative photo series shows everyday items being used as protective face masks in response to the coronavirus. The photos are based on images from around the world of people wearing hand-made masks that had been circulating on social media.

Although global demand for surgical face masks is growing, doctors do not advise using them for protection as research shows they have limited effectiveness in preventing the spread of viruses.


Five provocative projects by artist Max Seidentopf

Passport Photos, 2019

The Passport Photos series aims to challenge the rules of how you must appear in official photography.

Each pair of photos shows an official cropped passport photo alongside a wider image of the model engaged in one of a variety of strange activities.

The post Five provocative projects by artist Max Siedentopf appeared first on Dezeen.

Surviving and thriving as partners in life and work

Mixing business and pleasure isn’t always a bad idea – in fact, some swear by it. We speak to three creative couples about the unparalleled benefits that this kind of relationship can bring, how to avoid disasters and the value of letting go of barriers

The post Surviving and thriving as partners in life and work appeared first on Creative Review.

Get curved toasts with this toaster…because it makes absolute sense!

A toaster is a staple in every household, and toast a part of almost everyone’s breakfast. We’re all used to the usual rectangular box-like form of toasters, however, Jexter Lim’s Arctoas is a breath of fresh air. Arctoas is said to serve toast with a whimsical smile. Intrigued? Me too! Unlike the shape and structure of conventional toasters, Arctoas has a curved circular form. To be honest, it almost looks like a small air purifier! Two cylindrical sheets of mica were combined, with a nichrome wire running vertically through them (which prevents the bread from getting stuck) to create the toaster’s ergonomic form. And on hindsight, it makes absolute sense to have a curved toast!

Lim’s aim was to create a unique bread toasting and breakfast experience. He wanted to provide a refreshing touch to a family’s breakfast routine in the morning. Arctoas comes with a circular slot that runs all around the toaster. You simply slip your toast into the slot. A curved Capacitive Touch Switch is provided as an alternative to physical buttons. You can adjust the settings of the toaster using the switch, according to your personal toast preference. Once the toast is ready, a motorized carriage lifts up the bread, so you can pluck it out! However, the curved form of the toaster molds the toast, giving it a curved shape as well!

The curved toast looks almost an arc and is much easier to hold and eat as compared to your regular square-shaped toast. The curved toast fits seamlessly into your palm, allowing you to easily spread butter, jam, or any condiment of your choice. You can even pile on some eggs, avocadoes, tomatoes or more without fear of them spilling or falling over! Ingenious isn’t it! In fact, the curved slice of bread looks like a smile. With Arctoas even your daily bread will greet you with a cheerful grin and keep you stain-free as you head out to start your day! Now, why didn’t someone invent this before?!

Designer: Jexter Lim