Frankie Pappas threads skinny house through South African forest

House of the Big Arch in the bushveld nature reserve, South Africa, by Frankie Pappas

Architecture collective Frankie Pappas has hidden the 3.3-metres-wide House of the Big Arch within the Bushveld nature reserve in the north of South Africa.

The unusual form of the skinny house is a direct result of its unique location within a nature reserve, surrounded by forest and alongside sandstone cliffs.

House of the Big Arch in the bushveld nature reserve, South Africa, by Frankie Pappas

“This house is designed for a very specific portion of a very specific valley of a very specific nature reserve in a very specific portion of South Africa,” explained Frankie Pappas.

“The building is shaped by its surrounds,” the collective told Dezeen. “It could exist nowhere else in the world. It is a direct expression of its site.”

House of the Big Arch in the bushveld nature reserve, South Africa, by Frankie Pappas

Frankie Pappas designed the home so that it would be enveloped by the surrounding forest and sit within the canopies of the existing trees.

The house’s long, thin shape was determined by the location of the trees so that not even one tree had to be felled during its construction.

House of the Big Arch in the bushveld nature reserve, South Africa, by Frankie Pappas

“The existing trees completely determine the house’s form,” said the collective. “The 3.3 metre-wide central space is as thin a building as possible with the required programmes: and this enabled us to thread the building through the treescape,” it continued.

“All of the shapes that protrude from the 3.3-metre central spine are sculpted by the openings in the forest.”

House of the Big Arch in the bushveld nature reserve, South Africa, by Frankie Pappas
Photo is by Dook+Visi

All of the main living spaces are arranged linearly within a 3.3-metre-wide section that consists of two timber bridges. These bridges are supported on piers constructed from rough stock brick chosen to resemble with the nearby sandstone cliffs.

“The bridge portions of the house are constructed from timber and span between the monolithic brick structures,” said the collective.

“The timber bridges allow us to minimise our footprint in the forest and allow for fauna and flora to inhabit these spaces.”

House of the Big Arch in the bushveld nature reserve, South Africa, by Frankie Pappas
Photo is by Dook+Visi

A lounge area is contained with the first brick support and a dining area on the first bridge connecting to a kitchen in the second brick element.

The second timber bridge leads to an outdoor patio containing an oven and a small pool supported on a brick arch, from which the house takes its name. A swing hangs beneath the arch.

House of the Big Arch in the bushveld nature reserve, South Africa, by Frankie Pappas
Photo is by Dook+Visi

“The fireplace at the end of the building is the culmination of the house’s spatial sequence – and sits about four metres above the forest floor,” said Frankie Pappas.

“In order to produce a space this high off of the natural ground level using bricks, the natural form is the arch – a form that contemporary architects seem to be terrified of for some reason.”

House of the Big Arch in the bushveld nature reserve, South Africa, by Frankie Pappas

The house’s main level is accessed by a long stair contained in a tall, rectangular brick form that projects form the house at a 35-degree angle.

This stair also leads to a study space contained in one of the brick piers below the main space.

House of the Big Arch in the bushveld nature reserve, South Africa, by Frankie Pappas
Photo is by Dook+Visi

As the house was located an hour-and-a-half drive to the nearest town, the architecture collective decided to make it an off-grid home – not connected to water or electricity networks. Water is collected and filtered on the roof while solar panels provide electricity.

“Building off-grid homes should not be a complex problem to resolve – and in our work, is almost a given,” added the collective.

House of the Big Arch in the bushveld nature reserve, South Africa, by Frankie Pappas

Overall Frankie Pappas believes that the home is respectful of the unique site where it was built.

“The key concept for House of the Big Arch doesn’t exist as an idea in the mind of the architect – that is not how Frankie works. The key concept is a reverence for the site,” said the collective.

“And this same reverence was shared by everyone involved in the project: client, architect, engineer, builder and brickie.”

Other recently completed off-grid homes include a low-lying house on a desolate, grassy lot in Idaho for a family to “distance themselves from social stresses” and a slender house on a farm tucked into the rolling hills of Catuçaba, Brazil.

Photography courtesy of Frankie Pappas unless specified.

The post Frankie Pappas threads skinny house through South African forest appeared first on Dezeen.

Villa Cavrois serves as backdrop to Muller Van Severen exhibition

Design! Muller Van Severen at Villa Cavrois exhibition

Belgian design duo Muller Van Severen is exhibiting a selection of their furnishings amongst the rooms of Villa Cavrois, a modernist 20th-century villa near Lille, France.

The exhibition, called Design! Muller Van Severen at Villa Cavrois, will see Fien Muller and Hannes Van Severen present both new and old pieces from the oeuvre of their eponymous studio, which was founded in 2011.

It comes as part of the year-long programme of events that Lille and the wider Lille Metropole area are hosting as the designated World Design Capital for 2020.

Design! Muller Van Severen at Villa Cavrois exhibition

Villa Cavrois is situated northeast of central Lille in the commune of Croix and was built between 1929 and 1932 by the French architect Robert Mallet-Stevens.

The villa was originally designed as a family home for Paul Cavrois, a successful textile manufacturer, but during the second world war was occupied by German soldiers and turned into barracks.

Design! Muller Van Severen at Villa Cavrois exhibition

It was eventually abandoned and became subject to vandalisation, falling into such a severe state of neglect that it was threatened by demolition in the late 1980s.

The French state ended up purchasing the villa in 2001 and carried out extensive renovation works to return the building to how it originally appeared in 1932. It then opened to the public in 2015.

Design! Muller Van Severen at Villa Cavrois exhibition

When it came to hosting their own exhibition at Villa Cavrois, Muller Van Severen wanted their furnishings to seamlessly fit in with the modernist grounds and interiors rather than appear as “strange entities”.

“Time becomes irrelevant in this project,” the pair explained.

“We want to create the poetic feeling that our objects could originate from the same time as the building. In the same way that the building itself feels very contemporary.”

Design! Muller Van Severen at Villa Cavrois exhibition

One room in the villa that’s lined with green-grey tiles of veiny marble is dressed with Sofa Cavrois, a furnishing that Muller Van Severen has designed specifically for the exhibition.

The sofa – which is the first the duo has ever designed – curves upwards at two points, merging the shape of a standard chair and a chaise longue. To emphasise its sculptural form, the sofa is upholstered in bright sea-green linen.

A couple of the Muller Van Severen’s glossy, enamel-topped Emaille tables are also dotted throughout the room.

Design! Muller Van Severen at Villa Cavrois exhibition

Another mint-coloured room with wooden parquet flooring is dressed with the Strangled Rack from the duo’s Future Primitives collection, which comprises two intersecting shelves.

Muller Van Severen’s Duo seat and lamp, which both boast red tubular framework, is presented just in front of the room’s huge marble-lined fireplace.

Design! Muller Van Severen at Villa Cavrois exhibition

One large maroon-red room displays shiny silver pieces from Muller Van Severen’s recent Alltubes collection, which is crafted from welded rows of aluminium pipes.

Smaller spaces such as the villa’s kitchen, which features checkerboard floors, is decorated with a couple of brightly-hued Chair 2 models.

Design! Muller Van Severen at Villa Cavrois exhibition

The gridded wire daybeds and rocking chairs that Muller Van Severen originally created for Solo House, an architect-designed holiday home in Spain, are dotted across Villa Cavrois’ yellow-brick terraces outdoors.

Some of the duo’s smaller homeware accessories are also included in the exhibition – for example, one office-like room features their stainless-steel Bended Mirror #3.

Design! Muller Van Severen at Villa Cavrois exhibition

Design! Muller Van Severen at Villa Cavrois will be showing until 31 October 2020.

Villa Cavrois isn’t the only building by Robert Mallet-Stevens to become a public attraction. Villa Noailles in the French commune of Hyeres, which Mallet-Stevens designed in 1923, is now an arts centre.

June of 2019 saw designer and Dezeen Awards judge Pierre Yovanovitch overhaul Villa Noailles’ gift shop, brightening up surfaces by painting them salmon pink, cobalt blue and buttery yellow.

Photography is courtesy of Fien Muller.

The post Villa Cavrois serves as backdrop to Muller Van Severen exhibition appeared first on Dezeen.

This high-tech portable mat is designed to clean, dry and disinfect your pet’s paws!

If you have pets, you already know that you are an experienced cleaner – not just because you have to keep your home clean but also because you always have to make sure your pet is clean, that way you both remain healthy! When you take your pets out for a walk there is bound to be dirt that comes home with them, especially if you live in a place with a wet season. This obviously isn’t good for your home but also can cause infections for your pet if not cleaned out well. It can be a tedious task to do every time you step out with them and this concept design is aimed at giving pet owners a paw-some solution!

Pet Paws is a high-tech sanitizing mat used to clean, disinfect, and dry the legs of our pets as well as the soles of our shoes. The efficient product design is a simple roll-up mat that is easy to carry and store. The team worked on elevating an existing prototype by adding improved functionality and simplifying it further – the redesigned version is now just a one-piece product, unlike the original one which had four parts. It has two areas on its surface – the first section of the mat has a multi-directional cleaning texture which bends and cleans inside the paws in a friendly manner, and the second section of the mat has a cushioned texture which helps to dry the paws as the pet walks over the microfiber sleeve.

Both parts have a texture that has been cleverly selected to maximize the efficiency of the process by making sure it can clean inside the paws without any discomfort or complex steps. The ridged cleaning part is made of recycled tire rubber so it ensures durability and the set also includes a removable microfibre cover for the other half. The mat has a central indicator to fill up 500 ml of water for the cleaning process. The soft drying surface features suction dampers at different heights to make sure that all areas of the paws are covered. Once you are done, just roll the mat over so the water will flow vertically to the front pocket where it can be stored till you dispose of it. Tilt the mat and the smart draining mechanism will take care of the rest! I bet this works for kids too.

Designer: NOS Design

petpaws

Furniture designs from the A’ Design Award that are so good, they’re impossible to resist!

Let’s take a minute to just soak in the creativity that’s filled in this roundup of award-winning furniture designs from last year’s A’ Design Award and Competition. Now the purpose of this roundup is twofold. If you’re a fan of furniture design (either as a design lover, or as a furniture designer yourself), go ahead and bookmark this page for inspiration, or add these images to your Pinterest by clicking the Pin button at the top left of any image. The second purpose is to spark your imagination and get those creative juices flowing so that one day, you too could design something worthy of a design award.

Now if you DO have a design that’s relatively new or just sitting patiently in your portfolio, leveraging its creative appeal to win a design award can actually do wonders for your career. You’re ]in time to send your work over to the A’ Design Awards, with the standard entry period ending on the 30th of September. The multidisciplinary design award program spans a whole variety of categories, ranging from the traditional design disciplines like furniture, interiors, architecture, lighting, consumer tech, to more niche areas like social design, differently-abled design, education design, and even jewelry design. The international award program is hosted every year, with a grand interdisciplinary jury of 218 experts from different fields for its current 2020-2021 edition! So if you’ve got yourself a great design with a whole lot of potential, go ahead and let it boost your career and brand. If not, don’t worry! This showcase should provide enough creative fodder to motivate and inspire you!

Register to participate in the A’ Design Awards now. Hurry! The regular deadline ends on September, 30th.

01. Cloud Chair by Shota Urasaki

Capturing perhaps every child’s dream, the Cloud Chair gives you the feeling of sitting on a floating cloud. Unlike traditional chairs with 3-4 legs, the Cloud Chair is elevated using multiple metal rods, not only giving the cloud its perceived lightness and airy-ness, but also resembling steady drops of rain falling from the cloud’s underbelly. The inspiration for the chair came to Shota Urasaki after she saw a moving cloud raining over a distant coastline. Inspiration immediately struck and the Cloud Chair was born. The seat comes made from clusters of polyester fibers pierce-fitted into a block of polyurethane foam to give the visual as well as the tactile appeal of a puffy cloud. The seat rests on multiple stainless steel supports, with a mirror at its base to give the rain an illusion of continuity. Clever, eh??

02. Fllipping Hanger by Marco Guariglia and Jui-Ju Lin

Isn’t it adorable how these coat hangers resemble the leaves of a Monstera plant?? Designed to cleverly add function with a touch of greenery to your interior space, these hangers let you suspend clothes, sports equipment, umbrellas, raincoats, and hats on the various hooking points on the leaves, and they look great while they’re bare too! Two birds, one stone.

03. Lift Portable and Adaptable Shelf by Shiva Pouryousef Khameneh

The Lift shelf’s entire objective is to be accommodating. Designed to work without needing to be mounted on any wall the Lift rests with its back against a wall, becoming a tall bookshelf that you can easily place wherever you need. Its light design comes with two zigzag columns and multiple wood and copper dowels that attach in between. Powder-coated steel plates help form flat surfaces for resting items on the shelf, and can easily be moved around to create the composition you’re looking for. You could, alternatively, keep portions of the shelf empty too, adding a bit of negative space to the composition to make it look more visually appealing.

04. Acorn Leisure Chair by Wei Jingye, Chen Yufan and Wang Ruilin

Designed to be a resting area both for you as well as your pet, the Acorn Leisure Chair turns the space underneath the seat into an enclosure for small animals. The chair’s organic curves come inspired from its namesake, the acorn, and its base heavy design provides the perfect resting space for your pet, while allowing you to easily (and comfortably) sit on top. The wooden parts of the chair are CNC-machined to perfection, while the wrought-iron pipes on the base give the chair its sturdiness, while allowing your pets to see your legs as they sit inside their safe-space, providing a unique connection between both occupants! Alternatively, you could use the space under the seat to store books and pillows too.

05. 37 Degrees Music Coffee Table by 37 Degree Smart Home Ltd.

This coffee table lets you rest your hot coffee-cup while it serves up some hot beats to match! The 37 Degree Music Coffee Table comes with a 360° Bluetooth speaker built into its vertical pillar. The table’s overall wooden design does more than adding a nice visual touch to your house. The wooden enclosure also provides a great resonating chamber for the audio, allowing your sound to be as rich and creamy as the coffee you’re drinking! Besides, the vertical channel helps scatter audio in all directions, filling your entire room with high-fidelity audio. Don’t worry, listening to bass-heavy music won’t spill your coffee!

06. Butterfly Hanger by Lu Li

Elegance, thy name is the Butterfly Hanger. With a beautifully minimal design that evokes the delicate form of a butterfly, this clothes hanger is as functional as it’s aesthetic. Built out of just three components, the Butterfly Hanger requires no fasteners, glue, or screws. Just slide the wooden column into the diamond-shaped slot in both the metal frames and voila! You’ve got yourself a hanger that’s stable, durable, and beautifully minimal!

07. Poufs With 1000 Arrangements by Marco Guariglia and Jui Ju Lin

These Poufs aren’t really furniture, but are more like building blocks to make the furniture you need. Designed as plush yet sturdy quarter-circular velvet cushions, these Poufs can be arranged in a variety of styles, going from the regular Ottoman stool to wave-shaped seating, or even a lining around a planter or against the corner of a room. The possibilities are as endless as the use-cases, because designers Marco Guariglia and Jui Ju Lin believe that furniture should cater to the room’s needs, not the other way around. Each Pouf is made of a piece of 3D machine cut polystyrene, reinforced with plywood, and covered with foam + fleece.

08. Arc Guitar Stand by Hung Yuan Chang

The Arc Guitar Stand has an incredible sculptural quality to it, which is unusual for a product that’s usually designed to be really functional. A guitar stand is usually quite an unassuming product that fundamentally exists as a background element to the guitar, which sits atop it. With the Arc, the stand has an aesthetic appeal that makes it look beautiful even when there isn’t a guitar resting on it. Besides, its design does a pretty good job of propping up the instrument too!

09. Haleiwa Chair by Melissa Mae Tan

Legacy meets contemporary. Grace meets strength. Sweeping curves seamlessly merge with striking lines. Rattan, a pliant material commonly used in indigenous Philippine furniture, gets a modern upgrade when paired with a solid metal frame. The Haleiwa is a traditionally rich, handcrafted answer to the iconic elegance of the Panton Chair. Looks remarkable, doesn’t it?

10. Motichair by Koma Yang, Yuxiao Dong and Jiaxin Liang

The Motichair isn’t a conventional-looking chair, because it isn’t designed for conventional spaces. Made to be placed in an area that’s often rich with decor, flashing lights, deep basslines, and good conversations, the Motichair is designed to somehow stand out against its chaotic background. Yep, the Motichair is a barstool, and its design borders on being an art installation. With a ‘matte-meets-chrome’ carbon-fiber and metal construction, the Motichair is light yet durable, and comes with a unique metallic halo that surrounds you like rings around a planet. I guess you could say this chair is ‘out of this world’!

Register to participate in the A’ Design Awards now. Hurry! The regular deadline ends on September 30th!

David Guambo builds his stilted studio Kusy Kawsay in Ecuadorian hillside

Kusy Kawsay by David Guambo and Al Borde

Architecture student David Guambo has built himself a small studio in rural Ecuador with a straw roof and wood framing.

Kusy Kawsay is a small hut lifted on wooden stilts that is nestled into a hillside in Sucre, Ecuador. Its name translates to Passionate Life from Kichwa, a dialect of Quechua, a language used in the Andean region.

Kusy Kawsay by David Guambo and Al Borde

Guambo, an architecture student at Universidad Tecnológica Indoamérica (UTI) in Ambato, Ecuador designed and built the tiny work space for himself to do projects in while listening to loud music.

“I became a big fan of listening to music loud, it allowed me to do my architecture school assignments during the nights, but I did not realise that this bothered my neighbours,” Guambo said.

Kusy Kawsay by David Guambo and Al Borde

He worked under the guidance of Al Borde, a local architecture studio that completed the renovation of a deteriorated 18th-century house in Ecuador.

To construct the sound-proof studio, Guambo referenced a traditional construction method known as Bahareque, a building system that involves weaving sticks and mud to construct compact walls, which has become less common.

Kusy Kawsay by David Guambo and Al Borde

“I’m making a study room, with wood, with straw, and everyone made fun of me,” the architecture student added.

“They made fun of me because I am constructing with a traditional system and this is because we don’t value what we have, they prefer to do foreign things, thinking that they will save money.”

“But what I believe they don’t know is that you can reinterpret with the things we already have, to do new things, you have to change the mentality of people with this project that I’ve done.”

The hut has a gabled roof layered with grassy straw. Its walls comprise dried mud pressed between wood framing.

Kusy Kawsay by David Guambo and Al Borde

A triangular window forms the front of the tiny building to let in sunlight and provide views of the rural landscape. The entire structure is lifted above the hillside using criss-crossing wood beams.

Cut-up wood logs form several rows of bench seating underneath the unit where passerby can sit in the shade and rest.

Kusy Kawsay by David Guambo and Al Borde

Inside, the roof structure is exposed and the floors are covered with wood planks. A wood desk with legs formed by cut logs is topped with a flat slab and situated in front of the large window along with a chair also fashioned using a log.

Guambo also outfitted the unit with electrical outlets and light bulbs.

Kusy Kawsay by David Guambo and Al Borde

The design follows a number of other architects and designers who have built themselves tiny workspaces.

In Los Angeles design-and-build practice Knowhow Shop constructed a geometric unit to accompany its woodshop and Invisible Studio completed a timber and corrugated fibreglass shed for model making in Bath, England.

Other tiny structures built in Ecuador include Casa Parásito, a 12-square-metre unit built on a rooftop in Quito.

Photography is by JAG Studio.

The post David Guambo builds his stilted studio Kusy Kawsay in Ecuadorian hillside appeared first on Dezeen.

Photographer Asked Artists To Draw Their Portrait Photos

 

Le photographe Mathieu Stern est spécialisé dans le portrait expérimental. Cela n’étonne donc personne qu’il soit à l’initiative d’un projet qui mêle l’autoportrait photographié mais aussi dessiné.

“J’ai décidé de contacter une illustratrice pour lui demander si elle souhaitait redessiner un de mes portraits dans son propre style. Je lui ai dit que je créerais une vidéo YouTube sur le processus avec une équipe de mes artistes préférés. Elle a dit oui et le résultat qu’elle m’a envoyé était tellement incroyable que j’ai commencé à contacter tous les illustrateurs que j’aimais sur Instagram. Un mois plus tard, j’avais 16 participants et j’avais une superbe vidéo de leurs processus créatifs,” explique-t-il à Bored Panda.





Timeless or Trendy: How to choose the right design direction for your consumers

Hi, I am Kelly from Knack, where we help mobility brands make their products irresistible.
I recently wrote an article about how to design timeless products. The comments and discussion that followed highlighted the fact that trendy and timeless products serve different purposes. One isn’t necessarily better than the other. However, one IS more irresistible, depending on who your customer is.

So, in this article, we’re going to dive into what makes a product either trendy or timeless and determine which type is right for your product.

IRRESISTIBILITY

To be irresistible, a product must possess an enticing aesthetic, solve a meaningful problem, deliver a delightful user experience, and have a no-brainer price tag. An irresistible product must check all of these boxes, but can also be either trendy or timeless to boot.

It is important that you understand what makes a product trendy or timeless so that your product’s fate is not accidental, but instead part of your design strategy.

Let’s take a close look at each:

TRENDY

The Cambridge Dictionary defines trendy as, “modern and influenced by the most recent fashions or ideas.” Trendy products flaunt hot, popular attributes.

To design a trendy product, focus your product development efforts on exploiting the in-thing your customer is most obsessed with. Trendy products require an understanding or prediction of the current fads and quick action to deliver a relevant product before the trend fades.

With a design that’s trendy, you’ll be able to ride the wave of buyer interest created by the current craze. Heavily influenced by emotion, your consumers will buy more impulsively to fill an immediate need or desire.

TIMELESS

Unlike trendy designs that are focused on being relevant in the present day, timeless design is focused on staying relevant and looking appropriate for many years to come.

When setting out to design timeless products, avoid clues of the current time. Instead, strive for a proper proportion, functional form, and classic colors that were cool way back when, now, and for many years to come. Designing timeless products requires an extra level of thoughtful refinement, void of frivolous aesthetics, often yielding an understated product.

Achieving timelessness in your design gives your product staying power, sparing you a great deal of future new product development costs while allowing your product’s fan base to compound over time.

WHICH ONE?

Again, whether your product should be trendy or timeless depends on your consumer. While many designers would argue that a product should always be timeless, timelessness requires an extra level of aesthetic refinement and subtly that a here-today-gone-tomorrow product can’t always afford.

If your consumer values keeping up with the times, looking cool and flashy in the moment above all else, your product needs to be trendy. A consumer who is obsessed with the latest and greatest will inevitably be onto the next big thing soon. In this case, there’s no reason to over-invest in a timeless aesthetic.

If your consumer values products that endure the test of time and don’t look dated in just a few years, or you just simply want to invest in a product that doesn’t need to be revamped every 3 years, you should pursue a timeless design.

Note: With strategic industrial design execution, it is possible for a product to be both trendy and timeless.

Do you know what your consumer desires? As soon as you do, you’ll be one step closer to achieving irresistibility.


ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Kelly Custer is the Founder + Design Director of Knack

Pairing her transportation design education from the College for Creative Studies in Detroit, Michigan with over 8 years of design consulting experience in consumer products, Kelly has built a strong passion for mobility. She founded Knack in 2014 and leads the studio to deliver irresistible simple mobility products.

When she’s not in the studio, she can be found on a mountain bike trail, trying to keep up with her husband on her dirt bike, or exploring the Tennessee river on their vintage stand-up jet skis.

Follow Knack on Instagram

This timepiece hits the refresh button on the classic pilot watch designs of the 50-60s

The Schallmauer (which stands for ‘sound barrier’ in German) immortalizes the aviator watch design from the 50s and 60s by turning them into contemporary evergreen classics. Designed with better materials, durable construction, clearer graphics, and more precise mechanisms on the inside, the Schallmauer is a modern timepiece for the modern jetsetter. Its highly visible dial features large, legible numerics against a matte watch-face for maximum visibility. The watch’s hands and numerics come coated with a layer of Japanese Nemoto LumiNova for extended visibility in low-light settings, and two subdials and a date window in customized red color give you all the information you need at a glance.

The Schallmauer embraces its “Made in Germany” tag pretty seriously, with an impeccably designed outer and precisely assembled inner components, featuring a customized Citizen Miyota 6S21 movement. The watch comes with a 316L Stainless Steel casing that has a scratch-resistant sapphire glass (with two coats of anti-reflective film) sitting on the top, an unidirectional rotating 120-clicks bezel, a handy crown with stamped logo and a bas-relief design of a fighter-jet from the 60s along with a bespoke serial number engraved on the back. The Schallmauer comes limited to just 999 pieces per color, and watch aficionados can choose from a variety of classic watch colors complimented with the genuine top-grain Horween leather straps and to opt in an additional well-suited woven-nylon NATO straps!

Designers: André Lampe, Malte Thomeczek & Tim Ole Benkus

Click Here to Buy Now: $287 $384 (25% off). Hurry, only 11 left!

Schallmauer – Modernized Classic Pilot Watch

The Schallmauer is a tribute to the fascinating chronographs worn by pilots of the 50s and 60s. With its 42.5mm case made from 316L surgical stainless steel, the soft, oiled leather strap and the legendary two-counter chronograph dial, the Schallmauer watch seamlessly continues the exciting history of the aviation tradition.

Color Options

Black Beast – Stainless steel case (DLC coated – the caseback as well) with black aluminum bezel inlay, black dial (refined with LumiNova® SG2200), white hands, black Horween leather with white stitching and DLC coated buckle.

Heritage – Stainless steel case with black bezel inlay, black dial with silver totalisers (refined with LumiNova® Beige), white hands (black on totalisers), light brown vintage Horween leather strap with white stitching and steel buckle.

Horizon – Stainless steel case with blue aluminum bezel inlay, blue dial (refined with LumiNova® SG2200), white hands, dark brown Horween leather with white stitching and steel buckle.

The Dial

The matted dial of the Schallmauer watch is characterized by its clear numbers and the central arrangement of its large totalizers. This ensures optimum readability. 12 ball indices stylishly complete the dial of our watch. The contrasting red date gives the dial, the face of the watch, a special character.

The straight, clear hands emphasize this striking impression and ensure perfect orientation – even at night. The Japanese NEMOTO finish guarantees enormous luminescence.

At night the dial lights up with the Luminous LumiNova SG2200 (on Black Beast and Horizon) and beige (on Heritage).

The Case

– Three pieces case
– 316L surgical stainless steel
– 10 bar waterproof
– Handmade polishing
– Manually grounded, exact edges

The surface of the case is finished by hand by selected specialists, which make the double-contoured edges on the lugs stand out.

The Glass

– Scratch-resistant sapphire glass
– Single-curved
– 2-fold anti-reflection coating

The Movement

– Citizen Miyota 6S21 -customized
– Height: 4.9mm
– Accuracy of +/- 20 seconds/month
– 3-year battery life
– Function: chrono min/sec, date

The Caseback

– 3-dimensional embossing in the center
– Individual serial number
– Limited to 999 pieces per variant

The Bezel & Crown

– Steel-aluminum-bezel
– Ring uni-rotatable, 120 clicks
– Push & Pull crown – 3-fold seal
– Crown with logo

The Straps

The hand-dyed leather with its rich wax feel on the surface comes from the traditional house HORWEEN, Chicago. It is made with proven techniques and formulas that were developed almost 100 years ago and perfect ever since. It gives our watch a very charismatic look.

The 2-piece Nylon Straps comes with a solid buckle and quick exchange pins.

Made in Germany

Made in Germany. After the assembly by their German master watchmaker, the watches are checked once more before they send them to you. And because they are so sure of their quality, they offer a guarantee of 3 years instead of the usual 2 years.

Click Here to Buy Now: $287 $384 (25% off). Hurry, only 11 left.

Take your love for fly-fishing anywhere you go with this portable Japanese Tenkara fly fishing rod

Tenkara, a Japanese method of fly fishing, borders on pure artistry with simple gear. You don’t need to reel and a lot of line out catch fish, Tenkara removes those from the fly fishing equation. All you need is a great long rod, a short light line, and you can present your fly in a natural drift to the fish that is sometimes hard to do with other gear.

A good rod makes Tenkara fly fishing easy and it is incredible amounts of fun. Crafted with the precise amounts of flex, Tenkara rods make casting exceptionally light lines very easy for better presentation. The long length allows you to guide fish and bring them in without all the extra line.

Designed to make fly-fishing more versatile for both novices as well as experts, the MUTANT Tenkara Fly Rod comes with a 3-in-1 design that uses a telescopic mechanism to change sizes. Built on the feedback from a dedicated Tenkara community, the MUTANT Tenkara Fly Rod comes adjustable in three sizes that make it ideal for any sort of light level line casting. The rod also completely telescopes down to 25.5 inches to fit into the hard-case that comes along with it, allowing you to easily carry it along with you on outdoor adventures.

Whether you’re a beginner or a seasoned professional, the MUTANT Tenkara Fly Rod allows you to fly-fish with ease. Its deep rod flex action allows it to distribute pressure evenly throughout the entire rod when fighting fish, while excellent tip-dampening allows you to precisely cast your line without any oscillation. The rod even comes highly recommended by experienced Tenkara anglers who have tested it out.

Made from lightweight yet incredibly resilient IM10 carbon fiber, the collapsible, portable Tenkara fishing rod is a pretty handy option for backpackers, bike packers, and many outdoor enthusiasts. The 3-length settings, that can be adjusted in a matter of mere seconds, allow you to have the right length of rod for wherever your adventure takes you.

The MUTANT Tenkara Fly Rod comes with a rod sock and hard case to make transporting it easier. The optional starter kit also includes a spool of DRAGONtail Level Line, 2 line holders, 3 Tenkara flies, and a spool of tippet. Designed for experienced as well as the novice user, the MUTANT Tenkara Fly Rod capitalizes on an incredibly engaging, fun, and rapidly growing trend in modern Tenkara fishing, that’s built on centuries of ancient Japanese tradition and culture!

Designer: Brent Auger of DRAGONtail Tenkara

Click Here to Buy Now: $109 $160 ($51 off). Hurry, only 138/150 left.

MUTANT Tenkara Fly Rod: 3-Lengths, Full-Flex, & Soft Action

The zoom sections of the MUTANT lock to give you 3 adjustable lengths, 380cm (12.5ft), 350cm (11.5ft), and 315cm (10.3ft) in one rod (sometimes called a triple zoom rod) so you can use the same rod for all the different conditions you run into on the water.

Zoom Lengths Diagram

Whether you want long reach, a medium casting length, or need to shorten things up around over hanging trees the MUTANT has you covered with just the zoom of a rod section (or two) mutating into the rod length needed.

Features & Performance Overview

Excellently balanced tip-weight in every length, feels very light in hand when casting and fishing.

Deep rod flex action allows the rod to distribute pressure evenly throughout the entire rod when fighting fish. This deep rod flex also makes for a smooth casting action with little effort to cast light level lines.

Excellent tip dampening so you have very little (IF ANY) oscillation while casting giving you very precise accurate casts with great presentation, even with very light level lines.

This rod is designed for targeting small to medium sized trout on light lines in creeks, streams, or small rivers. That does not mean you can’t use outside of those parameters if you so desire, have fun doing what you like. Although if you want to target big fish then this is probably not the tenkara rod for you.

Check out Tristen’s video review above of the Mutant prototype and Tom Davis (a highly trusted name in Tenkara) when he tested the Mutant here.

New to Tenkara: Why a Tenkara Rod?

Ultra Compact – Tenkara rods telescope out and in so you can have a fly fishing rod that is over 12ft long collapsed down to 2ft and all self contain within its self with very little weight and very little size. No reel is needed and very minimal gear is required: rod, flies, line, and tippet. This makes it perfect for backpackers, day hikers, back country biking, keeping in the car, or anywhere adventure takes you.

Simple To Start – Although there are many Tenkara fishing techniques that you can spend years learning and perfecting, it is easy to get started with the basics and start catching fish. The basic casting motion is simple, the gear is simple, and setup is very quick (see our setup videos). The light line and long rod make for great presentation of your fly as you can keep your line out of the currents so your fly makes a natural drift with very little effort, making your fly more desirable to fish with very little experience on your part.

It’s Fun As Hell – You would be surprise how much you will enjoy this simple form of fly fishing. We get messages all the time telling us “I have been fishing (or fly fishing) for 20-30 years and I just fell in love with fishing all over again using your Tenkara rods”.

How to Use a Multi-length Zoom Tenkara Rod

Click Here to Buy Now: $109 $160 ($51 off). Hurry, only 138/150 left.

Link About It: This Week’s Picks

Award-winning iPhone photos, an uncuttable material, the future of video calls and more from around the web

An Uncuttable Material Inspired by Abalone Shells

A new material called Proteus made from “ceramic spheres embedded in a cellular structure made of metallic foam” that’s believed to be uncuttable could revolutionize security. Inspired by abalone shells—which are composed of an essentially weak material that’s arranged in a manner that makes the shells super-strong—Proteus may be used in various ways, from bank vault doors to bike locks. After being tested with angle-grinders, water jets, drills and other tools, Proteus proved itself impenetrable. Fast Company explains, “The ceramic spheres inside the material vibrate so much that it blunts the tool attempting to cut through. As some of the spheres also break apart into small, hard fragments, those pieces act like rough sandpaper, further wearing down the tool.” Read more about this fascinating material and its potential at Fast Company.
Image courtesy of stickytoffeepudding/iStock

First-Ever Photo of a Solar System Like Ours

Images of exoplanets are extremely uncommon, but even more rare is an image of such a planet as part of a greater solar system like ours. Astronomers, however, have just shared one such photo captured by the European Southern Observatory’s Very Large Telescope. The picture of TYC 8998-760-1, located approximately 300 light years from Earth, reveals “a Sun-like star, orbited by multiple exoplanets.” This set-up is remarkably similar to our system within the Milky Way (where the Sun is orbited by planets, dwarf planets, many moons, and millions of asteroids, comets and meteoroids). It’s also inherently different. The sun in the image is described as a “very young version of our own” (at 17 million years old) and is orbited by “gas giants” (like Jupiter or Saturn) that are “320 times the distance we are from the Sun.” Despite the differences, the similarities prove to be fascinating, with lead researcher Alexander Bohn explaining, “The possibility that future instruments, such as those available on the ELT, will be able to detect even lower-mass planets around this star marks an important milestone in understanding multi-planet systems, with potential implications for the history of our own Solar System.” Read more at The Independent.
Image courtesy European Southern Observatory and Alexander Bohn

Kris Lemsalu Malone + Kyp Malone Lemsalu’s “Love Song Sing Along (Once Again With Feeling!)” Exhibit

Acclaimed Estonian artist Kris Lemsalu Malone (who represented the Baltic nation at 2019’s Venice Biennale) and her husband Kyp Malone Lemsalu (of the band TV on the Radio) have partnered once again, this time on an imaginative, immersive exhibition for Tallinn’s Kai Art Center. It’s a rebirth (and extension) of their KW Institute for Contemporary Art exhibit which shuttered early in Berlin because of COVID-19. For Love Song Sing Along (Once Again With Feeling!), the Brooklyn-based couple populate their own version of a creation myth with an array of characters—as eccentric sculptures and upon tapestries. As with their previous collaborations, Kyp has built the exhibitions soundscape, too. See more of the installation images at Kai Art Center’s site.
Image courtesy of Stanislav Stepaško

Japan’s New Earthquake-Proof Bullet Train

Commissioned by the Central Japan Railway Company to offer support during the now-postponed 2020 Olympics, the new N700S (Supreme) bullet train runs the roughly 250-mile stretch between Tokyo and Osaka. Though it can reach 224mph, it’s being capped at 177 for safety reasons—and it incorporates better brakes and running controls for slowing and stopping. Its makers also claim that the train is earthquake-proof thanks to an onboard power source and different running modes for adjusting to dangerous track. Read more about the speedy, safe train—which made its debut on 1 July—at Popular Mechanics.
Image courtesy of JR Central

Reincubate’s Camo App Elevates Your Video Calls

An app that essentially transforms your iPhone or iPad into a professional webcam for your Mac, Reincubate’s Camo elevates your (perhaps all-too-frequent) video calls. It works by streaming and processing camera data in the iOS app and sending it to your desktop instead of using the computer’s lower quality camera. Super-useful—especially for presentations—Camo works with everything from Zoom to Slack, Skype, Meet, Microsoft Teams, Chrome, Firefox, QuickTime, WebEx Teams and others, without special or complicated commands. The free option provides 720p video quality with a watermark appearing during calls, while the full version ($40 a year) offers 1080p video quality and the ability to adjust color, exposure, brightness and more. Read about the new app at Apple Insider.
Image courtesy of Reincubate

2020’s iPhone Photography Awards Winners

Entries in the 13th Annual iPhone Photography Awards spanned 140 countries and several generations of the device, from the iPhone 6 through the new 11 Pro. Dimpy Bhalotia (India), the talent behind the pictured “Flying Boys” shot, took the Grand Prize and Photographer of the Year awards, while first place went to Artsiom Baryshau (Belarus), second to Geli Zhao (China), and third to Saif Hussain (Iraq). There were also first, second, and third place awards given to photographers in 18 different style categories—from abstract to sunsets. Read more and see a handful of winners at Mashable.
Image courtesy of Dimpy Bhalotia

Link About It is our filtered look at the web, shared daily in Link and on social media, and rounded up every Saturday morning. Hero image courtesy of Stanislav Stepaško