Saskia Diez adds chains to face masks to make them feel "more like wearing an accessory"

Chained masks by German jewellery designer Saskia Diez

German jewellery designer Saskia Diez has created face masks with detachable chains plated in silver and gold.

Diez told Dezeen she hoped the design would make the devices, which have become mandatory in many situations due to the coronavirus pandemic, feel “less medical”.

“It feels more like wearing an accessory than something you’re being forced to wear,” she told Dezeen.

The Munich-based designer produced the first batch of lightweight cotton masks with 50-centimetre-long metal or nylon chains that allow them to be worn like a necklace for her store in April, before publicising the products on her website and Instagram account in May.

Chained masks by German jewellery designer Saskia Diez

However, with designers rushing to put their own spin on face masks, covers with chain-link attachments have proved controversial. In an Instagram post by fashion watchdog Diet Prada, clothing seller We Wore What was called out for allegedly copying the design from fellow New York brand Second Wind.

After By Second Wind had launched its own chained masks in June, We Wore What direct messaged the brand asking for a mask, only to launch chained masks with a very similar design soon after being gifted it in July.

Diez believes she was the first to launch chained masks in April this year, but sees the addition of chains to face masks as a natural progression from the chains used to hold reading glasses.

Chained masks by German jewellery designer Saskia Diez

“The date I made them and launched them was clearly before these two brands, and I did not see anyone else doing any at that time either,” said Diez.

“Maybe Second Wind had seen my work, but maybe she did not. But, actually, I think making masks that you can hang around your neck was a natural thing to do, especially with the hype of the glasses chains in the last years,” she continued.

Chained masks by German jewellery designer Saskia Diez

Diez told Dezeen that the idea started off as her sewing some simple face masks out of old shirts for herself and her children at the beginning of March in the wake of the pandemic.

“Everybody always forgot to take it or left them somewhere,” she explained. “And a friend of mine said, wouldn’t it be great to have a chain like the glasses chain we had in the collection.”

“So I did a few, bought fabric and got masks sewn by a tailor for our store in Munich. We sold out immediately, so we did more, I posted a picture [on Instagram] and from that day onwards we were inundated with orders.”

Chained masks by German jewellery designer Saskia Diez

To keep the production price low at the start, the designer initially bought leftover brass chains from her brand’s various suppliers. Since then, she now has three tailors sewing the masks, which are prepared in different workshops.

The detachable chains, which are plated in gunmetal, silver or gold, allow the wearer to hang the mask around their neck when not in use.

“I have one around my neck all the time and I have gotten very used to it,” she said. “I have a black one with a dark chain when I am wearing black, a taupe one with a golden chain when I wear colour or neutrals, and a white one with a silver chain when I wear white or blue or grey.”

Another practical yet fashion-forward masks was an expandable face covering made from washable fabric made from recycled plastic bottles by wearable technology company Petit Pli.

Artist Danielle Baskin also set up a company, called Resting Risk Face, that will print user’s faces on N95 masks so they can use facial recognition technology while wearing them.

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Ingeniously portable full-size chess set features nesting pieces that compactly fit into each other

The Crownes is really just redemption for all those horrid travel-friendly portable chess sets we’ve been subjected to with the ridiculously tiny plastic pieces and the magnetic chessboard. The way Crownes approaches portability is uniquely clever, and it still maintains the footprint of a full-size chessboard… thanks to one smart detail – nesting chess pieces.

Perhaps the Crownes chess set’s most defining detail is the way the chess pieces are designed. Individually CNC machined from solid blocks of metal, each piece nests into one another, becoming compact during storage. Designed with this Matryoshka-doll-inspired feature, the chess pieces are sized chronologically, or based on their importance. Pawns are the smallest, and pieces subsequently get bigger, with the king and queen being the largest. The pieces stack up to become two towers (a ‘king’ tower featuring 8 pieces and a ‘queen’ tower featuring the other eight) that then snap together using a magnetic platform. All 16 pieces (per player) fit neatly into this magnetically bound ‘baton’ of sorts, which slides right into a cylindrical case that’s long enough to house both players’ pieces. The chessboard, made from leather, rolls around the cylindrical case like a scroll, giving you a complete full-size chess set that’s roughly 75% smaller when packed up.

The Crownes chess set’s build quality doesn’t really cut corners either. The premium variant comes with machined stainless steel pieces (anodized in bronze and black) with a pure leather board and a wooden casing. The regular version comes in the same size, but with zinc alloy pieces, a PU leather board, and a recycled plastic casing. If you’re looking for a lower tier, the basic chess set comes in a full size too, but with injection-molded plastic pieces and a flexible silicone board.

Ultimately, the Crownes is just a well-designed chess set that’s also designed to be ultra-portable and slim enough to fit into the bottle holder on your backpack. It opens up to a full-size gaming experience that’s uniquely fun, especially when you make your king or queen ‘swallow up’ your opponent’s pieces by covering them entirely. It’s overall pretty neat too, thanks to the magnetic base-platform that lets you organize your inactive pieces on the side.

Designers: ETHO & DesignNest

Click Here to Buy Now: $35 $50 (29% off). Hurry, only 24/570 left! Raised over $200,000.

Crownes Chess – Compact, Portable Nesting Chess Set

Crownes is a modern approach to a timeless game. Each piece is precisely designed to fit one over the other in sequential order, creating a uniformly compact stack.

A full size set awaits within an efficiently sized solution. Set up, stow away and bring along without compromise.

Crownes provides a simplified way of organizing your pieces. Remove and place or stack and go. It is perfectly nested together for your convenience.

In the Palm of your Hand

16 pieces, an entire team, is nested together and magnetically drawn to the centralized base, creating a handheld barrel for each opponent.

The two teams can be stored in a cylindrical, compact carrying case for you to bring pieces anywhere with style, while minimizing mass.

Play Anywhere, With Anyone

Play the classic game wherever you please with this space-saving and portable design.

Simply unroll the board to reveal both teams. Remove each team from their storage cases to sequentially unstack the nested pieces in perfect order.

When you are done, go on your way by rolling up the carrying case of both teams into the board, becoming an easy-to-carry ensemble.

Product Details

The centralized bases split open providing a stable platform for each piece to rest on.

Crownes Chess Options: Basic, Original and Premium

Basic is made from Recycled Plastic, available in blue & white.

Original is made from zinc alloy, available in black & silver.

Premium is made from stainless steel, available in black & bronze.

Click Here to Buy Now: $35 $50 (29% off). Hurry, only 24/570 left! Raised over $200,000.

Motiv Architects experiments with cross-laminated timber for Vancouver garage

Eton Accessory building by Motiv Architects

Vancouver practice Motiv Architects has built a garage from cross-laminated timber as an experiment of working with the material on a small scale.

Called Eton Accessory Building, the garage is a 330-square-foot (30-square-metre) gabled structure on an alleyway in Vancouver. It is connected via a garden to the main residence that is on a separate street – a programme common in the city.

Eton Accessory building by Motiv Architects

Motiv Architects created the project to house the owner’s restored vintage Mustang and to serve as a workshop for them to manage their industrial bag and belt fabrication company.

The studio built the garage with a prefabricated design using cross-laminated timber (CLT) because it wanted to learn how to use the engineered-wood building material.

Eton Accessory building by Motiv Architects

“This 100-per-cent wood structure is a testament that no project is too small for prefabrication, its design born out of a strong desire to work with cross-laminated timber – to better understand its properties as well as the efficiencies of its assembly on a project of a very small scale,” Motiv Architects said.

Eton Accessory building by Motiv Architects

CLT, which is made from layers of timber glued together, provided a way to build quickly and easily, as the site was rather inaccessible and surrounded by other garages and houses.

“The site presented a number of challenges – accessed from a narrow alley with an overhead powerline, limited lay-down area and adjacent structures,” Motiv Architects added.

Eton Accessory building by Motiv Architects

It took under two days to build Eton Accessory Building and it was constructed with a crane known as Hydrauliska Industri AB (HIAB). Black vertical boards and battens of native Western Red Cedar siding clad the exterior for insulation.

“Designed as a kit of parts, the structure is entirely made of three-ply CLT with large cedar framed openings at both ends,” said the studio. “Cut into its component parts by hand as 14 pieces and trucked to Vancouver, the CLT was erected from a HIAB in one-and-a-half days – snapping together like a puzzle.”

Eton Accessory building by Motiv Architects

Efforts to maximize the CLT panel size and sturdiness included incorporating a mezzanine inside and adding built-in gutters outside to stiffen the structure.

Inside, the CLT is left exposed to showcase the warmth of the spruce. Four skylights are even placed across the ceiling and align with vertical windows around the exterior. A long window above the desk in the rear also overlooks the garden.

Eton Accessory building by Motiv Architects

The exterior has an onyx finish for contrast and blends with the dark standing seam metal roof.

“A glowing contrast of interior and exterior is created,” the studio added. “Neighbours come by to see what the latest project is and to admire the woodiness of it all… a gem in the neighbourhood.”

In addition to this garage, another project built on a laneway in Vancouver is Laneway House by Campos Studio, but instead of being for cars, it has a bedroom for a growing family.

Eton Accessory building by Motiv Architects

Motiv Architects is led by architects Asher DeGroot and Tracey Mactavish. The studio has also built Swallowfield Barn for DeGroot’s family farm in British Columbia.

Photography is by Jean-Philippe Delage.


Project credits:

Lead architect: Tracey Mactavish
Engineering: Aspect Structural Engineers
Collaborators: Nicola Logworks, Structurlam

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Incredibly stylish EDC gear coated with Tungsten Carbide (3.5x harder than titanium) will last an entire lifetime!

3.5 times harder than titanium, the strongest metal known to mankind, Tungsten Carbide is akin to black-gold in the EDC world. Give any gear a coating of Tungsten Carbide and it shines black like obsidian rock, with a unique metallic luster that’s glimmery in a subtle way… but more importantly, it makes them practically invincible, resisting any sort of external wear and tear. Pair it with Wingback’s series of exquisitely designed EDC and you’ve got the ideal combination of aesthetics and performance. Designed by Alasdair MacLaine, Wingback’s Black Steel collection sports three minimal-yet-functional products that are bound to be an unwavering part of your everyday carry. A bullet-sized Key Cache helps you store emergency money on your keychain, while a mechanical pen with its comfortable broad design promises to be the last pen you’ll ever want to use. Lastly, MacLaine’s 100ml hip-flask comes with the same cylindrical lathe-manufactured design as the other products in the series. With a refreshing baton-shaped design, the hip-flask is a pleasure to look at and to use, giving you the ability to store liquids in it as well as use it as a bottle-opener.

All of the Black Steel products are precisely lathe-manufactured in the UK using stainless steel, before being coated with a 3um thick surface of the magical Tungsten Carbide using a revolutionary process called magnetron sputtering. The result is a product with a black finish that’s still remarkably shiny, thanks to the steel sitting underneath it. You can even get custom personalized inscriptions laser-engraved onto your products, revealing the shining steel underneath the black coating. Each EDC gear is designed to be perfectly functional as well as aesthetic, with impeccable tolerances, and knurled surfaces that make using the items easy. The pill-sized Key Cache easily sits on your keychain, giving you access to an emergency bank-note if you ever find yourself in a financial fix. The mechanical pen, on the other hand, comes with a diameter of 10mm that feels comfortable to hold, along with the pen’s inherent weight. A single-handed twist of the knurled dial at the end helps deploy the pen’s Fisher PR pressurized ball-point refill, which can easily be replaced after use. The 100ml Hip Flask builds on an existing classic in Wingback’s catalog (which we’ve featured before on YD for its uniquely appealing design), but gives it a layer of future-proofing with the black Tungsten Carbide coating. The hip-flask comes fitted with water-tight silicone gaskets to ensure hermetic sealing, while its base also has a bottle-opener machined into it for good measure. The base is entirely removable too, making the flask easy to clean after use.

Every product in Wingback’s Black Steel collection comes with the same mentality of providing quality that lasts. The dark coating on the products help increase their lifespan nearly ten-fold, and each item is made from locally sourced materials to ensure a lower carbon footprint. Wingback ensures the delivery of each product is 100% carbon neutral along with a promise that they’ll serve you loyally for the rest of your life.

Designer: Alasdair MacLaine of Wingback

Click Here to Buy Now: $53 $68 ($15 off). Hurry, for a limited time only.

Black Steel – Everyday Items Built to Last a Lifetime

Designed and made in England, the Black Steel Collection is a personalized everyday essentials with a tungsten carbide surface that’s 3.5x harder than titanium. The collection consists of the Mechanical Pen, 100ml Hip Flask and Key Cache.

Aesthetically, Black Steel rivals the exotic look of Damascus steel or titanium, with a sub-metallic lustre that reveals a glimmer of the steel beneath the surface. But it doesn’t just catch the eye. Their Black Steel finish also serves a vital purpose in protecting their pen, flask and key cache for the long haul.

It’s applied using a technology called magnetron sputtering, usually reserved for luxury watches and military-grade tools, where multiple nano layers of tungsten carbide carbon are deposited onto the stainless steel surface in a matter of seconds.

The resulting 3um thick surface has a Vickers hardness of 1200 VPN, 9x harder than stainless steel and 3.5x harder than titanium. Their Black Steel finish also has incredibly low friction (< 0.1) due to the carbon added, ensuring the sliding surfaces of the mechanism are satisfyingly smooth.

As a result, their Black Steel Collection will be scratch resistant to virtually anything you will put in your pocket and the parts should never need to be maintained, let alone replaced. They’ll work as well for you today as they will for a grandchild who might inherit your collection in decades to come.

Made to Order

After machining, each product can be laser engraved with a personal inscription, on the base of the 100ml Hip and Key Cache, and along the barrel of the Mechanical Pen.

The Mechanical Pen

The Wingback Mechanical Pen, epitomizes the “buy once” philosophy. Machine turned from stainless steel, it has been designed to last for decades, not months and help its owner rediscover the joy of putting pen to paper.

With a wide 10mm (3/8 inch) diameter and knurled grip, it sits comfortably in the hand to reduce writing fatigue while the satisfying weight (50g) of its materials encourages more time to be taken with every pen stroke.

Features:

– A large 10mm (3/8 inch) diameter allows for a better grip around the pen barrel means you can write more comfortably for longer
– At a compact 117.5mm (4.63 inch) length, the pen fits neatly in the crook of your hand when writing and is ideal to tuck in your pocket or bag
– Personalization of 50 characters available, laser engraved onto the barrel
– A single handed twist allows you to lock the nib in place with our bespoke mechanism
– Precise manufacturing tolerances stop any unwanted nib wobble
– Includes Fisher PR pressurized refill – (refills widely available online)

The Key Cache

The Key Cache is simple yet functional. It neatly clips onto your keyring to enhance your daily carry while containing a secure compartment to store banknotes and contact details in case your keys go missing.

Store an emergency banknote with a little space to spare for a message with your vital details.

– Fits GBP, EURO, USD and every other note we have tried (the maximum size we have tried is 160mm x 82mm)
– CNC machined from a solid block of stainless steel or brass, including custom knurling to provide the ideal ergonomic and aesthetic finish
– Hermetically sealed with a silicone washer to keep its contents dry
– Designed and manufactured to aerospace standards in England, with all materials sourced from Europe

100ml Hip Flask

The hip flask is iconic. A gentleman’s most trusted travel companion, worth its weight in gold (or bourbon). The classic rectangular shape and small spout hit popularity in prohibition, but they believed they could create a flask that celebrates its contents in a more user-friendly, less leaky, easier to clean, more durable way.

With a seamless, cylindrical design, the Wingback hip flask is robust, resilient and adventure ready. At a 100ml capacity, it’s the ultimate travel companion, designed to serve you on any journey as well it does at home.

– 100ml/3.4 fl.oz. capacity and a weight of 180g/6.35 oz
– Include your own personalization on the base of the flask (up to 50 characters)
– Manufactured to aerospace standards in the UK, from food grade 316 Stainless Steel, sourced from Europe, that will not alter the flavor of its contents
– A large lid and removable base makes filling, drinking and cleaning simple
– The wide mouth has been designed to give the perfect pour. Whether for a drip to taste or to pour a decent measure, you won’t get any spillage
– Includes a lip detail on the base of the flask that serves as a handy bottle opener
– Unbroken cylindrical design to eliminate risk of leakage and seam splitting
– Hermetically sealed with a silicone washer and a bespoke dual contact seal to eliminate leaks
– CNC machined from stainless steel, including custom knurling for the ideal ergonomic and aesthetic finish
– All parts are dishwasher safe
– Fits bourbon, whisky, whiskey, gin, tequila, mezcal…You name it, and it has been tested!

Click Here to Buy Now: $53 $68 ($15 off). Hurry, for a limited time only.

Link About It: This Week’s Picks

Art museum banners that block harmful air pollutants, a medical student’s guide to symptoms on darker skin and more from around the web

Malta’s Virtual Underwater Museum

Launched by the Malta Tourism Authority, University of Malta and Heritage Malta, the virtual Underwater Malta museum offers viewers access to 10 archaeological sites, ranging from seven to 361 feet below the surface. Shipwrecks, sunken planes, submarines and various other treasures are on display, and each entry is viewable in 3D with additional details embedded within clickable tabs. The collection is the culmination of five years of collecting data and images to create “the full underwater exploration experience.” Learn more at Underwater Malta’s official site.

Image courtesy of Underwater Malta

Medical Student’s Guide to Symptoms on Darker Skin

During his studies, second-year medical student at St George’s, University of London, Malone Mukwende discovered a lack of diversity and discussion regarding physical symptoms manifesting on darker skin tones. From information about red rashes to lips turning blue, Mukwende says, “It was clear to me that certain symptoms would not present the same on my own skin. I knew that this would be a problem for patients of a similar skin tone to mine, or of a darker skin tone in general.” Working with Margot Turner (lecturer in Diversity and Medical Education) and Peter Tamony (lecturer in Clinical Skills), Mukwende created “Mind The Gap: A Handbook of Clinical Signs in Black and Brown Skin”—a publication to help physicians recognize signs and symptoms appearing on brown and black skin. Throughout the process, faculty at the school found further issues with their educational materials and have vowed to work with Mukwende on decolonizing their curriculum. Read more at the Washington Post.

Image courtesy of Malone Mukwende

Three Spacecraft Head to Mars

This summer, three unmanned spacecraft—the Perseverance (US), Tianwen-1 (China) and Hope Orbiter (United Arab Emirates)—are making the journey to Mars in order to explore. Helicopters, rovers, infrared spectrometers, cameras and other equipment aboard each craft will be controlled from Earth and all the data gathered will add to our ever-growing understanding of the red planet. The New York Times, via NASA, provides graphics for each mission, detailing the spacecraft components, landing gear, vehicles and research instruments—offering a little insight into what each space agency is looking for up there. Read more at The New York Times.

Image courtesy of Wikimages

The Guggenheim Museum Bilbao’s Sustainable Banners

Shifting toward a more sustainable world requires radical change: structural reconfiguration of supply chains, pivoting from harsh chemicals and single-use plastics and beyond. The Guggenheim Museum Bilbao’s newest banner ad campaign for their upcoming exhibition, Olafur Eliasson: In Real Life, proves that these changes can also be remarkably subtle. All 250 of the banners act as air-purifiers capable of catching and cleaning volatile components. The printed materials are coated in Pureti Print, a clear elixir that “induces photocatalysis, a chemical reaction triggered by sunlight, using oxygen and water vapor to combat air pollutants like nitrogen and sulfur oxides, as well as bacteria and mold,” Condé Nast Traveler writes. Find out more about the process there.

Image courtesy of the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao

AFAR Launches an Inspiring “Travel Tales” Podcast

For daydreamers and those who hope to return to travel safely one day, AFAR Media’s new podcast, Travel Tales by AFAR, shares engaging first-person adventures of writers, photographers and other creatives. Each 15-minute podcast—sometimes funny, other times moving—is narrated by the person who lived the story themself. The podcast is the latest vertical in AFAR’s Travel Tales platform, which includes other valuable, personal pieces of travel guidance, from itineraries and articles to illustrated videos. Listen to the first few episodes of Travel Tales on Apple Podcasts now.

Image courtesy of Peter Bohler

Pittsburgh’s 27-Part Drivable Art Exhibition

Sean Rothermel’s April in Paris of Appalachia art exhibition, which ends 31 July, spans 27 outdoor billboards around Pittsburgh and its surrounding metropolitan area. A billboard across the street from Rothermel’s apartment was both an eyesore and a source of inspiration through quarantine. “I struggled a bit early on in the pandemic and found that creative exploration was a helpful mechanism to cope with the stress,” Rothermel tells the Pittsburgh City Paper. He decided to place his art on the spaces typically reserved for advertisements in order to create “a way for people to connect even if that just means agreement on the fact that the artist is a little nuts.” Each piece is meant to be viewed in a specific order, and he made a helpful map to follow, which sets the course for a three-hour drive through the exhibition. Read and see more at the Pittsburgh City Paper.

Image by Jared Wickerham / Courtesy of Pittsburgh City Paper

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

Burnt-red tiles and hessian feature inside Dough Pizza restaurant in Perth

Dough Pizza restaurant by Ohlo Studio

Interior design firm Ohlo Studio used materials that evoke the “rustic sophistication” of Italy to create the interiors of Dough Pizza restaurant in Perth.

Dough Pizza takes over a unit of Westfield Whitford City shopping centre which lies just north of central Perth.

Dough Pizza restaurant by Ohlo Studio

Locally based Ohlo Studio was tasked with designing the interiors and set out to create an aesthetic that, like the restaurant’s name, is “timeless and no-fuss”.

The studio also wanted the space to texturally reflect Italy and the country’s “rustic sophistication”.

“It needed to evoke a distinct atmosphere and personality reinforcing the cultural heritage behind the food,” explained the studio.

Dough Pizza restaurant by Ohlo Studio

On one side of the restaurant, burnt-red tiles have been used to line the lower half of the wall.

Just in front lies a seating banquette upholstered in taupe-coloured fabric, accompanied by wooden tables and white wicker dining chairs. Slim disc-like pendant lights have been suspended from the ceiling directly overhead.

The same red tiles clad the central bar counter. It’s surrounded by wooden fold-out high chairs, where customers can sit and eat within view of the open kitchen or grab a quick drink.

Dough Pizza restaurant by Ohlo Studio

A wall on the opposite side of the restaurant has been completely lined in hessian, which extends down to cover a chunky plinth that runs in front.

The plinth serves as a base for a series of tobacco-hued cushioned seats that can be easily pushed together or apart to suit different-sized groups of diners.

Dough Pizza restaurant by Ohlo Studio

Homely decor elements such as ceramic vases, potted plants and tiny lamps have been dotted throughout to evoke the same feel as a “neighbourhood Italian espresso bar”.

Large photographic prints that capture scenes from sun-drenched Italian beaches have also been mounted on the walls.

In a bid to contrast the commercial setting of the shopping centre, the studio has applied the same selection of warm materials used inside the restaurant to its exterior.

“The tiled bar puncturing the facade also activates the boundary and creates a playful entry,” added the studio.

Dough Pizza restaurant by Ohlo Studio

Ohlo Studio was founded by interior architect Jen Lowe and is based in Perth’s South Fremantle suburb.

The studio’s Dough Pizza project is one of several trendy Italian eateries across Australia. Others include Glorietta by Alexander & Co, which features wooden furnishings and a caged rattan ceiling.

There’s also Pentolina by Biasol, which has worn concrete walls and pink-marble fixtures to emulate the materiality of Ancient Rome.

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Four chocolate trademark battles that were decided in court

KitKat trademark case

Ritter Sport’s recent court victory over Milka is the latest in a series of long-running legal battles to trademark the design of chocolate bars. Here we round up four of the tastiest disputes.


EU gives two fingers to Kit-Kat's four finger design

KitKat vs Kvikk Lunsj

KitKat’s tearable, four-stick design in the UK was the focus of an almost two-decade-long legal battle between Swiss company Nestlé and Cadbury, which is owned by American confectionary giant Mondelez.

Nestle, which owns the KitKat brand, had been arguing the case against the owners of rival Norwegian four-fingered chocolate bar Kvikk Lunsj since it filed a registration with the European Intellectual Property Office in 2002. This was appealed by Cadbury and a back and forth legal case began in 2007.

European Union General Court ruling from late 2016 found that that the bar had acquired “distinctive character through use” in the UK, but this was over-ruled by the UK Court of Appeal in 2017.

This decision was confirmed by the European Court of Justice in Luxembourg in 2018, which deemed that the shape of the chocolate bar was not distinctive enough to amount to a European-wide trademark. Country specific trademarks for KitKat still exist in some European countries including Germany and Italy.

Originally called Rowntree’s chocolate crisp, the first KitKat was produced in 1935, while Kvikk Lunsj came to the market in 1937.


Four chocolate trademark battles that were decided in court

Cadbury vs Nestlé 

Nestlé and Cadbury also entered into another long-running battle over the colour purple. Cadbury trademarked the “predominant” use of its signature Pantone 2685C purple, which it had been using for over 100 years, for “chocolate in bar or tablet form” in 1995.

However, when it attempted to expand this trademark to cover its other products in 2004 it was challenged by Nestlé with the case ending up in the court system for several years.

Cadbury appeared to have won the legal battle with a UK High Court ruling in its favour in 2012. However, this was overturned at appeal in Court of Appeal in 2013 as trademarking a colour was considered too broad.

In 2018, Cadbury unsuccessfully attempted to update the wording of its original trademark for chocolate bars, which it finally dropped in 2019.


Four chocolate trademark battles that were decided in court
Image courtesy of Alaina Terwilliger via Pixabay

Ritter Sport vs Milka

Mondelēz-owned brand Milka challenged Ritter Sport’s monopoly on selling square chocolate bars in Germany.

The result of a 10-year legal battle saw Ritter Sport come out victorious. The back-and-forth dispute began in 2010 after Milka was challenged by Ritter Sport for selling a quadratic chocolate bar.

The Mondelēz-owned brand was initially successful in winning the rights to also sell square bars in 2016, but this was dismissed in 2017.

The case was closed when Germany’s highest court upheld this decision earlier this year, declaring that the square chocolate configuration was the sole property of Ritter Sport.


Four chocolate trademark battles that were decided in court

Poundland vs Toblerone

Mondelez found itself on the winning side of this legal battle UK discount retailer Poundland over Toblerone.

Poundland made a challenge to the trademark of Mondelez-owned Toberlone in 2017 when it was set to release a similarly shaped chocolate bar called Twin Peaks.

Poundland claimed its chocolate bar’s Poundland form was taken from the shape of Wrekin Hill in Shropshire, unlike the Toberlone, which has a pyramidal shape said to be a version of the Alps’ iconic Matterhorn.

When the case was taken to court, Poundland argued that a savings-driven redesign of the Toblerone bar that had larger gaps between the chocolate pyramids had diluted the trademark.

Eventually, Poundland entered into negotiations with Mondelez and released a modified bar with asymmetrically arranged sloped hills instead of peaked mountains.

The post Four chocolate trademark battles that were decided in court appeared first on Dezeen.

This week, architects criticised Autodesk's BIM software

This week, architects criticised Autodesk's Revit BIM software

This week on Dezeen, a group of 17 of the UK’s leading architecture studios wrote a letter to American software maker Autodesk criticising the cost and lack of development of its Revit application.

In the letter, the architecture studios, which included Zaha Hadid ArchitectsGrimshaw and Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners, stated that the rising cost of Building Information Modelling (BIM) software Revit was damaging their businesses.

“Where once Autodesk Revit was the industry enabler to smarter working, it increasingly finds itself a constraint and bottleneck,” it said.

In response to the letter, Autodesk vowed that it would listen to the feedback from its customers and would make addressing their concerns its “top priority”.

This week, architects criticised Autodesk's BIM software
Diller Scofidio + Renfro wraps US Olympic and Paralympic Museum in diamond scales

Architecture firm Diller Scofidio + Renfro’s US Olympic and Paralympic Museum in Colorado opened its door this week.

The museum is covered in diamond-shaped scales, while its galleries are arranged around a spiralling ramp to make it one of the most accessible museums in the world.

This week, architects criticised Autodesk's Revit BIM software
Seymourpowell designs Virgin Galactic spaceship cabin to maximise views of Earth

In transport news, London-based Seymourpowell revealed its design for a spaceship cabin that will be used by Virgin Galactic within its Virgin Spaceship Unity to six passengers on a sub-orbital flight into space. The cabin is designed to maximise views of Earth during the journey.

Transport designer PriestmanGoode also released its design for a cabin, but this time slightly closer to Earth. It envisioned how aircraft cabin interiors will look following the coronavirus pandemic.

This week, architects criticised Autodesk's Revit BIM software
ASICS creates face mask for exercising during the coronavirus pandemic

Also responding to the pandemic, Sportswear brand ASICS released a face mask that contains vents so that people can wear it while working out.

The coronavirus continued to impact events with the organisers of the Consumer Electronics Show making the decision to cancel next year’s January event in Las Vegas and replaced it with an online version.

See Dezeen Events Guide for an up-to-date list of architecture and design events taking place around the world.

This week, architects criticised Autodesk's Revit BIM software
World’s tallest prefabricated skyscrapers set to be built in Singapore

In Singapore, local architecture studio ADDP has designed a pair of 56-storey skyscrapers that will be the tallest prefabricated buildings in the world when they complete in 2026.

The towers will be 60 metres taller than the previous tallest modular building, the 140-metre-high Clement Canopy built by Construction company Bouygues Bâtiment International, which is also in Singapore.

This week, architects criticised Autodesk's Revit BIM software
Zaha Hadid Architects unveils Roatán Próspera housing complex for Honduras

In other architecture news, Zaha Hadid Architects unveiled its design for a modular housing project that will be built on the Caribbean island of Roatán of the coast of Honduras.

In the UK, Twelve Architects designed 60 holiday home that will directly overlook the race track at Silverstone – home of the British Grand Prix.

This week, architects criticised Autodesk's Revit BIM software
Frankie Pappas threads skinny house through South African forest

Popular projects on Dezeen this week include a 3.3-metres-wide house that Frankie Pappas threaded through the forest in South Africaa small studio in rural Ecuador with a straw roof and wood framing designed by architecture student David Guambo and a holiday home in New Zealand by Fearon Hay Architects concealed by black shutters and a concrete wall.

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This camera-equipped smart soundbar upgrades your Netflix binges as well as your Zoom conferences!

This year has been the year of Netflix and Chill. Movies are now releasing on the streaming platforms because theatres are closed and that has led to many of us investing in a better sound system for our homes. Since we aren’t spending on cheap tickets and expensive popcorn, we can upgrade with tech like this Crestron UC video soundbar! It does a lot more than make binge-watching better, it is actually a smart soundbar that also features video conferencing capabilities and a camera to give your work from home setup a boost as well!

The modular soundbar is available in three different versions, both the camera and sensor are attachable accessories depending on when they are needed. “The basic principle of the design is an architectural hierarchy, that optimizes the use of design elements and material,” describes the team. To make the soundbar more visually streamlined and ‘clean’, all technical elements of the product were moved and placed in a way that they are minimally visible.

The wall bracket, ventilation, and the space for storing cables were especially hidden away to give the soundbar unobtrusive aesthetics. “To reach this area, the entire front part of the product can be easily opened. The front includes the interface with display, speakers, camera, sensor, and led bar, as part of the functional level,” says the team. The Crestron UC video soundbar’s linear and smooth design make it a great addition for your sound system but since we are working from home and our lives are one giant zoom call, I guess this can count as an essential “business expense”!

Designer: Noto Design for Crestron