Vanilla Ice designs lighting collection

Vanilla Ice designs lighting collection

News: American rapper-turned-property developer Vanilla Ice has designed a collection of chandeliers and wall lamps in collaboration with New Jersey-based company Capitol Lighting.

Ice, whose real name is Rob Van Winkle, unveiled the collection at Fort Lauderdale Boat Show in Florida last month.

The range comprises two wall lamps and a 24-inch and a 28-inch chandelier, available in two finishes: polished nickel or vintage brass. Prices range from $250 to $1400.

Vanilla Ice designs lighting collection

Best known for his 1990 hit single Ice Ice Baby, the rapper has since turned his hand to property development and is now the star of his own home renovation TV series, The Vanilla Ice Project.

Vanilla Ice isn’t the first hip hop star to take an interest in architecture and design –  we’ve previously featured a chair with tank-like wheels by rapper and producer Pharrell Williams and Kanye West’s minimalist apartment in New York, while rapper and former architecture student Ice Cube went on film to explain how designers Charles and Ray Eames have inspired his music.

Last year we also featured the much-discussed debut furniture collection by Hollywood star Brad Pitt, which includes a marble bathtub for two.

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To Have and To Hold by JamesPlumb

The illusory shadows of burning candles and unexpected assemblages of decrepit furniture make up the latest collection by British designers JamesPlumb.

To Have and to Hold by JamesPlumb

Above: photograph by Gisela Torres, courtesy of Kandasamy Projects

Hannah Plumb and James Russell, who work together as JamesPlumb, created the To Have and To Hold collection from discarded and broken antiques.

To Have and to Hold by JamesPlumb

Above: photograph by Gisela Torres, courtesy of Kandasamy Projects

Included in the collection is a nineteenth century chandelier shown alongside a moving image of its silhouette.

To Have and to Hold by JamesPlumb

Above: photograph by Gisela Torres, courtesy of Kandasamy Projects

“The talking point was the beauty of the shadow,” James Russell told Dezeen, explaining that they wanted to show the shadows of candle smoke without using bright lights, which would have destroyed the candlelit atmosphere.

To Have and to Hold by JamesPlumb

Instead, they recorded the chandelier burning overnight and then projected the video alongside it in the chapel of St. Barnabas.

To Have and to Hold by JamesPlumb

“None of our shows are in typical white cube spaces,” said Russell. “We love to evoke an atmosphere.”

To Have and To Hold by JamesPlumb

The collection also includes assemblages such as an eighteenth century wing chair combined with church pew seats to create a long bench, and a Victorian pulpit repurposed as a cocooned reading room.

To Have and to Hold by JamesPlumb

Document boxes with mirrored tin linings are raised on steel plinths and illuminated from inside, while a corner cupboard has been transformed into a freestanding upholstered bench.

To Have and to Hold by JamesPlumb

A dresser from an apothecary and a set of artist’s pigment drawers are extended with steel frames that outline the missing fragments of the original furniture.

To Have and to Hold by JamesPlumb

Above: photograph by Gisela Torres, courtesy of Kandasamy Projects

“The majority of the work is about vessels or containers, whether for people or objects,” said Russell. “It’s nearly always a broken or incomplete object, one that the antique dealers aren’t drawn to.”

To Have and to Hold by JamesPlumb

To Have and to Hold by JamesPlumb

Above: photograph by Gisela Torres, courtesy of Kandasamy Projects

The pieces were exhibited inside the House of St. Barnabas, a former women’s refuge in Soho, during last October’s Frieze art fair. To Have and To Hold was the first exhibition by newly founded “nomadic gallery” Kandasamy Projects.

To Have and to Hold by JamesPlumb

Other projects by the same designers we’ve featured on Dezeen include antique furniture with cast concrete inserts and an award-winning interior for a fashion boutique in east London – see all our stories about JamesPlumb.

To Have and to Hold by JamesPlumb

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To Have and to Hold by JamesPlumb

Photographs are by JamesPlumb, courtesy of Kandasamy Projects, except where stated.

To Have and to Hold by JamesPlumb

Above: photograph by Gisela Torres, courtesy of Kandasamy Projects

Here’s some more information from Kandasamy Projects:


Kandasamy Projects is proud to present its inaugural exhibition To Have and To Hold by James Plumb. The installation will showcase a significant new body of work, and marks the designers first solo show with a London gallery.

To Have & To Hold presents the artist’s core ethos – the desire to look again at the overlooked. It is the pieces they find that are the starting point of all their work. With a desire to treat each one preciously, they marry apparently disparate fragments into new assemblages that appear as if they could have always existed.

The site for the exhibition reflects the tone of the works. The House of St. Barnabas was a place of sanctuary in its former life as a women’s refuge. The installation will encompass the on-site Chapel, where a unique lighting piece will be presented. A 19th C chandelier – patinated as if dragged from the ocean floor – is exhibited alongside its own silhouette – a shimmering moving image that brings a unique balance of the analogue and the digital.

The focus on the preciousness of objects is borne out in a new limited edition of sculptural luminaires. A collection of old solicitor’s document boxes have been given their own elegant steel plinths. Illuminated from within, their mirrored tin linings become a home for cherished belongings.

The Monro Room will showcase a new collection of unique assemblages. An old corner cupboard that has been released from its confines and allowed to stand freely in the middle of the room, is transformed into a ‘settle’ that celebrates its distinctive shape. A Victorian pulpit, discovered in a tangled mess of overgrown brambles has had its former purpose for delivering sermons to the masses refocussed to create a one of a kind reading room for the individual. The utilty of the pulpit has been transformed from a platform for public speech to a cocooned space for quiet contemplation.

An 18th C wing chair finds new function as a day bed-come-bench with the addition of oversized church pew seats that project from within. A fragment from an old apothecary dresser, and a pair of old pigment drawers are extended by steel frameworks which reference the other parts now missing and forgotten. An allusion to the fact that their present forms are merely fragments of their former selves – an ethereal reminder of their initial purpose.

Each piece is a study in refined interventions that are designed to elevate but not dominate their subjects.

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David Weeks: The designer debuts rugs and his latest lighting collection

David Weeks

For the last few months, new work by designer David Weeks have been on display at the Ralph Pucci showroom in New York. In addition to his latest lighting series, the new pieces include his first collection of carpets, created with renowned rug maker Christopher Farr. To conceive of…

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Plumen Hive by Hulger in The Changing Room at Dezeen Super Store

Plumen Hive by Hulger in The Changing Room at Dezeen Super Store

London design brand Hulger has installed a chandelier made from their new Baby Plumen light bulbs in The Changing Room, a former fitting room at Dezeen Super Store.

Plumen Hive by Hulger in The Changing Room at Dezeen Super Store

Hulger worked with lighting designer Chieh Ting to design modular honeycomb-shaped pieces made from one-sided metallic card to reflect the squiggle of light from each bulb.

Plumen Hive by Hulger in The Changing Room at Dezeen Super Store

“We thought the organic shape of the bulbs would create really interesting resonances in a repeating, geometric, cellular structure, when the honeycomb surfaced as an idea,” says Nicolas Roope of Hulger.

Plumen Hive by Hulger in The Changing Room at Dezeen Super Store

The card was laser-cut and scored, then constructed by hand to make the chandelier.

Plumen Hive by Hulger in The Changing Room at Dezeen Super Store

The Changing Room space has previously featured pendant lamps by Naomi Paul, London 2012 Aquatics Centre photographs by Luke Hayes and interlinking tea cups by Fionn Tynan O’Mahony.

Plumen Hive by Hulger in The Changing Room at Dezeen Super Store

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Plumen Hive by Hulger in The Changing Room at Dezeen Super Store

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Plumen Hive by Hulger in The Changing Room at Dezeen Super Store

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Plumen Hive by Hulger in The Changing Room at Dezeen Super Store

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1 July – 30 September 2012

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NYC Design Week 2011: Brilliant Lighting

Eight impressive lighting options that do more than illuminate

As we made the Design Week rounds recently in NYC, we found some brilliant examples of modern lighting. Below are eight lamps sure to add a flicker of stylish design to any home or office, culled from ICFF, Model Citizens, NoHo Design District and the Voos Lights Up SportMax exhibit.

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Esque and No.1 Son

A continuation of their (Bar)barian collaboration with No.1 Son, Esque’s gorgeous Afloat lamp combines meticulously mouthblown glass balls with finely crafted leather.

B.Light Design

Designer Ben Light’s clever Bourbon Jar Lamp perches an Edison bulb atop a turned oak wooden base, which has been carved from an old bourbon fermentation tank. When the bulb heats up, it emits the aroma of the sweet liquor.

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Bocci

Designed by Omer Arbel, Bocci’s 28 Series is a collection of chandeliers that each feature 28 distorted glass spheres, with low voltage or LED lamps housed inside each globe. The pendants are crafted using an intriguing technique in which air is blown in, sucked out and then intermittently heated and cooled for a slightly warped shape. We happened upon a more massive edition, beautifully hanging from a crane over the Bowery.

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Matt Gagnon

Los Angeles-based designer Matt Gagnon lit up the Future Perfect, handmaking over 40 of his Prototype Lamps in the storefront window of The Future Perfect. He makes each piece, an exploration in “scale, form, color, texture, material, pattern and more,” from fibers wound around a metal armature.

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Lindsey Adelman Studio

Blown by glass artist Michiko Sakano, Burst combines gold-coated glass spikes and a dizzying array of glass globes. The chandelier gorgeously demonstrates Adelman’s interest in marrying Wabi-Sabi with Modernism.

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Rich Brilliant Willing

Modeled after propulsion systems and rooftop vents, Rich Brilliant Willing’s new Delta IV pendant lamps boast a simple silhouette with gold or white interiors, designed to diffuse energy-efficient bulbs with a warm glow.

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UM Project

Clean, simple and upcycled from elegant Art Deco-era materials, UM Project’s new L.U.M. Lamp harbors three short Edison bulbs inside a polished copper, aluminum and satin brass shade, accented by a subtle burst of color.

Deger Cengiz

Deger Cengiz’s Wooden LED Light merges antique materials with modern lighting. A hardwood base bolsters copper piping for a sleekly industrial aesthetic.