Grillage by Francois Azambourg for Ligne Roset

Grillage by Francois Azambourg

Cologne 2011: French brand Ligne Roset presented this folded mesh chair by French designer Francois Azambourg at imm cologne in Germany last week.

Grillage by Francois Azambourg

Called Grillage, the piece is made by stretching a metal sheet with tiny grooves cut into it, then folding into a seat and attaching to a bent steel frame.

Grillage by Francois Azambourg

A stretchy, quilted throw can be attached to the seat with magnets sewn into the fabric.

Grillage by Francois Azambourg

Grillage by Francois Azambourg

imm cologne took place 18-23 January. See all our coverage of the event here »

More furniture on Dezeen »
More about Ligne Roset on Dezeen »

The information that follows is from Ligne Roset:


Called Grillage, the design

The principle for creating the basic shape of Grillage is very simple: a sheet of metal with staggered grooves is folded, origami-style, and then drawn to create a mesh. Grillage tells the story of its manufacturing process…drawing, folding, creasing. It reveals everything about itself, from how it was designed to how it was produced.

Grillage – wire mesh – it’s the way to achieve both comfort and ergonomics with an all-metal piece of furniture. It may be covered with a special quilted material for added comfort and a warmer appearance. An outdoor version is available in light blue.

To manufacture Grillage, a sheet of metal, which is grooved in staggered rows, is stretched. Metal wire is then soldered to the exterior, piece by piece. The sheet thus obtained is folded at various points to create the seat: this is a manual operation which renders each armchair ‘unique’.The shape of the armchair will evolve over time.


See also:

.

Jean Nouvel for
Ligne Roset
Ronan & Erwan Bouroullec
for Ligne Roset
Inga Sempé
for Ligne Roset

Rewrite by GamFratesi for Ligne Roset

Rewrite by GamFratesi for Ligne Roset

Cologne 2011: the Rewrite desk by Copenhagen designers GamFratesi (see our earlier story) has been put into production by French brand Ligne Roset.

Rewrite by GamFratesi for Ligne Roset

The desk has a cave-like shield on top to create a private working environment.

Rewrite by GamFratesi for Ligne Roset

This fiberglass cocoon is covered in foam and woolen fabric, while the desk itself is made of walnut.

Rewrite by GamFratesi for Ligne Roset

A slit in the back of the surface accommodates cables while a lacquered steel container underneath hides laptop transformers and loose wires.

See the prototype in our earlier story.

The product was shown at imm cologne, which took place 18-23 January. See all our coverage of the event here »

More furniture on Dezeen »
More about GamFratesi on Dezeen »
More about Ligne Roset on Dezeen »

Here’s a little information from Ligne Roset:


GamFratesi is a design agency which was founded in Copenhagen in 2006 by Danish architect Stine Gam and Italian architect Enrico Fratesi. This Italian-Danish coupling brings together two gifted European design traditions: a magical union between Southern and Northern design. And the result: the Rewrite desk, designed like a bubble, a little jewel of modernity and softness.

Those who work from home do not necessarily want their living rooms to resemble an open plan office! At once aesthetic and functional, this astonishing study cocoon, covered in a sound-absorbing woollen material, is perfect for preserving both concentration and intimacy.

AESTHETICS

The soundproofed ball affords protection from both light and external noises and also dampens sounds emanating from within it. The natural, precious materials of which it is composed, walnut and Kvadrat Divina wool, reinforce the overall feeling of softness and security.

The astonishing appearance arises from the unexpected meeting between the déjà-vu and a surprising new element: the desk section is quite traditional in terms of its shape and materials (a wooden table), but when one adds its bubble, it breaks free of all historical or proportional references.

The functional aspect is covered by a lacquered metal chest, fixed beneath the desk, which conceals transformers and electrical cables, and by a slit cable port in the top of the desk. Whist staying connected, the user can isolate himself and construct for himself a very private space which is nonetheless still linked to the outside world…Thanks to its rounded shape, the Rewrite desk can be located as a ‘point’ anywhere in a room, be it living room, bedroom or even a large hallway.

Rewrite has already been displayed at the Danish Museum of Art and Design, Copenhagen.

Desk with legs in solid walnut and top in walnut veneered MDF, with the exception of the slit cable port in the rear section which is made from solid walnut. Ball/screen in fibreglass clad in polyether foam and Divina craie on both its internal and external faces. Chest in white lacquered steel to take transformers and cables, located beneath the top.


See also:

.

Jean Nouvel for
Ligne Roset
Ronan & Erwan Bouroullec
for Ligne Roset
Inga Sempé
for Ligne Roset

Forbidden Fruit by Glimpt

Forbidden Fruit by Glimpt

Cologne 2011: Swedish design duo Glimpt presented these strawberry-inspired pendant lamps as part of [D3] Design Talents at imm cologne last week.

Forbidden Fruit by Glimpt

Called Forbidden Fruit, the collection of lights feature ceramic shades that have been painted with tiny details representing strawberry pips.

Forbidden Fruit by Glimpt

The cords are fitted with layers of colourful discs, which sit on top of the shades.

Forbidden Fruit by Glimpt

As well as the pendant lights, the collection includes a floor lamp, a sideboard and a stool with metal legs that slot into grooves on the bottom side of the seat.

Forbidden Fruit by Glimpt

The designers created the objects in collaboration with craftsmen from South Africa.

Forbidden Fruit by Glimpt

imm cologne took place 18-23 January. See all our coverage of the event here »

Forbidden Fruit by Glimpt

More lighting on Dezeen »

Forbidden Fruit by Glimpt

More furniture on Dezeen »

Forbidden Fruit by Glimpt

Here’s some text from the designers:


Before starting our exam project, we had long discussions about what we felt was important to us and about the ways we want to work. Since we are both very fond of handicraft and do a lot of woodwork ourselves, it felt natural to make handicraft the point of departure for our project.

Forbidden Fruit by Glimpt

Our discussions revealed that we are more or less fed up with that part of today’s designworld which is all about conceptualizing and creating products for a consumer society without involvement at a deeper level. In order to justify ourselves as designers we felt a need for our work to mean more than just that.

Forbidden Fruit by Glimpt

This led us on to the idea of co-operating with craftsmen in poorer parts of the world, thus highlighting their handicraft and their cultural tradition and perhaps, in the long run, contribute to creating more work for the local craftsmen.

Forbidden Fruit by Glimpt

When design and craftmanship meet, we hope to create more attractive products for which you can charge more reasonable prices so that the local craftsmen get a fairer share than what is often the case.

Forbidden Fruit by Glimpt

We established contact with Furntech (furntech.org.za) – South Africa’s Centre of excellence for the furniture industry – where they accepted working with us in our exam project. At Furntech they focus on skills development in furniture manufacturing to improve quality in South African wood and furniture industry.

Forbidden Fruit by Glimpt

They offer accredited training programmes as well as support/incubation for small and micro enterprises. Before going to South Africa, we studied their wealth of handicraft and also established contact to a ceramics studio called Potters Workshop (pottersworkshop.co.za), whose work we found highly inspiring.

Forbidden Fruit by Glimpt

We also found different metal workers who wanted to work with us in our project. When we finally came to Cape Town at the beginning of May, we experienced four very intensive weeks working together with the people that we had established contact to.

Forbidden Fruit by Glimpt

The final outcome was a number of prototypes: a stool and a sideboard, both knock-down, and a number of hand-deco- rated ceramic lamps.

Forbidden Fruit by Glimpt

All along we had the European market in mind, but to show an explicit sender, we wanted the products to carry a clear South African feeling. Therefore we combined materials and worked with colours in the details in ways similar to the those of the South African craftsmen.
Forbidden Fruit by Glimpt

On the following pages you find photos from our work in South Africa as well as photos showing the final prototypes. In March the pendant lamps will be released at the Design In Daba in Capetown. And they will be produced by the ceramicists at the Potters Workshop.
Tor & Mattias


See also:

.

Rubber Table by
Thomas Schnur
Pressed Chair by
Harry Thaler
La Grande by Reinhard Dienes for Anthology Quartett

Forest Light by Ontwerpduo

Forest Light by Ontwerpduo

Cologne 2011: this branching ceiling light by Dutch designers Ontwerpduo was presented at imm cologne last week as part of [D3] Design Talents.

Forest Light by Ontwerpduo

Called Forest Light, the pendant lights hang from a network of aluminium-coated copper piping.

Forest Light by Ontwerpduo

Photographs are by Marly Gommans.

Forest Light by Ontwerpduo

imm cologne took place 18-23 January. See all our coverage of the event here »

More lighting on Dezeen »

Here’s a little text from the designers:


Forest light is a new system for ceiling lights. The possibilities are unlimited. The design consists out of different parts, which can be connected at the ceiling. Step by step the light system is overgrowing the ceiling as it were.

It is possible to get one ore much more light points exactly where you want them. Also a wall light is possible. Obstacles or height differences are beautiful to use with these lights.

Commissioned by: Ontwerpduo
Type: unlimited product
Distribution: Ontwerpduo
Material: coated aluminium, copper and PU


See also:

.

Three projects by
Fabien Cappello
Joints by Nathan Wierink
of Ontwerpduo
When I Was Small by Tineke Beunders of Ontwerpduo

Beaugars by Meike Langer

Beaugars by Meike Langer

Cologne 2011: product designer Meike Langer presented this table combined with two clothes rails as part of [D3] Design Talents at imm cologne last week.

Beaugars by Meike Langer

Called Beaugars, the product has two bent metal loops that pivot round the wooden surface, meaning it can be reconfigured according to location and the items to be stored.

Beaugars by Meike Langer

imm cologne took place 18-23 January. See all our coverage of the event here »

Beaugars by Meike Langer

More furniture on Dezeen »

Beaugars by Meike Langer

Here’s a bit more information from the designer:


Beaugars by Meike Langer

IMM Cologne 2011 Halle 3.2 A 008/E009

Areas of life blend, rooms loose their fixed assignments and functions. Due to the blurring of boundaries new requirements for the environment and their products arise. In this context the furniture Beaugars was developed.

Beaugars by Meike Langer

It offers space to lay, hang up and store objects of daily use. Its most distinctive feature, its mutability, results from the flexibility of the two arcs, which can be rotated in 360°.

Beaugars by Meike Langer

Therefore Beaugars adapts easily and can be, according to the available space, either compact or expansive. Beaugars consists of a bench made of massive wood, two metal arcs and three wooden hook-elements.

Beaugars by Meike Langer

The bench has five legs altogether: three wooden and two metal ones. Whereas the wooden legs are massive the metal ones are hollow due to their function as the mountings of the arcs.

Beaugars by Meike Langer

Both arcs can be moved around the seating area in 360 degrees. I try to create functional objects that shall be used and lived with by people in the long term.

Beaugars by Meike Langer

Every detail of an object needs to be thought of and justified, but this austerity should not show in the design. I rather wish my objects to appear light and easy to handle.


See also:

.

Carro Lungi by
Ciszak Dalmas
Welcome to the Jungle by
My Own Super Studio
Vaisselier Système D by
Matière A

Home Traveller by Anne Lorenz

Home Traveller by Anne Lorenz

Cologne 2011: young designer Anne Lorenz presented this storage chest modelled on an enormous handbag as part of [D3] Design Talents at imm cologne last week.

Home Traveller by Anne Lorenz

Called Home Traveller, the leather bag on legs is designed to be moved around without occupying a fixed place on the home.

Home Traveller by Anne Lorenz

imm cologne took place 18-23 January. See all our coverage of the event here »

Home Traveller by Anne Lorenz

Here’s a little bit of text from Lorenz:


Home Traveller was part of my graduation project at HFG Karlsruhe/Germany. It is a combination of a handbag and furniture – a play with those archetypes. The portable storage unit can easily be carried from one place to another and be arranged in the living space like an accessory. Instead of a normal furniture it has no fixed place in the room. It is as spacious like a chest but more flexible in the use.

Materials: Leather, wood.


See also:

.

Built to Resi(s)t by Quinze & Milan and EastpakTassenkast by
Lotty Lindeman
More Cologne 2011
coverage

Ton by Mark Braun

Ton by Mark Braun

Cologne 2011: Berlin designer Mark Braun presented a series of cylindrical plywood stools at imm cologne in Germany last week.

Ton by Mark Braun

Called Ton, the collection includes stools in three different heights, each with a slot cut out to form a handle.

Ton by Mark Braun

imm cologne took place 18-23 January. See all our coverage of the event here »

Dezeen editor-in-chief Marcus Fairs interviewed Mark Braun as part of our series of Dezeentalks at [D3] Design Talents at the fair. Movies of all the talks will be shown on Dezeen soon. Meanwhile you can see films of all the Dezeentalks at last year’s fair here.

Ton by Mark Braun

Photographs are by Inka Recke.

The information that follows is from Mark Braun:


TON – a wooden stool series

TON is made out of laminated wood in bleeched and smoaked oak. Different stool types offering functional hights useful as step, stool and leaning aid and stackable as they are you can also use them as occasional tables.

Flexible use is also supported by the large grip hole for carring your TON as a suitcase – and beside that the grip hole creates a formal icon to underline the beauty of a pure but characteristic form.


See also:

.

Reichtum by Mark Braun
for Lobmeyr
More about
Cologne 2011
Authentic Wood
by Le Corbusier

Back Room – Adults Only by Mike Meiré

Back Room - Adults Only by Mike Meire

Cologne 2011: designer Mike Meiré invited visitors to a fetish club furnished with customised design classics at his Cologne factory during the imm cologne trade fair last week

Back Room - Adults Only by Mike Meire

At the end of a winding corridor visitors found chairs by designers including Marcel Breuer and Eileen Gray, draped with chains, straps, surveillance equipment and masks, intended to contrast with the trade fair’s sleek product presentations.

Back Room - Adults Only by Mike Meire

imm cologne took place 18-23 January. See all our coverage of the event here »

Back Room - Adults Only by Mike Meire

More furniture stories »

Back Room - Adults Only by Mike Meire

The information that follows is from Mike Meiré:


As part of the Passagen for the imm cologne furniture trade fair, Mike Meiré presents his installation “Back Room – adults only” in his Factory in Cologne Ehrenfeld.

Back Room - Adults Only by Mike Meire

The exhibition confronts us with the bewildering notion that furniture could have its own life, a dark alter-ego that questions the supposed certainties of marketing and the design staples of the good, the beautiful and the true which the trade fair presents year after year with great pomp and circumstance.

Back Room - Adults Only by Mike Meire

Mike Meiré transforms his Cologne Factory into a difficult to access back room which can only be reached along a labyrinthine corridor.

Back Room - Adults Only by Mike Meire

The spatial deconstruction of the corridor is an artistic coup which maximises the effect of the passage as a portal to a recessed, forbidden world.

Back Room - Adults Only by Mike Meire

With this mental preparation, one enters the “Back Room” which quickly reveals itself to be a dark room with clear sexual connotations and where icons of design history such as the Wassily Chair by Marcel Breuer or the Day Bed by Eileen Gray discard their bourgeois innocence and reservedness.

Back Room - Adults Only by Mike Meire


See also:

.

Global Street Food
by Mike Meiré
Jean Nouvel at
Cologne 2011
Frederik Roijé
at Cologne 2011

Rubber Table by Thomas Schnur

Rubber Table by Thomas Schnur

Cologne 2011: German designer Thomas Schnur presented this table with suction cups on the legs as part of [D3] Design Talents at imm cologne last week.

Rubber Table by Thomas Schnur

Called Rubber Table, each product has five legs and an irregularly shaped top, moulded from dyed foam rubber.

Rubber Table by Thomas Schnur

More furniture stories »

imm cologne took place 18-23 January. See all our coverage of the event here »

Rubber Table by Thomas Schnur

Here are some more details from Schnur:


Rubber Table

The drain or toilet plunger is an item, which, though it receives little attention, is actually extremely useful. Rubber Table adopts its idiosyncratic aesthetics and transfers them to a new environment. The rubber plunger has become a table leg – setting in motion a new way of looking at this ambivalent object. Manufacturing it from dyed foam rubber preserves the color and the feel of the original object.

Rubber Table by Thomas Schnur

In my projects I always attempt to negotiate with the product I am to design. I negotiate on the weighting of materials, manufacturing, appearance, meaning and function. I break down this task into its characteristics and meanings. I then analyze, assess and construct the idea.

Rubber Table by Thomas Schnur

In this, it is important to me that despite their cross-references, the products, which are often created from familiar fragments, are able to development the greatest possible degree of autonomy. In this way, they allow for associations but, beyond this, develop their own potential for becoming autonomous products.”


See also:

.

Rubber Stool
by h220430
Rubber Candlesticks
by Yen-Wen Tseng
Rubber House by
Zeinstra van Gelderen

Cross by Karim Rashid for Freedom of Creation

Cross by Karim Rashid for Freedom of Creation

Cologne 2011: designer Karim Rashid launched this 3D-printed lamp for Dutch brand Freedom Of Creation at imm cologne in Germany last week.

Cross by Karim Rashid for Freedom of Creation

The product features icons from Rashid’s work, including crosses, stars, splats and blobs, overlapped and built up into a rounded cross-shape.

Cross by Karim Rashid for Freedom of Creation

Called Cross Lamp, the design is available at a floor, pendant or table light.

Cross by Karim Rashid for Freedom of Creation

imm cologne took place 18-23 January. See all our coverage of the event »

See all our stories about Karim Rashid »

The information that follows is from Freedom Of Creation:


Karim Rashid designs Cross lamp for Freedom Of Creation

Freedom Of Creation, Dutch company for innovative design editions realized through advanced 3D printing technologies pioneered by FOC itself, starts the New Year and its second decade since its foundation with a prestigious collaboration. Polyhedral star designer Karim Rashid has conceived the amazing “Cross” lamp for Freedom Of Creation (FOC), launched on the occasion of IMM furniture fair. Karim Rashid is one of the most prolific designers of his generation.

“I thought to make a hyper-collage of my icons as a lit object, in changing scale and mass to create diverse shadows and light filtration, to really make one overriding blobular 3-d cross form, which is my symbol for Globalove,” says Karim Rashid regarding his astonishing “Cross” table, floor and suspension lamp designed for FOC. The 3D Cross is composed of an infinite number of small icons alluding to Karim’s most famous and iconic forms.

“CROSS Lamp”: A suggestive “cross-shaped” lamp – available in suspended and table versions – made up of the agglomeration of Karim Rashid’s most memorable icons. The cross form is Karim Rashid’s symbol for Globalove.


See also:

.

Bobble by
Karim Rashid
Iiamo Go by
Karim Rashid
Snap Chair by
Karim Rashid