Peye and Olive by Numéro 111 for Ligne Roset

Peye and Olive by Numéro 111 for Ligne Roset

Cologne 2012: these oversized lamps by French studio Numéro 111 for design brand Ligne Roset are illuminated by strips of LEDs around the back of the shade. 

Peye and Olive by Numéro 111 for Ligne Roset

Their large hood-like shades diffuse the bright white light into a soft, wide beam.

Peye and Olive by Numéro 111 for Ligne Roset

The floor-standing Peye and table-top Olive are on show at imm cologne, which continues until 22 January. See all our stories about Cologne 2012 here.

Peye and Olive by Numéro 111 for Ligne Roset

Ligne Roset will also present their new collection at Maison & Objet in Paris from 20 to 24 January.

Here are some more details from Ligne Roset:


Two highly original lights (table lamp and floor lamp) which work on the principle of an oversized shade and illumination via strips of LED’s.

The Peye floor lamp is a reflection on the illuminated object as a generator of atmosphere and space. The system of LED’s gives off, almost mysteriously, an all-enveloping light that highlights the curves of the shade.

Oversized in inspiration, the Peye floor lamp, with its surprising dimensions, occupies a truly singular position in the domestic landscape. Its shade, which rests on a solid wood stem, is in composite material, with white interior and anthracite exterior. The LED’s are arranged all around the opening, in the rear of the shade.

The Olive table lamp has been devised as an illuminated chest, the design of which liberates itself from the formal constrains relating to the use of the bulb. The indirect light source reveals the generous shade of this singularly proportioned light, from which a soft, diffuse atmosphere is given off.

Numéro 111 is a trio of 2 designers and an architect from St Etienne, who have already made their mark with several projects in the fields of furniture design and interior design. They demand a global, dialogue-based approach, one which is not limited to a single hierarchy or discipline. Sensitive to both forms
and materials, Numéro 111 provokes and offers, through its creations, reflections on usage arising from the three team members’ cross-disciplinary standpoint on our daily lives.

Gudpaka Lamp by Great Things to People

Gudpaka Lamp by Great Things to People

Cologne 2012: Chilean studio Great Things to People (gt2P) present this lamp covered in alpaca hair as part of [D3] Talents at imm cologne this week.

Gudpaka Lamp by Great Things to People

The Gudpaka Lamp is shaped into two hairy humps around two bulbs.

Gudpaka Lamp by Great Things to People

It was heat-formed from ABS plastic over an MDF mould, then covered with triangles of plywood on the inside and alpaca hair woven into alpaca felt on the outside.

Gudpaka Lamp by Great Things to People

imm cologne continues until 22 January. See all our stories about the event here.

The information below is from gt2P:


GUDPAKA lamp represents the concept of Digital Crafting in its maximum expression. It brings together manufacturing processes and production from both the field of digital and technological to that of the artisan and low tech. It is a game of opposites. Besides merging digital and traditional (in its manufacturing process), meets also the global and the local (in its design process), vegetable and animal (in its appearance), smooth shapes and flat faces (in its geometry), northern and southern (in the Chilean materials used).

The manufacturing process involved the development of a low cost mould of cut and routed mdf by CNC machinery for thermoforming the structure that supports the materials that converge on the lamp. The inner faces of Coigue plywood were cut by laser cutting machine as well as the alpaca felt strips. Then, the outer covering was woven by hand from wasted hair in the process of obtaining Alpaca wool.

Gudpaka Lamp by Great Things to People

Great things to people (gt2P) is a Chilean studio in a continuous process of research and experimentation in production, technical, functional and aesthetic terms always in search of new proposals.

Its interest in the systematization of geometric, spatial, natural or artificial phenomena by identifying their variables or relevant parameters (geometry, size, material, etc.) allows creating generative algorithms that can control the form and function.

Gudpaka Lamp by Great Things to People

This focus on the systematization of knowledge allows accumulating the learning of all the projects in a “library” of DNA or rules of design, which are used in each new project. These are reproduced as many times as necessary on the scale which is required, as in architecture, furniture, objects, or interventions in public space, thus creating standard methodologies for non-standard solutions.

That is how the concept of digital crafting was born, based on the implementation of digital design methodologies and the experience and the know-how of Chilean artisans, who feed and contribute to qualify each “generative algorithms” or DNA. Through this concept gt2P has succeeded in communicating its ability to investigate, explore and experiment with new materials and processes, and integrate technologies CAD/CAM with traditional techniques and knowledge.

Picnic by GamFratesi for Ligne Roset

Picnic by GamFratesi for Ligne Roset

Cologne 2012: French design brand Ligne Roset present their new collection in Cologne this week, including this little storage unit modelled on a traditional sewing box by Copenhagen designers GamFratesi.

Picnic by GamFratesi for Ligne Roset

Like the original, Picnic is raised on short legs with a handle looped over the top so it’s easy to move around. The box is made entirely from ash and stained in black.

Picnic by GamFratesi for Ligne Roset

This time last year GamFratesi launched their Rewrite desk for Ligne Roset – take a look at it here.

Picnic by GamFratesi for Ligne Rose

imm cologne continues until 22 January. Ligne Roset will also present the collection at Maison & Objet in Paris from 20 to 24 January.

Here are some more details from Ligne Roset:


Picnic

As with their Rewrite desk from 2011, the aesthetic astonishment arises from the unexpected meeting between the déjà-vu (‘already seen’) and a surprising new element: the storage section is evocative of the traditional sewing box or workbox, but when one turns away from the original function (the first priority is no longer necessarily to arrange one’s sewing kit) and updates the materials (black-stained ash replaces the more traditional oak or cherry), it transcends the more ordinary references to take on another dimension altogether, one which is both familiar and strange.

Picnic’s familiar, domestic character is underlined by the softly curved treatment of the storage chest as well as its support feet/handle which enables it to be moved about with ease.

GamFratesi is a design agency founded in Copenhagen in 2006 by Danish architect Stine Gam and Italian architect Enrico Fratesi. This Italian-Danish pairing embodies two talented European design traditions: the magical union between the design of the South and that of the North.

Spotlight Volumes by Lukas Peet

Spotlight Volumes by Lukas Peet

Cologne 2012: these steel pendant lamps with a bulb in each end are on show as part of [D3] Talents at imm cologne, which opens today in Germany.

Spotlight Volumes by Lukas Peet

Designed by Lukas Peet from Canada, the Spotlight Volumes create ambient downward light while throwing a small spot of illumination upwards onto the ceiling.

Spotlight Volumes by Lukas Peet

The shades hang from a braided flex wrapped around their narrowest points, supplemented by a 1mm thick steel cable.

Spotlight Volumes by Lukas Peet

Each is painted in glossy white on the outer surface and a matte pale yellow inside to add warmth to the CFL light source, with a polished steel rim separating the two finishes.

Spotlight Volumes by Lukas Peet

Peet has also made a table lamp for the series, resting on a cork base and with a cork dimmer switch.

Spotlight Volumes by Lukas Peet

We published a set of cutlery by Lukas Peet that combines silver and ceramics back in 2010 – take a look at it here.

Spotlight Volumes by Lukas Peet

imm cologne continues until 22 January.

Here’s some more information from Peet:


Spotlight Volumes

Inspired by spotlights, these pendant lights have an energy efficient CFL light bulb at either end. One illuminates the ceiling and the other the floor.

Spotlight Volumes by Lukas Peet

Shown here in three sizes, they can be arranged in groups or on their own. When arranged in a group they should hang randomly each illuminating a different part of the ceiling/floor.

Spotlight Volumes by Lukas Peet

The outer surface is coated in gloss paint, while the inner is hand painted with a brushed pale matte yellow to contrast the strong overall shape of the lights. The smooth gloss finish of the outside also contrasts with the texture of the visible strokes on the inside.

Spotlight Volumes by Lukas Peet

The Yellow of the inner shade is added to the light through diffusion, adding warmth to the cfl Bulb. The two finishes are divided by the polished steel edge. The lights hang from their braided electrical cord and a 1mm steel cable due to the overall weight. The physical connection of the electrical cord also communicates a clear separation of the two ‘volumes’ of the two shades.

Spotlight Volumes by Lukas Peet

Price on Request – Limited Production
Prototype – Seeking Producer/Manufacture

Dezeen Screen: Gravity by Jólan van der Wiel

Dezeen Screen: Gravity by Jólan van der Wiel

Dezeen Screen: designer Jólan van der Wiel has sent us this movie of his machine for shaping stools using gravity and magnets, on display as part of the [D3] Contest for young designers at imm cologne in Germany this week. Watch the movie »