Dezeen Music Project: Byrds in Heaven by Human Machine

This track by Human Machine is a tribute to the late, great trumpet player Donald Byrd, who passed away last week. Byrds in Heaven is a gentle electronica track, which features a mournful sample of Byrd’s playing.

The track was sent to us by Love Our Records, a UK-based online record label that releases a free download each week. Check them out here.

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Author Douglas Coupland designs furniture range

Furniture by Douglas Coupland for SwitzerCultCreative

News: Generation X author Douglas Coupland has followed fellow celebrities Vanilla Ice, Brad Pitt and Pharrell Williams and designed a range of furniture, unveiling a collection of Japanese-inspired pieces.

Furniture by Douglas Coupland for SwitzerCultCreative

Canadian novelist and artist Coupland has come up with a desk, chair, lamp and bookcase for SwitzerCultCreative, a design brand launched by brother and sister Allan and Renee Switzer.

Furniture by Douglas Coupland for SwitzerCultCreative

Coupland’s efforts come just a few days after rapper Vanilla Ice unveiled a lighting collection. In November actor Brad Pitt unveiled a range of limited-edition furniture. Hip hop star Pharrell Williams has also dabbled with furniture design while in 2007 astronaut Buzz Aldrin designed a moon-shaped light for Habitat.

Furniture by Douglas Coupland for SwitzerCultCreative

Coupland’s collection includes the Bento Box Escritoire, a black writing desk, and Paint Box Escritoire, a white writing desk with colourful storage pockets. The Writer’s Seat fits beneath the desks and is available in five colours.

Furniture by Douglas Coupland for SwitzerCultCreative

The Ryoan-ji floor and desk lamps are inspired by a chequer pattern seen by Coupland in a Kyoto temple and are made with wire frames wrapped in translucent material.

Furniture by Douglas Coupland for SwitzerCultCreative

The Osaka bookshelf can be arranged in different configurations and is named after similar shelves seen by Coupland that survived the 1995 Osaka earthquake.

Furniture by Douglas Coupland for SwitzerCultCreative

“The collection is a reflection of everything I use daily,” says Coupland. “These are pieces that will unleash creativity, dopamine, high style and timelessness into their user’s world.”

Furniture by Douglas Coupland for SwitzerCultCreative

See more furniture »

Here’s some information from SwitzerCultCreative:


Douglas Coupland Designs Luxury Furniture Line For SwitzerCultCreative

Prominent writer and visual artist Douglas Coupland is launching a collection of furniture designs, in collaboration with Vancouver-based SwitzerCultCreative, a brother-sister luxury design collective. The Douglas Coupland for SwitzerCultCreative collection is being unveiled on January 24th at Toronto’s Interior Design Show (IDS 13) taking place from January 24th to January 27th at the Metro Toronto Convention Centre.

“The ‘Douglas Coupland for SwitzerCultCreative’ collection is a reflection of everything I use daily,” says Coupland. “These are pieces that will unleash creativity, dopamine, high style and timelessness into their user’s world.”

Douglas Coupland for SwitzerCultCreative consists of a desk, chair, lamp and bookshelves.

The Desk: The Bento Box Escritoire and the special edition Paint Box Escritoire are two variations on a personal theme from Coupland. His fascination with an escritoire, rather than a run-of-the-mill desk, inspires thought, broadens his mind and because of the nature of the escritoire – a vessel for writing alone – encourages the thought process and makes him want to write more.

The Writer’s Seat: Available in five different colours, the seat fits perfectly beneath either escritoire. “When I went to art school in Hokkaido, I had to study several Japanese art forms — ikebana, rock arranging, calligraphy and sumi-e painting,” says Coupland. “I think everybody should study these things.  It makes you reframe the way you see the world.  These seats are unexpectedly ergonomic and work whether you’re doing ink work, or blogging on a MacBook Pro.”

Ryoan-ji Lamps: These lamps take strong influences from Japanese culture, specifically a checker pattern seen by Coupland in Kyoto’s Ryoan-ji Temple in 1986. A floor lamp and a desk lamp have shades made with wire frames wrapped with a translucent shoji-type material.

Osaka Bookshelves: These sleek, stacking bookshelves will provide a luxurious home for any book collection. Simple in style, the Osaka bookshelves are so named after Coupland saw similar shelving that survived the 1995 Osaka earthquake. They have been designed to encase paperbacks, hardcover and oversize books. Says Coupland: “They’re simple, smart, strong, and can be arranged in any number of configurations like Legos. They also have caps and kicks available should you want to change proportions.”

The Douglas Coupland for SwitzerCultCreative collection is only available through SwitzerCultCreative, who hold the exclusive worldwide license to market and supply the range.

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Daily Mail website wins design award

Daily Mail website wins design award

News: London design studio Brand42 has won an award for design effectiveness after its redesign of Mail Online made it the most popular news website in the world.

Brand42 picked up the Design Effectiveness Awards’ Grand Prix for its work on the Daily Mail’s website, which now attracts over 91 million unique monthly visitors and generated advertising revenue of £25 million in 2012.

Traffic to Mail Online has grown almost fivefold and advertising revenue has jumped by 455% since the site was redesigned in 2008, when Brand42 introduced a simple three-column grid layout. The right-hand column now includes a feed of celebrity news known to as the “sidebar of shame”.

If printed out the homepage – which was redesigned to incorporate more, larger images to make it look more like a magazine than a newspaper – would measure 5.16 metres in length.

Daily Mail website wins design award

The Grand Prix is the top prize at the annual Design Business Association’s awards ceremony and is given to the design project that delivers the greatest commercial benefit. The judging criteria for the awards “aren’t related to standards of aesthetics or ‘good’ and ‘bad’ design” .

Last year we reported on the launch of the UK government’s new website, which was built according to 10 principles of good design devised by Ben Terrett, head of the Government Digital Service – read the 10 principles and listen to our interview with Terrett.

See all graphics »

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UK government backs down on plans to “demolish” creative education

Mossbourne Community Academy by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners, photographed by Mark Burton

News: the UK government has abandoned controversial plans that would have removed design and other creative subjects from the school curriculum, it was announced today. Campaigners who fought the plans described the move as “fantastic news” for the design industry.

Education Secretary Michael Gove admitted that proposals to introduce an English Baccalaureate (EBacc) that focusses only on maths, English, sciences, languages and a humanities subject were “a bridge too far” for secondary school students. Instead, he plans to “restore rigour” to the existing GCSE system by offering students these five subjects, plus three more that could include art or design.

“My idea that we end the competition between exam boards to offer GCSEs in core academic qualifications and have just one – wholly new – exam in each subject was just one reform too many at this time,” said Gove, as he announced the U-turn.

The move has been celebrated by members of the #IncludeDesign campaign, who have been rallying against the plans and gaining support from key industry figures, including Apple’s Jonathan Ive, designer Terence Conran and architect Norman Foster, as well as brands and organisations from Adobe to the Design Council.

“This is fantastic news for the whole of the design industry and creative economy,” said campaign organiser Joe Mcleod. “As an industry this gives us an opportunity to work with education leaders and the government to help support the shared vision of a world-class syllabus that offers students a fully rounded education.”

Mcleod, who is also a director at digital design studio ustwo, explained that the move will help to secure the future of the UK’s creative industries. “Without these changes to the EBacc, we would have lost the designers, architects and creatives of the future, as their talents would have been constricted by schools being pushed to prioritise an unnecessarily narrow range of subjects that reflected the past and not the future.

“The creative industries are worth more than £60 billion a year to the UK economy and it would have been a catastrophe if creative subjects such as design and technology had been lost from schools.”

The Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA) also supported the decision, but insists that there is still work to be done to ensure creative subjects are promoted alongside the academic curriculum.

“The creative sector – including architecture – is a vital contributor to the UK economy,” said RIBA president Angela Brady. “The teaching of creative subjects must be maintained to retain our creative assets and nurture future talent. However we are still concerned at the league table measures which do not include creative subjects, we will continue to lobby the Government to ensure creative subjects are not undermined.”

D&AD president Neville Brody previously described the government’s plans to “demolish and smash” creative education as “insanity” and told Dezeen: “The creative industries need high-quality creative graduates. If we’re not getting the graduates, we’re not going to sustain the industry.”

See more stories about design and education »

Photograph is by Mark Burton.

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Furniture brands “terrible” at selling online

Joel Roos of One Nordic

News: the way design is sold to the public is “stuck” in the past and hasn’t changed since the seventies, according to the founder of a brand that aims to sell high-quality furniture online (+ interview).

“I just feel that this whole industry is terrible at seeing that many people are moving online and willing to buy furniture online,” said Joel Roos (above), founder and CEO of One Nordic. “It just feels like, when you go to Italy, time is stuck. Nothing has happened in this field.”

Roos made the comments at the Stockholm Furniture Fair this week, where the Finnish company unveiled new furniture lines that fold flat to enable them to be shipped more cheaply.

“In many other retail fields so much is happening,” he added. “But in the furniture field many, many companies retail exactly the same way as they did in the seventies.”

One Nordic is developing innovative sales strategies that involve working with traditional retailers to showcase products to customers, who then buy them online. Retailers will be given a percentage of sales generated through their stores.

Hai armchair by Luca Nichetto

To reduce shipping costs, the brand has introduced products such as the Hai armchair designed by Luca Nichetto (above), which features a folding backrest. This cuts the shipping volume by half.

We don’t want to call it “flatpack” because that has a bad ring to it,” says Roos. “It’s more about effective shipping.”

“Most design furniture costs a fortune and is for this reason not accessible,” says One Nordic’s website, which can ship products to customers across Europe within two weeks. The site adds: “By making the shipping smarter and more effective, we can make our products more affordable.”

Levels lamp by Form Us With Love

Another product, the Levels ceiling lamp by Form Us With Love (above), collapses to around a third of its size while the Pal Stool by Hallgeir Homstvedt (below) can be easily taken apart and put back together.

Pal stool by Hallgeir Homstvedt

A prototype shelf by Steffan Holm has a scissor-like structure so you can unpack it, open it up like a concertina and attach it to the wall.

Bento chair by Form Us With Love

One Nordic debuted at the Stockholm Furniture Fair last year where it showed the Bento chair by Form Us With Love (above), which also comes as a kit.

Innovation in the sale of design online has come from new players rather than established companies. Last autumn online furniture retailer Made.com announced it was opening a physical showroom in London, while flash sales site Fab.com told Dezeen it had “IKEA-sized ambitions”.

This month a private collector put his 1,000-strong of Braun products designed by Dieter Rams up for sale on eBay.

Here’s an edited transcript of an interview with Roos conducted by Dezeen editor-in-chief Marcus Fairs:


Marcus Fairs: We’re at the Stockholm Furniture Fair on the One Nordic stand. Tell us about yourself and your company.

Joel Roos: I’m the founder of One Nordic, and this is our first birthday. We showed the prototype of the Bento chair by Form Us With Love one year ago, and now we’re at the fair showing nine product families. So we’ve come pretty far in a year I guess.

Marcus Fairs: Tell us about your business model because it’s quite different from other brands. You want to use the internet as much as possible; a lot of your products fold down for easy shipping.

Joel Roos: Yeah. I just feel that this whole industry is terrible at seeing that many people are moving online and willing to buy furniture online. But one of the biggest [limiters] has been the size of the items. What we want to do, without destroying the design and the high-end elements of these products, is to create smart shipping. We don’t want to call it “flatpack” because that has a bad ring to it. It’s more about effective shipping.

So, for example, our new lounge chair by Luca Nichetto has a folding backrest, which means that you get half of the volume of a normal lounge chair. All the air is gone so the shipping is so much more effective. Of course it’s pretty green and good for the environment but also price-wise it’s pretty effective.

Marcus Fairs: Are you going to be working with traditional retailers as well, or will people only be able to buy the products online?

Joel Roos: We are definitely going to work with traditional retailers. We’re building a retailer network as we speak. We want to have good retailers. Because I don’t believe in only online, or only bricks and mortar. It’s about the combination. It’s about having a really nice combo where you can rely on your retailers to show your products but then give back to them by, for example, giving kickbacks for sales online and so forth.

We’re in a very weird situation in the field where some retailers are really suffering because of the big online stores, especially here in the Nordic countries. We have small retailers and customers go to their stores, have a look at the items and then disappear. The store never sees them again because much bigger retailers selling online with zero transport costs ship them for maybe 50% less to the customer.

Marcus Fairs: We call that “showrooming” in the UK. But how do you get around it? If a customer sees one of your products in a physical store but buys it online from you, how does the retailer benefit?

Joel Roos: This is a very interesting issue. We’re looking into different alternatives. One alternative we’ve already started with is to look at where the purchased is based. Let’s say Berlin: say we see a customer from Berlin on our web shop. If we have a good retailer in Berlin we give them a kickback for that sale via our web channel. It means that even though that customer might go home and buy it from our store, the retailer will still profit from this sale.

Marcus Fairs: Will people only be able to buy it online from you, or will they be able to find it cheaper on other websites?

Joel Roos: We’re one of the few manufacturers that really focusses on selling through our own online store. So we’d like to be the most important online seller of our own products. Of course there are really beautiful online stores that we might use as retailers, but those are not the ones that are robbing sales from us.

Marcus Fairs: What about other aspects such as customer service? If someone buys an armchair online and decides they don’t like it, or there’s a fault with it, what will happen? How will you give the customer service that people expect?

Joel Roos: That’s the other part of good retailer contacts. What we’re working on is the mechanism of customer claims, so that unhappy customers can go to their familiar retailer in their city. The problem usually with online sales is that you have nobody in your country: you’re trying to call Germany, nobody answers, they tell you to send an email. But if we have a good collaboration with our retailers they can be the ones doing this. Of course they will get their fair share for the work they do. This way we can make it more secure for the customer.

Marcus Fairs: Another problem with buying furniture the traditional way is you go into your nice local design store, you choose your piece and then they tell you it’s going to take three months to arrive. How long will it take people to get the products they buy online from you? People expect things to arrive faster when they buy online.

Joel Roos: This is of course a problem with online sales: people’s expectations are really high. There’s two sides to it. When people visit an online store they expect everything to work perfectly and their tolerance of mistakes is very low. And then of course with delivery times, people want things to arrive pretty quickly. We are now looking at two weeks, which for a lounge chair is okay.

Marcus Fairs: Worldwide?

Joel Roos: No, right now we’re working in Europe with our online store. Outside of Europe we are working through partners because it would be too difficult to handle. Our own webshop onenordic.com works within the limits of Europe, where we can guarantee transport within 14 days. So far that has been sufficient for our customers.

This is such an interesting topic to think about. Where is this field going? Where are we now? It just feels like, when you go to Italy, time is stuck. Nothing has happened in this field.

I’m a lawyer by education but my family has a background in the furniture field. The family business is furniture retail. I was working as a lawyer in New York in 2008 when the market crashed. At that point my mother who was the CEO of the company called and said could I come back to Finland to help in the furniture business.

So I came and after that I started going to fairs and meeting people. It was so interesting that in many other retail fields so much is happening. But in the furniture field many, many companies retail exactly the same way as they did in the seventies. That’s how this idea came up: that things that could be done differently.

Marcus Fairs: Are all these products available to buy now?

Joel Roos: Almost all. The new shelf by Staffan Holm is still a prototype. The other new items here will be ready in six weeks, for example the Luca Nichetto lounge chair. But all items that we already had in our collection, plus the Levels ??? lamp by Form Us With Love, are already available online.

 

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1000-piece Dieter Rams design collection for sale on eBay

Braun design collection on eBay

News: a private collector is putting his 1000-piece archive of Dieter Rams-designed Braun products up for auction on eBay with an asking price of over £300,000.

The Braun design collection failed to attract any bids during its first listing on the online marketplace in January, but private collector Roland Feinler intends to list the collection again in the hope of selling it privately or attracting the interest of a design museum.

Braun design collection on eBay

The collection includes televisions, record players, radios, cameras, clocks, toasters and many more products and appliances created by the hugely influential German designer Dieter Rams between 1955 and 1988.

Feinler, who is based in Heidelberg, Germany, started picking up Rams’ designs between 1979 and 1981, and later extended the collection by merging it with another. His website provides a video tour of the collection along with photographs of around 400 products and a complete list of the items.

Braun design collection on eBay

In a recent edition of our new opinion column, Dezeen’s editor-in-chief Marcus Fairs questioned why the Design Museum wouldn’t admit to using eBay to procure objects for its collection.

Last year we reported that Rams had made furniture brand Vitsœ the exclusive worldwide licencee of his complete collection of furniture designs.

Braun design collection on eBay

Dezeen previously recorded a podcast with Rams at London’s Design Museum, where he talked to Vitsœ managing director Mark Adams about an exhibition of his work at the museum – see more about Dieter Rams.

See more design by Braun »

Photographs are by the Braun Design Collection.

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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.

See all chandeliers »
See all lighting »

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Dezeen Music Project: Voyager (remix) by Aimedeuxhaine

We’ve got another remix to end the week on Dezeen Music Project, this time courtesy of young French producer Aimedeuxhaine who has turned his precocious talents to the Daft Punk cassic Voyager.

The track is part on an EP by new electronic record label Atelier du Sample, which you can download for free here.

Make sure you also check out the great dance track by Aimedeuxhaine that we featured on Dezeen Music Project last year.

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Dezeen Music Project: Eat Me (remix) by Zwolf

In this remix British producer Zwolf builds on the haunting, fractured vocals of the original track with a glitchy, fast-paced electronic beat.

The original track by Atlas (aka singer Sarah Hezen) is remarkable in its own right. You can see the music video for it here.

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Dezeen in The Times’ 50 top websites you can’t live without

Dezeen in The Times' 50 top websites you can't live without

News: Dezeen was featured in a list of the 50 top websites you can’t live without by UK newspaper The Times on Saturday.

Dezeen in The Times' 50 top websites you can't live without

The entry read: “If you’re an architect or designer, this site is worth knowing. Dezeen curates a selection of the best design and interiors projects from around the world – great for inspiring both amateurs and professionals, and is often first with industry gossip.”

Other featured websites included TED, Gizmodo and Kickstarter plus giants like Google, Facebook and Wikipedia.

Dezeen in The Times' 50 top websites you can't live without

Last year UK newspaper the Independent named us best architecture blog in the world while in 2011 French magazine Architectural Digest placed us in the 100 qui comptent list of the most important forces in global design.

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