Weight Vases by Decha Archjananun

Weight Vases by Decha Archjananun

Thai designer Decha Archjananun has made a series of vases with concrete bases to hold water and wire frames to support flower stems.

Weight Vases by Decha Archjananun

The concrete parts sit within each steel frame and weigh the pieces down to prevent them toppling over.

Weight Vases by Decha Archjananun

Called Weight Vases, the collection comprises different shapes for different types of flower arrangement.

Weight Vases by Decha Archjananun

Archjananun developed the project while studying at the Ecole Cantonale d’art de Lausanne (ECAL).

Weight Vases by Decha Archjananun

More vases on Dezeen »

Weight Vases by Decha Archjananun

Here’s some text from the designer:


What is a vase? How does it work?

Those were simple questions I asked myself for this historical object which was created since Neolithic period.

I found that, all the vases in the world have a same basic principle to hold flowers. There are 2 important parts which function differently.

Top part (vase-mount), has a duty to hold flower stem and base part, to hold water and also offer a stability to the vase.

“Weight” brings a new perspective on a vase design by the separation of 2 different parts which support each other.

Water container made of concrete pile-up on a steel piece to give a stability for holding flowers.

In the collection, there are 4 vases for different flower setting from single flower to flowers panel.

Project name: Weight Vases
Material: Concrete , Laser cut steel
Pictures by: Decha Archjananun


See also:

.

Bucket Vase by
Qubus Design
Pretty Vases Collection
by FX Balléry
Lanterne Marine
by BarberOsgerby

Hose Clip Shelving by Max Frommeld

Show RCA 2011: this modular shelving unit by Royal College of Art graduate Max Frommeld is held together with clips more commonly found on garden hoses.

Hose Clip Shelving by Max Frommeld

Metal brackets at the corners of each shelf slot into grooves in the round wooden uprights.

Hose Clip Shelving by Max Frommeld

Once tightened, the yellow hose clips hold each one firmly in place.

Hose Clip Shelving by Max Frommeld

Quilted fabric covers can be attached to the shelf edges using magnets concealed in their seams.

Hose Clip Shelving by Max Frommeld

See Frommeld’s BA graduation work in our story from 2008. See all our stories about Show RCA 2011 »

Here are some more details from the designer:


Hose clip shelving is a extendible shelving system which consists of three main components: wooden pole, steel bracket and shelf board.

The repetition of those components create a versatile, modular, flat pack shelving unit which introduces standard hose clips to the furniture world.

A magnetic curtain adds a soft element to the structure which allows the user to have closed compartments in a very open storage system.

Material: solid ash, ash veneered ply, steel, hose clips with PP wing nut


See also:

.

X-System by Alexander
Lotersztain
Parasite Shelf by
Johanna Landin
Shelframe by Bahbak
Hashemi-Nezhad

1.3 Chair by by Ki Hyun Kim

1.3 Chair by by Ki Hyun Kim

Show RCA 2011: here’s another project by Royal College of Art graduate Ki Hyun Kim: a balsa wood dining chair that weights just 1.3 kilograms, making it even lighter than Gio Ponti’s famous 1.7 kilogram Superleggera chair.

1.3 Chair by by Ki Hyun Kim

The chair is made of compressed balsa wood protected by hardwood veneer to give it structural stability and a tough outer shell, while keeping it much lighter than Gio Ponti’s 1957 effort.

1.3 Chair by by Ki Hyun Kim

The chair, and a ladder made using the same technique (see image below) can be seen at Show RCA 2011 in London until 3 July.

1.3 Chair by by Ki Hyun Kim

See also: Alternative Alarm Clock by Ki Hyun Kim

1.3 Chair by by Ki Hyun Kim

See all our stories about Show RCA 2011 »

The text below is from Ki Hyun Kim:


1.3 Chair

In starting to design a wooden chair, I looked at the properties of woods.

1.3 Chair by by Ki Hyun Kim

What intrigued me most, was balsa wood.

1.3 Chair by by Ki Hyun Kim

Balsa is a hardwood; but very unique. It grows fast, is light in colour, with a very soft, warm texture. Most surprising is its weight, as the lightest of all woods.

1.3 Chair by by Ki Hyun Kim

Exploring this material, my process is based on reinterpreting craft techniques combined with developing alternatives to industrial methods.

1.3 Chair by by Ki Hyun Kim

Although seemingly disparate, the combination retains a commitment to experiment, challenge and innovate.

1.3 Chair by by Ki Hyun Kim

The chair intends to reflect practical considerations, in terms of production, use and everyday beauty, as well.

1.3 Chair by by Ki Hyun Kim

I wanted to hatch ideas on my own, experiment with forms, materials and techniques.

1.3 Chair by by Ki Hyun Kim

Material.
Balsa wood + Veneer + Lime wood

Dimension.
390 x 420 x 780 mm

Weight.
1.28 kg


See also:

.

Corian chair by
Jon Harrison
Tenon by
Yota Kakuda
If Only Gio Knew…
by Martino Gamper

Alternative Alarm Clock by Ki Hyun Kim

Alternative Alarm Clock by Ki Hyun Kim

For those who’d rather be woken by a gentle breeze or the smell of coffee than a shrill alarm, Royal College of Art graduate Ki Hyun Kim has designed a clock that wakes users with the electrical appliance of their choice.

Watch this movie on Dezeen Screen »

The Alternative Alarm Clock combines a digital clock with a two-socket extension lead.

Alternative Alarm Clock by Ki Hyun Kim

It supplies power to a coffee maker, lamp, radio or fan when the alarm is activated rather than omitting sound itself.

Alternative Alarm Clock by Ki Hyun Kim

The project can be seen at Show RCA 2011 in London until 3 July.

Alternative Alarm Clock by Ki Hyun Kim

The information below is from Ki Hyun Kim:


Alternative Alarm Clock

More diverse senses; stimulation users’ sense of hearing, sight, touch, smell or any other combination of senses, as an alternative of application about alarm, awakes people from sleep very gently and effectively.

Alternative Alarm Clock by Ki Hyun Kim

In general, people stay a bit longer after alarm. While people linger, the body gets started with awaking its nerves and senses from deep sleep to work.

Alternative Alarm Clock by Ki Hyun Kim

Alternative Alarm Clock is a combination of an alarm and an electric outlet which are common things in daily life and have a simple single function. It goes off on time users set and also supplies electric power through double sockets.

Alternative Alarm Clock by Ki Hyun Kim

By putting together other products with it, this simple function does not gives opportunities to rebuild up fresh sorts of alarm to users but also allow many potential options stimulating different senses with ordinary electronic products around us.

Alternative Alarm Clock by Ki Hyun Kim

Dimension.
126 x 93 x 47 mm


See also:

.

An Alarm by Industrial
Facility
The Alarming Clock
by Natalie Duckett
Dual Time Alarm Clock
by Kit Men

QR U? by Thorunn Arnadottir

QR U? by Thorunn Arnadottir

Coded patterns on this beaded dress by Royal College of Art graduate Thorunn Arnadottir feed information to smart phones when photographed.

QR U? by Thorunn Arnadottir

The QR U? dress features graphic codes that a mobile app can recognise and translate into images, links to websites or text.

QR U? by Thorunn Arnadottir

The tribal styling references the way social networks are often described as online tribes.

QR U? by Thorunn Arnadottir

Arnadottir designed the dress for pop star Kali of Icelandic group Steed Lord using Swarovski crystals.

QR U? by Thorunn Arnadottir

She also made an eye mask that directs photographers to make a charity donation (above).

The project can be seen at Show RCA 2011 in London until 3 July.

The text below is from Arnadottir:


QR U?

In only a few years the combination of the Internet’s social networks and digital cameras on mobile phones have changed the way we express our identities. Individual expression has been made significantly easier and the route to fame more accessible. It has also turned all of us into our own “paparazzis”.

Reading through some articles and texts about the effect of technology on our society I found the word “tribal” to be a reoccurring term used to describe it.

To use a very analogue culture as a reference to describe the effect of high tech on our society I find very interesting and this led me to how beads have been used as a communication tool and to express individual identity in African culture and how we also use “beads” (pixels) in the digital culture as a communication tool and to express our identities online.

QR U? explores the juxtaposition of self promotion and personal privacy in this new environment. Could traditional African bead craft be used in it’s original function of communicating identity but used with modern technology in contemporary context?

Inspired by african beads and masks that use decorative symbols to communicate identity, designer Thorunn Arnadottir beaded Swarovski crystals into QR codes to explore notions of self promotion and personal privacy in todays digitally networked environment. By taking a picture with a smart phone with a QR reader application you can access the online identity that hides behind these patterns.

The ‘Super self-promotional dress’ designed for Icelandic pop star, Kali from Steed Lord directs the photographer to a number of links, including the band’s videos, music sites and an unique animation of the QR code itself.

The ‘Privacy glasses’ are on the boundaries of a mask and sunglasses, high-fashion and theatrical. They give an air of importance, like famous people in Venice would wear elaborate masks, or Hollywood stars wear big flashy sunglasses. When they are scanned you will be given the option to pay a set sum to a charity chosen by the celebrity. The glasses commodify the privacy of the celebrity to the benefit of the charity. Donate to the charity and the identity of the person will be revealed.


See also:

.

Catalytic Clothing by Helen
Storey and Tony Ryan
Wear Out by Carolina ReisPlato’s Collection
by Amila Hrustić

Dezeen Screen: The Solar Sinter by Markus Kayser

The Solar Sinter by Markus Kayser

Dezeen Screen: this movie by Royal College of Art graduate Markus Kayser shows his Solar Sinter 3D-printing machine at work in the desert, making glass objects by melting sand with sunlight. Watch the movie »

The Solar Sinter by Markus Kayser

The Solar Sinter by Markus Kayser

German designer Markus Kayser has built a 3D-printing machine that uses sunlight and sand to make glass objects in the desert.

The Solar Sinter by Markus Kayser

Called The Solar Sinter, the device uses a large Fresnel lens to focus a beam of sunlight, creating temperatures between 1400 and 1600 degrees Celsius.

The Solar Sinter by Markus Kayser

This is hot enough to melt silica sand and build up glass shapes, layer by layer, inside a box of sand mounted under the lens.

The Solar Sinter by Markus Kayser

Solar-powered motors move the box on an x and y axis along a computer-controlled path and a new layer of sand is sprinkled on top after each pass of the light beam.

The Solar Sinter by Markus Kayser

Light sensors track the sun as it moves across the sky and the whole machine rotates on its base to ensure the lens is always producing the optimum level of heat.

The Solar Sinter by Markus Kayser

Once all the layers have been melted into place the piece is allowed to cool and dug out from the sand box.

The Solar Sinter by Markus Kayser

Kayser developed the project while studying on the MA Design Products course at the Royal College of Art.

The Solar Sinter by Markus Kayser

Graduate exhibition Show RCA 2011 continues in London until 3 July.

Here are some more details from Kayser:


In a world increasingly concerned with questions of energy production and raw material shortages, this project explores the potential of desert manufacturing, where energy and material occur in abundance. In this experiment sunlight and sand are used as raw energy and material to produce glass objects using a 3D printing process, that combines natural energy and material with high-tech production technology. Solar-sintering aims to raise questions about the future of manufacturing and triggers dreams of the full utilisation of the production potential of the world’s most efficient energy resource – the sun. Whilst not providing definitive answers, this experiment aims to provide a point of departure for fresh thinking.

The Solar Sinter by Markus Kayser

In the deserts of the world two elements dominate – sun and sand. The former offers a vast energy source of huge potential, the latter an almost unlimited supply of silica in the form of quartz. Silicia sand when heated to melting point and allowed to cool solidifies as glass. This process of converting a powdery substance via a heating process into a solid form is known as sintering and has in recent years become a central process in design prototyping known as 3D printing or SLS (selective laser sintering). These 3D printers use laser technology to create very precise 3D objects from a variety of powdered plastics, resins and metals – the objects being the exact physical counterparts of the computer-drawn 3D designs inputted by the designer. By using the sun’s rays instead of a laser and sand instead of resins, I had the basis of an entirely new solar-powered machine and production process for making glass objects that taps into the abundant supplies of sun and sand to be found in the deserts of the world.

My first manually operated solar-sintering machine was tested in February 2011 in the Moroccan desert with encouraging results that led to the development of the current larger and fully automated computer-driven version – the Solar-Sinter. The Solar-Sinter was completed in mid-May and later that month I took this experimental machine to the Sahara desert near Siwa, Egypt, for a two week testing period. The machine and the results of these first experiments presented here represent the initial significant steps towards what I envisage as a new solar-powered production tool of great potential.

The Solar Sinter by Markus Kayser

The machine

The Solar-Sinter machine is based on the mechanical principles of a 3D printer.

A large Fresnel lens (1.4 x 1.0 metre) is positioned so that it faces the sun at all times via an electronic sun-tracking device, which moves the lens in vertical and horizontal direction and rotates the entire machine about its base throughout the day. The lens is positioned with its focal point directed at the centre of the machine and at the height of the top of the sand box where the objects will be built up layer by layer. Stepper motors drive two aluminium frames that move the sand box in the X and Y axes. Within the box is a platform that can move the vat of sand along the vertical Z axis, lowering the box a set amount at the end of each layer cycle to allow fresh sand to be loaded and levelled at the focal point.

Two photovoltaic panels provide electricity to charge a battery, which in turn drives the motors and electronics of the machine. The photovoltaic panels also act as a counterweight for the lens aided by additional weights made from bottles filled with sand.

The Solar Sinter by Markus Kayser

3D printing process with sand and sunlight

The machine is run off an electronic board and can be controlled using a keypad and an LCD screen. Computer drawn models of the objects to be produced are inputted into the machine via an SD card. These files carry the code that directs the machine to move the sand box along the X, Y coordinates at a carefully calibrated speed, whilst the lens focuses a beam of light that produces temperatures between 1400°C and 1600°C, more than enough to melt the sand. Over a number of hours, layer by layer, an object is built within the confines of the sand box, only its uppermost layer visible at any one time. When the print is completed the object is allowed to cool before being dug out of the sand box. The objects have rough sandy reverse side whilst the top surface is hard glass. The exact colour of the resulting glass will depend on the composition of the sand, different deserts producing different results. By mixing sands, combinatory colours and material qualities may be achieved.

The Solar Sinter by Markus Kayser

Machine and man

With the scenario of a single person’s utilisation of the machine in the desert, I play with ideas of how an individual could use the machine to produce objects.

In this first instance the creation of artefacts made by sunlight and sand is an act of pure experimentation and expression of ‘possibility’, but what of the future? I hope that the machine and the objects it created, stimulate debate about the vast potential of solar energy and naturally abundant materials like silica sand. These first experiments are simply an early manifestation of that potential.

The Solar Sinter by Markus Kayser

Machine and community

In the context of a desert-based community, the Solar-Sinter machine could be used to create unique artefacts and functional objects, but also act as a catalyst for solar innovation for more prosaic and immediate needs. Further development could lead to additional solar machine processes such as solar welding, cutting, bending and smelting to build up a fully functioning solar workshop.

The vibrant and global ‘open-source’ community is already active in developing software and hardware for 3D printers and could play a key role in the rapid development of these technologies. The Solar-Sinter could simply be the starting point for a variety of further applications.

The Solar Sinter by Markus Kayser

Machine and manufacture

In 1933, through the pages of ‘Modern Mechanix’ magazine, W.W. Beach was already imagining canals and “auto roads“ melted into the desert using sunlight focused through immense lenses. This fantastical large-scale approach is much closer to reality today, with ‘desert factories’ using sunlight as their power a tangible prospect. This image of a multiplicity of machines working in a natural cycle from dusk till Dawn presents a new idea of what manufacturing could be.

The objects could be anything from glass vessels to eventually the glass surfaces for photovoltaic panels that provide the factories power source… and, as Mr. Beach imagined 78 years ago, the water channels and glass roads that service them.

The Solar Sinter by Markus Kayser

Dreaming of architecture

Printing directly onto the desert floor with multiple lenses melting the sand into walls, eventually building architecture in desert environments, could also be a real prospect.

Experiments in 3D printing technologies are already reaching towards an architectural scale and it is not hard to imagine that, if partnered with the solar-sintering process demonstrated by the Solar-Sinter machine, this could indeed lead to a new desert-based architecture.


See also:

.

Solar furniture maker
by Mischer’Traxler
Virtual potter’s wheel
by Unfold
Food-printing machine
by Philips Design

Hair Glasses by Studio Swine

Hair Glasses by Studio Swine

Royal College of Art graduates Azusa Murakami and Alexander Groves have made a collection of spectacles from human hair.

Hair Glasses by Studio Swine

The hair is bound with natural resin and the frames are completely biodegradable.

Hair Glasses by Studio Swine

Murakami and Groves work together under the name Studio Swine.

Hair Glasses by Studio Swine

The project is on display at graduate exhibition Show RCA 2011, which continues in London until 3 July.

Hair Glasses by Studio Swine

More about hair on Dezeen »

The information below is from the designers:


Hair Glasses by Studio Swine

Studio Swine presents ‘Hair Glasses’ – a collection of sustainable fashion eyewear exploring the potential of Human hair.

Hair Glasses by Studio Swine

The UK beauty industry imports 15 million pounds worth of human hair per year. As the world’s population continues to increase, human hair
has been re-imagined as a viable – importantly renewable – material.

Hair Glasses by Studio Swine

Hair Glasses comprises of human hair with bioresin as a binding agent, the frames are 100% biodegradable and no harmful substances are
released during production.

Hair Glasses by Studio Swine

Studio Swine explores how the booming production of hair extensions can be expanded beyond the beauty industry to make other commodities that are equally desirable.

Hair Glasses by Studio Swine


See also:

.

Wooden spectacles
by Matteo Ragni
Horn spectacles
by Aekae
Spectacles
by Yves Béhar