Häagen-Dazs Cloud ice cream by Front

Swedish design collective Front has designed a cloud-shaped ice cream in collaboration with dessert company Häagen-Dazs.

Häagen-Dazs Cloud ice cream by Front

Häagen-Dazs‘ ice cream by Front comes in two graduated colours named dawn and dusk.

The flavour of the red dawn cloud is champagne truffle with Belgian chocolate whilst the dusk orange cloud incorporates Haagen-Dazs’ well-known flavours, dulce de leche and cookies and cream.

“As Scandinavians snow is an essential part of our winters,” said the designers. “We were inspired by how the snow clouds in the north transform the landscape. We made an ice cream snow cloud that sprinkles snowflakes on your plate.”

Häagen-Dazs Cloud ice cream by Front

The Clouds are sold throughout France and in Brussels, Liège, Madrid, Barcelona, and London.

Last year, London designers Doshi Levien designed an ice cream cake in the shape of a cratered moon for Häagen-Dazs.

The post Häagen-Dazs Cloud ice cream
by Front
appeared first on Dezeen.

Melting Sculpture

L’australien James Dive fait le tour des plages avec son installation « Hot With The Chance Of A Late Storm » : un camion de crème glacée fondant aux bords du littoral. Une façon pour l’artiste du collectif The Glue Society de dénoncer le réchauffement climatique. A découvrir en images dans la suite de l’article.

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Ice Moon by Doshi Levien for Häagen-Dazs

Ice Moon by Doshi Levien for Haagen-Dazs

This white cratered moon is actually a densely filled ice cream cake created by London designers Doshi Levien for Häagen-Dazs.

Ice Moon by Doshi Levien for Haagen-Dazs

Each Ice Moon is pitted with smooth craters. Nipa Doshi and Jonathan Levien say they were inspired by Georges Méliès’ 1902 silent film Le Voyage dans la Lune, Armenian surrealist Léon Tutundjian’s relief work of 1929, a childhood Bollywood song and the near-spherical shapes of early ice cream bombes. “The moon idea came from many different places and has elements of fantasy, adventure and imagination,” they say.

Ice Moon by Doshi Levien for Haagen-Dazs

The white moon consists of a pistachio biscuit base, layers of macadamia nut ice cream and meringue and a coating of raspberry ice cream. The orange moon has crunchy chocolate at the bottom, layers of nutty ice cream and salted caramel and a coating of vanilla ice cream.

Ice Moon by Doshi Levien for Haagen-Dazs

“Our concept is almost spherical, so the ice cream has to be moulded in two separate parts and then put together without seeing the join,” explain the designers. “We love the ephemeral nature of ice cream and design to be eaten; we never had a design meeting before in which we ate the prototype.”

Ice Moon by Doshi Levien for Haagen-Dazs

We previously featured an ice cream parlour in London with a raw concrete interior and another laboratory-style parlour where the ice cream is frozen with liquid nitrogen.

Ice Moon by Doshi Levien for Haagen-Dazs

We’ve also published an in-depth report about the cross-pollination between the worlds of food and design – see it here.

Other projects by Doshi Levien we’ve featured recently include an armchair inspired by Le Corbusier’s designs for the city of Chandigarh and a dressing table made up of geometric elements.

See all stories about ice cream »
See all stories about Doshi Levien »
See all stories about food »

The post Ice Moon by Doshi Levien
for Häagen-Dazs
appeared first on Dezeen.

Ice Cream Flowers

This beautiful bouquet of ice cream canapé glasses is the latest from Martin Jakobsen, the designer of another YD fav – the rEvolution wine glass. The hand-blown Kkis set is a sexy twist on stemware that makes for an elegant and enticing presentation for after dinner desserts. The man knows glass and we’re looking forward to seeing more unique creations!

Designer: Martin Jakobsen


Yanko Design
Timeless Designs – Explore wonderful concepts from around the world!
Yanko Design Store – We are about more than just concepts. See what’s hot at the YD Store!
(Ice Cream Flowers was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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Polka Gelato by Vonsung

Polka Gelato by Vonsung

Raw concrete and rough limestone clad the interior of a London ice cream parlour designed by branding studio Vonsung.

Polka Gelato by Vonsung

Located inside a historic building in Fitzroy Square, the gelato shop is filled with bulbous black sofas and cylindrical white stools.

Polka Gelato by Vonsung

Ice cream packaging and signage were also designed using a monochrome palette.

Polka Gelato by Vonsung

The only colours to be found in the shop are inside the ice cream cabinet.

Polka Gelato by Vonsung

This is the second story on Dezeen this week about an ice cream shop in London, following an Italian gelato stall that evokes the seasidesee all our stories about ice cream parlours.

Polka Gelato by Vonsung

Here are some more details from Vonsung:


Polka Gelato

Vonsung recently completed the total identity design for Polka Gelato, from naming, identity, branding, signage, website to spatial design. Based in a conservation area, Fitzroy Square, Polka Gelato opens its doors to showcase their artisanal way of creating ice cream. Despite all the talk of a double-dip recession in the UK, the client’s wish was to offer something enlightening, from old to young, a sense of affordable luxury amid these difficult times.

Polka Gelato by Vonsung

The ambition of the new ice cream brand was to open a gelato store sourced only from the finest ingredients of precious, exotic fruits, herbs, spices and flavors. The vision was to bring the age-old history of Italian gelato to London, while a recent trip to New York sparked a new revolutionary thought – the gelato popsicle. To realize this vision, London’s design studio, Vonsung, was invited to work on the dream.

Polka Gelato by Vonsung

The character of the listed building situated near the Fitzroy Square, is clearly that of a London period building. The dilemma was how to avoid the ice cream parlour formula of pop-culture, primary colours interior decoration, without making a disconnected piece of modern design that clashes with the building’s original identity.

Polka Gelato by Vonsung

An early decision was to place the Polka’s colourful, beautifully crafted gelatos as the central focal point and make the surrounding interior resemble the sculpted nature of the hand-made gelato.

Polka Gelato by Vonsung

The concept of the store plays with the complementary characteristics and the related dichotomy between male and female; child and adult; night and day. This is reflected in the design through the formal language and tactile quality of the finish materials used. The surrounding interior is unified with a single colour used on all surfaces.

Polka Gelato by Vonsung

Housed inside a concrete/limestone mix surrounding, the furniture piece on the floor is designed as a strong, masculine and dynamic form whilst the lighting enunciates femininity to create more fluid contour lines. The store is designed in a more playful manner creating different zones that maintain the perspective view between them.

Polka Gelato by Vonsung

Joseph Sung (Creative Director Vonsung) has strived in his precedent projects to experiment variant ways to explore materials. Among the natural, old, and time-proven material, Sung has derived at lime concrete for this project. Being situated in a historical setting, Sung felt that juxtaposing old and new material would give expected meaning for both, as exemplified using external architectural material within the interior space of the gelato store.

Polka Gelato by Vonsung

Stemming from the client brief, Sung identified with the key word, ‘artisan’, and made every effort to not to allow the solid masses of concrete material to feel uncomfortable for the visitors, but feel a sense of skill, artistry of the space. The boundaries of the interior wall and ceiling were made to be permeable as possible by way of shadow gaps and openings. Also, to reduce the monolithic manner of concrete, Sung mixed limestone into the batch and applied a smooth finish to the raw concrete.

Polka Gelato by Vonsung

The result was an interior space, which kindles the feeling of being an insider in an environment; simply put, it recognises what may feel like being within a creamy gelato batch. By adopting this method of design, Sung drew the attention to the timeliness of the space and architecture. All faculties of perception and senses, particularly tactility, facilitate the customer experience.

Polka Gelato by Vonsung

Known for increasingly severe minimalism, this project is Sung’s latest interpretation of totality of branding design, however restrained and serene but rich in texture and delicate modulated light. With the aim of creating a space that will age better with time, our design creates a circular passage allowing the customer to experience the space in multiple ways and interpretations.

Polka Gelato by Vonsung

Furniture staged in key points throughout the store creates the spatial concept using a small space changing to an open condition.

Polka Gelato by Vonsung

Looking from the outside, the interior resembles a tale of a spaceship landed on the moon. If you taste a scoop of Polka Gelato, you may well think you are (over) the moon.

Polka Gelato by Vonsung

Completed: August 2011
Design: Joseph Sung (Vonsung)
Design Assistants: Jing Chen, Teresa Wong
Branding: Michiko Ito (Vonsung)

Polka Gelato by Vonsung

Contractor: MKM Contracts
Lighting: iGuzzini
Carpentry: Valchromat
Furniture: Modus, HAY

Polka Gelato by Vonsung
Click above for larger image


See also:

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Dri Dri by
Elips Design
Snog frozen yogurt
by Cinimod Studio
Leggenada Ice Cream
by SO Architecture

Dri Dri at St Martins Lane by Elips Design

Dri Dri at St Martins Lane by Elips Design

A pop-up Italian ice cream stall at St Martins Lane Hotel in London evokes the seaside with yellow beach huts and striped decking.

Dri Dri at St Martins Lane by Elips Design

Designed by architects Elips Design, the temporary shop serves gelato by UK company Dri Dri from a timber cart on wheels.

Dri Dri at St Martins Lane by Elips Design

Pink chairs provide seating in front of two-dimensional parasols that are printed on the walls.

Dri Dri at St Martins Lane by Elips Design

Coloured semi-circles decorate the glass facade of the shop, illustrating the different flavours of ice cream available.

Dri Dri at St Martins Lane by Elips Design

Other popular pop-up shops we’ve featured in the past include a fashion store with tights stretched across the walls, a bicycle shop for Tokyo Bike and our own Dezeen Watch Store pop-up in Covent Garden.

Dri Dri at St Martins Lane by Elips Design

Photography is by Carlo Carossio.

Here are some more details from Elips Design:


The Front Room of St Martins Lane’s hotel is a dynamic retail space. It has housed various creative collaborations with partners including The Convenience Store (fashion boutique), Wallpaper (photography exhibition), Angela Hill (vintage books), The Design Museum (film screening) and Nowness (video installation).

Dri Dri at St Martins Lane by Elips Design

This time it will be converted by ELIPS DESIGN into an idyllic Italian beach, complete with traditional decking, coloured beach cabins, sun umbrellas, chairs and tables. The customers will be transported to the Mediterranean in the heart of London’s bustling centre enjoying their gelato DRI DRI.

Dri Dri at St Martins Lane by Elips Design

The beach cabins are thought in the way to divide the space and create a back of the house for storage.

Dri Dri at St Martins Lane by Elips Design

The sun umbrella are wall stickers to create more perspective in a bi dimensional space.


See also:

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Camper store in Malmö
by TAF
Leggenada Ice Cream and Yogurt by SO ArchitectureIce Cream Laboratory by Akram and Haythornthwaite

Stoyn Iconic ice cream

L’agenzia pubblicitaria russa #Stoyn ha sviluppato una linea di ghiaccioli che si basano su personaggi iconici come Marilyn Monroe, Darth Vader o Mario Bros. Il progetto è un esperimento che abbina sapori e personalità in un contesto giocoso.

Stoyn Iconic ice cream

Stoyn Iconic ice cream

Stoyn Iconic ice cream

Stoyn Iconic ice cream

Stoyn Iconic ice cream

Creative Ice Creams

Le collectif Stoyn a repris l’idée des glaces en formes de personnages connus et de symboles. De bonne qualité, ces glaces reprenant aussi bien le visage de Dark Vador, de Che Guevara que celui de Mario ou Mickey Mouse. L’ensemble est à découvrir en images dans la suite.



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