Prehistoric Aliens by Glimpt

Swedish designers Glimpt worked with Peruvian artisans to produce the hand-carved wooden bases for these coffee tables (+ slideshow).

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Mattias Rask and Tor Palm of Glimpt travelled to the village of Yungay in Peru to research the techniques used by woodworkers at a workshop run by voluntary organisation, Artesanos Don Bosco.

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They designed a range of contemporary tables that make use of the facilities provided to artisans, who are taught furniture-making skills to encourage them to stay and work locally, rather than moving to the cities.

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The bases are made from local timber, including a hard white wood called Lengha, and a type of cedar. The wood is turned on a lathe before the faceted decoration is chiselled by hand and painted.

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Explaining how the project came about, Rask told Dezeen: “We sent an email to a Swedish guy in Lima and asked him about crafts organisations in Peru; he basically said that Artesanos Don Bosco are the best artisans in Peru, so we sent them an email!”

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Prehistoric Aliens will continue to be produced in Yungay and was presented by Italian furniture brand Cappellini as part of its Cappellini NEXT collection in Milan earlier this year.

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Glimpt collaborates with artisans around the world and previously created a range of stools made from seagrass in Vietnam, and ceramic lights painted to look like strawberries produced by craftsmen in South Africa.

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Still life photography is by Daniel Thrue.

Here’s some more information from the designers:


Glimpt of Peru – Prehistoric Aliens

We spent the autumn of 2012 in Peru working and learning from the Crafts Cooperative, Artesanos Don Bosco, a continuation of our work with craftsmen and women from different countries.

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Before our trip we had not fully appreciated how extensive this organisation was. Artesanos Don Bosco is part of a large Italian voluntary organisation called Operazione Mato Grosso. This organisation was founded in the 1960s by Father Hugo, a Catholic missionary priest who saw there was a need to help poor farmers in the Andes. Now, some fifty years later, Operazione Mato Grosso has roughly 2000 Italian volunteers and employs about twice as many Peruvians.

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The work involves educating and training people in the remote villages in the Andes, and then creating employment opportunities for them there. The idea is to encourage people to stay and work in these isolated areas rather than move to a very uncertain future in Lima, something that many Peruvians otherwise are tempted to do.

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Operazione Mato Grosso promotes the virtues of a simple, unhurried life, living and working in cooperation with one another. They have started schools, orphanages, hospitals and even power stations that provide electric power in the mountains. All this is free of charge for the poor.

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One part of this organisation, called Artesanos Don Bosco, provides craftsmanship training. After five years training with ADB most of the artisans then work in the organisation’s cooperative. The courses they give are mainly related to different ways of working with wood. This includes furniture making, decorations, carving pictures and the construction of housing. They also teach stone masonry, how to make glass, different ways of working with textiles and even metal work.

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We decided we wanted to help them develop a more modern series of furniture. After having visited several villages and different cooperatives in the Andes we finally settled on Yungay as the village where we would set to work. In Yungay there was a little cooperative that worked with furniture making. During our visits we were impressed by their very high standards of craftsmanship and above all by the skill of the people who carved pictures in wood.

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So day after day of soup followed by fried guinea-pigs and washed down with Inca Cola finally lead to the production of a series of coffee tables called Prehistoric Aliens. Our main difficulty was not a shortage of good ideas but rather the language barrier. Neither of us spoke any Spanish but we were faced with a situation where this was the only possible language for communication.

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The first few weeks we had been helped by our American friend Nick, but after a while we had to manage by ourselves. After keen language practice on the computer every evening, and getting a lot of hands on experience every day in the workshops, we finally managed to make some Spanish sounding words and were rewarded with the nicknames Gordo and Chato (Chubby and Shorty) by our fellow workers.

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Marcial, Barosso, Aristares and Messias taught us alot and we hope we have taught them something as well. It has been a good experience living and working with them. Hopefully our collaboration will provide them with more work so that they can keep on developing their skills and supporting their families, as well as contributing to the great work of Artesanos Don Bosco and Operazione Mato Grosso.

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The name, Prehistoric Aliens, was inspired by Peru’s fantastic cultural heritage which often seems very mystical and ancient to our western eyes.

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The small coffee tables are almost like small spaceships that have just landed, with their leader, The Robot.

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OMA’s furniture collection for Knoll “turns industry into a fetish”

Dezeen and MINI World Tour: in our fourth movie recorded at the MINI Paceman Garage in Milan, MINI head of design Anders Warming introduces the workshops that took place in the space and journalist Justin McGuirk explains why he sees OMA’s Tools for Life collection as a nostalgic reaction to the decline of industry in the city.

The MINI Paceman Garage hosted a week-long series of workshops in which students were tasked with coming up with a new product or identity for MINI and pitching it to the car brand.

OMA's furniture collection for Knoll "turns industry into a fetish"
Anders Warming

“The MINI community spreads into the design community, and that’s why we do these workshops with young students,” Warming says. “Sometimes one very straight thought, especially from a younger generation, actually helps nail things and makes them very simple and honest.”

OMA's furniture collection for Knoll "turns industry into a fetish"

Warming led the first workshop himself. “It’s not just a one-way street, where I might be teaching about how to do design,” he says. “It’s my view on design and what [the students] spontaneously think of that.”

OMA's furniture collection for Knoll "turns industry into a fetish"
Justin McGuirk

The guest in our Dezeen and MINI World Tour Studio is Justin McGuirk, architecture and design journalist and director of Strelka Press. “The most interesting thing I’ve seen is the OMA furniture for Knoll,” he says of this year’s fair.

OMA's furniture collection for Knoll "turns industry into a fetish"
Tools for Life by OMA for Knoll

But McGuirk doesn’t believe the Tools for Life collection, which includes a motorised table and chair that rise and fall at the press of large red buttons, are meant to be practical pieces of furniture.

“If you look at the way that Knoll is presenting this furniture it’s the standard spiel about adaptable, ergonomic furniture,” he says. “But it’s got nothing to do with that. The whole thing is just a performance and I think it is deeply nostalgic for industry.”

OMA's furniture collection for Knoll "turns industry into a fetish"

“It’s an interesting time to launch a product like that,” he continues. “Here we are in Milan where the city’s industry and the country’s industry is visibly in decline – it’s almost this message that industry is dead, so now we can turn it into luxury. But also, it turns industry into a fetish.”

OMA's furniture collection for Knoll "turns industry into a fetish"

Another piece in the Tools for Life collection is a counter made of three swivelling stacked blocks. McGuirk says: “It’s one of those classic designs that purports to solve all of these different problems, but actually solves none of them. So it’s actually completely useless.”

“It comes clearly from an architecture studio, and one that’s not overly concerned with form as well.”

OMA's furniture collection for Knoll "turns industry into a fetish"
Our Dezeen and MINI World Tour Studio

See all our stories about Milan 2013.

The music featured in this movie is a track called Konika by Italian disco DJ Daniele Baldelli, who played a set at the MINI Paceman Garage. You can listen to more music by Baldelli on Dezeen Music Project.

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Circus tables by Formfjord for Offecct

Product news: these tables based on a circus ringmaster’s podium were designed by German office Formfjord for Swedish brand Offecct.

Circus tables by Formfjord for Offecct

Referencing the zig-zagging patterns found on the traditional stands used by circus leaders, the circular platforms are supported by Y-shaped metal elements that angle inwards at each joint. These elements all connect to a metal ring that forms the base.

Circus tables by Formfjord for Offecct

The tables are finished in black or white laquer and the range includes various heights and diameters, plus a plant pot stand. The collection was presented at the Salone Internazionale del Mobile in Milan earlier this year.

Circus tables by Formfjord for Offecct

Other new products designed for Offecct include seats with curvy backrests by UNStudio and chunky grey seating by Jean-Marie Massaud, both also presented in Milan.

Formfjord have also made concrete pebbles for stone-skipping across water.

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Read on for more information from Offecct:


Formfjord is cooperating with Offecct for the first time, and the first resulting product is the table Circus. The main idea when Formfjord developed Circus was to think not only of the product they were developing, but also the whole living space where life happens. Formfjord wanted to see the whole living space as an arena, a circus.

Circus tables by Formfjord for Offecct

“The table defines the room and sets the atmosphere – it even changes the behavior of the room. Creating a playful design for the table makes the living room a wonderful place,” says Formjord, the duo behind the table.

Fabian Baumann and Sönke Hoof of Formfjord come from different backgrounds; Baumann is a mechanical engineer and Hoof a product designer. When creating their designs, the duo uses their different perspectives to enhance the creative process and develop products that functions well – technologically and ecologically, ergonomically and emotionally, strategically and economically.

Circus tables by Formfjord for Offecct

“To us it is important that our partners stand for good values. Today everyone considers themselves green in their way of working, but Offecct truly is in all aspects,” Formfjord continues.

“We always search for companies that can bring out good cooperation, and that is not always easy, but has turned out to be true with Offecct,” Formfjord concludes.

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INAHO by Hideki Yoshimoto and Yoshinaka Ono

Little tubes of golden light gently lean towards approaching visitors in this installation by Japanese design duo Hideki Yoshimoto and Yoshinaka Ono.

Inaho by Hideki Yoshimoto and Yoshinaka Ono

Hideki Yoshimoto and Yoshinaka Ono of tangent: studio wanted to create the impression of golden ears of rice slowly swaying in the wind.

Inaho by Hideki Yoshimoto and Yoshinaka Ono

INAHO, which means “ear of rice” in Japanese, is composed of LEDs encased in golden tubes fixed to the end of three-millimeter-wide carbon fibre stems.

Inaho by Hideki Yoshimoto and Yoshinaka Ono

Tiny perforations in the tubes distribute the light into a smattering of blurry dots reminiscent of a rice paddy field, while movement sensors within the base of each stem draw the golden tips in the direction of passing people.

Inaho by Hideki Yoshimoto and Yoshinaka Ono

The installation was awarded first place in the Lexus Design Awards and was subsequently presented at the Lexus space during the Salone Internazionale del Mobile in Milan last month.

Inaho by Hideki Yoshimoto and Yoshinaka Ono

We recently interviewed the new Salone del Mobile president on how he plans to tackle issues that “damage Milan”.

Inaho by Hideki Yoshimoto and Yoshinaka Ono

We previously featured a music box that uses the movement of the musical mechanism to cause sticks of barley to gently sway.

Inaho by Hideki Yoshimoto and Yoshinaka Ono

See all our stories about Milan 2013 »
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Inaho by Hideki Yoshimoto and Yoshinaka Ono

Here’s a description of Inaho from the designers:


INAHO is an interior lighting inspired by a golden ear of rice slowly swinging in the wind. The product’s 3 mm wide stem is made of carbon fibre and a LED covered by a golden perforated tube is attached to its end, which creates light in dots reminding us of paddy rice. Human-detection sensors are embedded in the base and when a person comes by the INAHO, it begins to sway in that direction.

Dozens of Inaho would create a landscape that responds to and follows people, which will make an attractive entrance or corridor. By extracting the characteristics from an ear of rice and representing them with minimal elements, we approached a product which possesses novelty and nature-oriented familiarity together.

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Rubber lamp by Thomas Schnur

Cologne designer Thomas Schnur has created squishy lamps made out of rubber.

Rubber Lamp by Thomas Schnur

The electrical components of these lamps by Thomas Schnur are encased in a heat-resistent silicone shell, molded into the form of a traditional desk lamp.

Rubber Lamp by Thomas Schnur

An articulated steel rod concealed within the rubber casing allows the lamp to be angled as desired.

Rubber Lamp by Thomas Schnur

The lamps were on show at the Salone Satellite showcase for young designers at the Salone Internazionale del Mobile in Milan last month.

Rubber Lamp by Thomas Schnur

Schnur presented the lamps alongside a pair of room dividers, which were also on display at the Objects for the Neighbour exhibition as part of design at imm Cologne earlier this year.

Rubber Lamp by Thomas Schnur

This isn’t the first time Schnur has worked with rubber. A couple of years ago the designer made a rubber table with suction cups on the legs.

Rubber Lamp by Thomas Schnur

We recently featured a couple of chairs made entirely out of rubber.

Rubber Lamp by Thomas Schnur

Photography is by Alexander Böhle.

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Here’s a description from the designer:


‘Rubber Lamp’ is created by the interest in rubber and the in and outside of products. The table lamp consists of two parts: The flexible steel rod, the switch, the electricity components inside and the heat resistant silicone outside.

The cover protects the inner components and gives the lamp an organic and warm attitude. The shape of the lamp preserves the original form because there is no reason to change the anonymous designed shape.

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Motek by Luca Nichetto for Cassina

Motek by Luca Nichetto for Cassina

Product news: the seat of this chair by Venetian designer Luca Nichetto is made of folded felt.

Motek by Luca Nichetto for Cassina

Called Motek, the design by Stockholm-based Luca Nichetto for Italian brand Cassina is pressure-moulded to make it rigid enough to support a person’s weight without losing the lightweight qualities of the fabric.

Motek by Luca Nichetto for Cassina

Origami-inspired folds give extra support to the structure.

Motek by Luca Nichetto for Cassina

The design comes with wooden or steel legs and there’s also a version upholstered in leather.

Motek by Luca Nichetto for Cassina

Nichetto presented the chair at the Salone Internazionale del Mobile in Milan last month, where he also showed cabinets carved with geometric patterns for Casamania and a TV-like lamp for Foscarini – see all design by Luca Nichetto.

Motek by Luca Nichetto for Cassina

Read our interview with the new Salone del Mobile president on how he plans to tackle issues that “damage Milan” and see all our stories about Milan 2013.

Motek by Luca Nichetto for Cassina

Other felt products we’ve featured recently include a chair with a pressure-moulded seat by Patricia Urquiola for Moroso and a seed-shaped pod for working or napping in peace – see more stories about designs in felt.

Motek by Luca Nichetto for Cassina

Here’s some more information from Luca Nichetto:


The inspiration behind Motek chair is a sheet of paper, which is flexible and lightweight by its very nature. Originally, a sheet of paper cannot bear weights, but the Japanese art of origami – which, with a series of folds, creates forms and structures that can support weights – the same sheet takes on a new lease of life.

Thanks to a new technology for Cassina, such as pressure molding, a sheet of felt is folded, which will bring the necessary rigidity to the body of the chair for it to support weights without losing the lightness of the original material.

Motek by Luca Nichetto for Cassina

In this project, the search for details and the experimentation with materials typical of the collaboration between Nichetto and Cassina led to a felt version of the chair, which comes in three different shades, as well as to a leather version, where the seams highlight the folds characterizing the aesthetics of the seat.

The adaptability to the different consumers’ tastes is yet another feature sought by Nichetto for Motek, which was obtained through a series of combinations of structure, legs and body.

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Globe lights by Studio Vit

Light from small ceramic pendants is bounced off large steel bowls to form these lamps by London designers Studio Vit.

Globe lights by Studio Vit

The Globe lights comprise matte ceramic spheres on long flexes, which can be used on their own, grouped together or directed onto the bowls.

Globe lights by Studio Vit

Each steel bowl is painted gloss white and they can either be placed on a surface or wall-mounted.

Globe lights by Studio Vit

“The collection explores how geometric volumes relate to each other and the juxtaposition of materials and light,” say Studio Vit designers Helena and Veronica.

Globe lights by Studio Vit

The pair presented their work at the Salone Satellite showcase for young designers at the Salone Internazionale del Mobile in Milan last month.

Globe lights by Studio Vit

Past projects by the Swedish duo include glass lamps with marble collars and a modular storage system comprising eleven different boxes.

Globe lights by Studio Vit

Watch our earlier interview with Studio Vit »
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Globe lights by Studio Vit

Photographs are by Annabel Elston.

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New Salone del Mobile president to tackle issues that “damage Milan”

Claudio Luti

News: the new president of Milan’s Salone Internazionale del Mobile has revealed plans to rebrand the fair, replace its “terrible” website and tackle hotel overpricing and transport chaos that are damaging its image (+ interview).

Claudio Luti (above), who was appointed president of fair organiser Cosmit at the end of last year, also plans to overhaul the layout and navigation of the fair, which is held each spring at the Fiera Milano fairground on the edge of the city.

Responding to criticisms of Milan’s infrastructure and the cost of visiting the world’s biggest furniture fair, Luti told Dezeen: “If things don’t work in the right way, they damage Milan, they damage our future.”

He added that that the visitors that flood into the city for the fair make the week “more important than Christmas” to the city’s economy.

66-year-old Luti, who is also owner and president of Italian furniture brand Kartell, requested a meeting with Dezeen to discuss issues raised in an opinion piece we published last month. The article highlighted the poor experience visitors endure when visiting the city during the fair.

Over lunch in New York last week, Luti told us that has invited three design agencies to pitch for the redesign the brand – which he described as “not good” – and streamline its multiple sub-brands, which include the Eurocucina kitchen fair, the Euroluce lighting fair, Salone Worldwide and Salone Satellite. Luti also wants to downplay the Cosmit parent brand, which he feels confuses people.

“The brand is Salone del Mobile,” Luti said. “If I go somewhere and say I’m the president of Cosmit, people say: who are you? But if I say I’m the president of the Salone del Mobile, people say: oh, yes!”

Other plans include reorganising the fair itself and improving navigation so people can more easily find the brands they are looking for at the fairground and creating a new website. “We have to make it easier for people to not lose time, to get where they want to be,” he said.

Luti agreed that issues such as transport overcrowding, the complexity of the ticketing system on the Metro and the exorbitant rates hotels charge during the week-long fair are damaging to the image of the both city and the fair. He is lobbying the city’s mayor, transport chiefs and hoteliers to make changes before poor service starts to drive visitors away.

“For next year we’ve asked for more trains on the Metro to take people to the fair,” he said. “We have to talk to the big hotel association and try to convince them that for all of us, for the future, it’s better to make a sacrifice,” he said. Milanese hotels regularly more than double their rates during Salone del Mobile.

Last year Lowie Vermeersch, the curator of the Interieur design biennale in Kortrijk, Belgium, complained about the poor experience of visiting Milan. “I sometimes get a bit frustrated coming back from Milan and feeling that even though I travelled a lot, I missed a lot,” he told Dezeen. “It’s a lot of logistics while you’re there, and a lot of planning.”

The Salone del Mobile attracts over 300,000 visitors each year, with around half of them coming from abroad.

Luti said Milanese shops, hotels and taxis do more business during Salone del Mobile than any other week of the year and that trade associations regularly ask whether the fair can be held more often. “It’s so important for the city,” he said. “It’s more important than Christmas.”

The Salone del Mobile will continue to be the world’s most important furniture fair only if Italian brands manage to overcome problems that are partly due to the economic crisis and partly of their own making, Luti added. Companies’ failure to invest in marketing and overseas expansion in the past was a “big, big mistake,” he said.

Luti, who took over Kartell in 1988 after a decade as managing director of fashion brand Versace, compared the fortunes of Italy’s design brands to those of its successful fashion houses. In the 80s the fashion brands “decided to go and sell everywhere in the world,” he said. “Even if the companies weren’t very big, they did this. But in furniture it was not the same.”

Last month Joseph Grima, editor-in-chief of Italian design magazine Domus, said he felt than the great era of Italian design was “drawing to an end”.

Below is an edited transcript of the interview with Luti:


Marcus Fairs: Why did you take on the presidency of Salone del Mobile?

Claudio Luti: I think it’s very important for Italy to maintain Salone del Mobile at the top. it’s part of the capital of each company that participates. It’s a moment that I want to share the decision-making for the future. I don’t want someone else to make the wrong decision. It’s vital that Salone del Mobile remains important.

Marcus Fairs: Are you pleased with this year’s fair?

Claudio Luti: Yes. The quality was very high. The companies proposed new things. I was afraid about the crisis but the response was fantastic. And everyone finished the Salone really positive and enthusiastic. A big number of them are going to make an effort to go around the world and sell their projects.

Marcus Fairs: What are your plans for the future?

Claudio Luti: We’re promoting Salone del Mobile around the world but the most important thing is to have all the most innovative brands. I would like to have all the best brands there. We want to have all the big brands. We want to give them the best positions we can.

Marcus Fairs: What else needs to improve?

Claudio Luti: The fair must be more concentrated and reward people for the time they spend there. People have no time. They want to get to the point. It’s so expensive to come to Milan.

Marcus Fairs: What about the way Salone del Mobile is branded?

Claudio Luti: It is not good. For example in your article you say there’s a confusion between Cosmit and Salone del Mobile. I agree 100% with you. The first day I arrived I said to everyone the brand is Salone del Mobile. If I go somewhere and say I’m the president of Cosmit, people say who are you? But if I say I’m the president of the Salone del Mobile, people say oh, yes!

Marcus Fairs: Can you change that?

Claudio Luti: Yes I’m trying. I just ordered a competition between three agencies to help me change. I have to change it carefully. I don’t know how to do it but my idea is to have Salone del Mobile like a brand.

Marcus Fairs: What about the website?

Claudio Luti: The website is terrible, we have to change it.

Marcus Fairs: Navigating the various halls at the Fiera can be confusing. Are you planning to improve that?

Claudio Luti: Yes, yes. We have to make it easier for people to not lose time, to get where they want to be. When people arrive from Asia etc they want to see the brands. They’re not interested in our sophisticated division [the way the fair is organised into different halls].

Marcus Fairs: How important are Salone del Mobile visitors to the city of Milan?

Claudio Luti: For the shops in the city, it’s the best shopping week in the year. It’s so important for the city. It’s more important than Christmas. The taxi drivers, shops and hotels always ask us if we can hold Salone del Mobile twice a year! Everyone asks for this. But that’s not possible.

Marcus Fairs: If a visitor has a bad experience in Milan, can it be damaging for Salone del Mobile and the city of Milan?

Claudio Luti: Yes. If something doesn’t work well, we are damaged. I hope that everyone involved understands that if things don’t work in the right way, they damage Milan, they damage our future. I’m very sorry when I hear that something doesn’t work the way it should.

Marcus Fairs: How could the experience of visiting the city be improved?

Claudio Luti: Milan is not normally a difficult city for traffic but of course to have such a number of visitors during Salone del Mobile – 300,00 or 350,000 – is unusual. When you take the Metro, it’s at maximum capacity.

We don’t control that, but we’re trying. I’ve spoken to the mayor, I’ve spoken to the president of the transport system. This year we introduced a new transportation ticket [covering both travel around the city centre and access to fairground at the edge of the city where Salone del Mobile takes place]. For next year we’ve asked for more trains on the Metro to take people to the fair.

The other thing I’d like to try is to reduce the cost of the hotels. The hotels make speculation [by charging higher rates during Salone del Mobile]. A small number of them have already agreed to stop increasing their prices during Salone del Mobile.

Now we have to talk to the big hotel association and try to convince them that for all of us, for the future, it’s better to make a sacrifice. In the next year we have three big new hotels opening for the Expo 2015 [when 20 million visitors are expected], so that will help.

Marcus Fairs: People get confused between the Salone del Mobile and the Fuori Salone events around the city. Which came first?

Claudio Luti: Salone del Mobile came first. It was so successful that – I don’t know when this was started – many years ago many different events started around town during the Salone del Mobile.

Salone del Mobile has always a waiting list of companies that want to get in and there was no space [at the old fairground in the city centre]. So brands starting exhibiting at spaces like SuperStudio [a huge video and photography studio complex on Via Tortona in Milan] and other brands who had their own showrooms started to do events in the evening.

This became more and more popular but it’s not controlled by anyone. Of course now, with the crisis, there is less money, less energy and this is becoming less important.

It’s difficult to do business outside the Salone. They don’t get professional visitors. They just get people coming to the parties in the evening. It’s not attractive for business.

Also I don’t like people coming [to Milan] like theme park visitors. It’s nice to see a lot of people from around the world, a lot of young people. But if I’m speaking about business… if you go to Via Tortona there are a million people who aren’t interested in doing business.

Marcus Fairs: In the past Salone del Mobile has organised exhibitions in the city but this year you held an exhibition on office furniture by Jean Nouvel at the Fiera. Was this a deliberate strategy to tempt people to the fair?

Claudio Luti: Yes, yes. Because the office furniture business is in crisis and it needed a vision. And it worked. Jean Nouvel gave a vision of different offices. It provided an attraction to help make the stands [at SaloneUffici, the office furniture part of Salone del Mobile] profitable. It was a good event.

Marcus Fairs: Should there be better coordination between the Salone del Mobile and the Fuori Salone events in the city?

Claudio Luti: We should try to coordinate all the events we have in Milan but I don’t know if I can do anything. I’m not the organiser and the institutions don’t want to do it. It’s not like New York, where the city decided to coordinate all the design events [under the NYCxDESIGN banner]. Maybe they can change their minds and we can help coordinate. But it’s not easy.

There is confusion because many journalists they ask me what we have organised in the city, what they should see in the city so they can spend their time the best way. And I say first you stay at the Salone del Mobile and in the evening you can go to some parties in Fuori Salone.

Marcus Fairs: Could Salone del Mobile lose its position as the world’s most important design fair?

Claudio Luti: No, I don’t think so. So long as Italian companies remain important, Milan will remain the best. But if tomorrow they go out of business, the Salone del Mobile would be nothing. I hope we can continue to have an Italian furniture system that is strong and attractive to all the designers, and remain the best.

Also if there are companies of quality from outside Italy, I’d like them to come to the Salone del Mobile. I’m very open. If tomorrow there is a quality US company or a Chinese company, why not? I’ll open the door. I want the best quality and innovation. I do the same with Kartell and designers. I never ask if they’re Italian or Japanese or British. I ask for the best. The same with the Salone del Mobile.

Marcus Fairs: How can Italian brands retain their leading position?

Claudio Luti: I feel that we need to promote Italian creativity around the world. The Italian companies need to remain committed to creativity; they have to continue to be willing to take creative risks. That is the secret. If they do that, we have a future. If they don’t, because of the crisis, or because they don’t have the right management, we have a disaster. We have to remain in our position.

Marcus Fairs: Many Italian design brands seem to be struggling. Is this because of the crisis or because of the way their are managed?

Claudio Luti: They have perhaps invested too much in innovation and not enough in things like international marketing. In the past, the companies were profitable, and it was enough to sell to markets close to Milan.

But it was a mistake. In the 70s and 80s Italy was fantastic in terms of design. But there were not many companies thinking about how to grow, how to become international. There was a bit of export to Germany, Switzerland, New York, Tokyo, but it was without any strategy. We lost power in that moment.

In fashion it was not the same. I remember in the 80s when Milanese fashion houses started doing prêt-à-porter, we decided to go and sell everywhere in the world. Not just in Italy. Versace, Armani, Ferré, Krizia and so on decided to take a risk and open shops around the world. Even if the companies weren’t very big, they did this. But in furniture it was not the same.

Also in Italy you have to realise that the policy was not to push capitalism. It was all about small family companies. They didn’t raise capital or list of the stock exchange. There was not this push. On the contrary, it was about staying small. It was a big, big mistake.

Marcus Fairs: How can they change?

Claudio Luti: Now I suggest that when you do a new product you have to sell it to the world. You have to have a strategy. If you want to grow you need time, money, people… you have to invest.

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Soe cups by Hanna Kruse

These tiny cups by German designer Hanna Kruse are topped with geometric wire grates to support and show off small objects like jewellery, flower heads or leaves.

Soe Cups by Hanna Kruse

Hanna Kruse was influenced by Ikebana, the traditional Japanese art of flower arrangement, when designing the little ceramic vessels.

Soe Cups by Hanna Kruse

She manipulated copper and steel wire into geometric patterns to form the tops, which can be opened by twisting them to the side.

Soe Cups by Hanna Kruse

Soe cups were presented as part of the Hochschule für Gestaltung Offenbach exhibit at MOST in Milan last month. See all our stories about Milan 2013 »

Soe Cups by Hanna Kruse

Earlier this year we featured a series of ceramic vases based on Ikebana with tops that loop over the flowers to frame them. 

Soe Cups by Hanna Kruse

See all our stories about ceramics »

The post Soe cups by
Hanna Kruse
appeared first on Dezeen.

Maker Faire Africa Workshop at Afrofuture

Visitors to the Afrofuture exhibition in Milan built light-up glasses from recycled materials at a workshop organised by Maker Faire Africa (+ movie).

Maker Faire Africa Workshop at Afrofuture

The workshop was a taster for the larger two to three day events that Maker Faire Africa put on in African cities for local makers to exhibit and develop their designs for gadgets or products.

Maker Faire Africa Workshop at Afrofuture

“The concept is that people come together to show their ad hoc inventions that they’ve made in their garages, basements or studios,” said Jennifer Wolfe of Maker Faire Africa, who organises the workshops.

Maker Faire Africa Workshop at Afrofuture

“In Africa, the inventions tend to be focussed on items that solve immediate and fundamental needs – issues such as agriculture, health and electricity.”

Maker Faire Africa Workshop at Afrofuture

At Afrofuture, a series of African-oriented design talks and activities, designer Cyrus Nganga from Nigeria helped visitors create their own versions of his C-Stunner glasses.

Maker Faire Africa Workshop at Afrofuture

The decorative glasses are built from old spectacle frames and recycled wire, metal or other found materials.

Maker Faire Africa Workshop at Afrofuture

Technology expert David Olaniyan was on hand to help integrate arduino microcontroller circuit boards with the designs so LEDs could be programmed to flash.

Maker Faire Africa Workshop at Afrofuture

“We’re trying to bring together some of these emerging technologies with grass root strategies, which you need to couple togther in a place like Africa,” Wolfe told Dezeen.

Maker Faire Africa Workshop at Afrofuture

Maker Faire is a global initiative that runs public workshops for designers to showcase their inventions and Maker Faire Africa has amassed a community of makers across the continent that have presented over 400 inventions.

Maker Faire Africa Workshop at Afrofuture

Wolfe presented other projects championed by Maker Faire Africa during the event, including a generator than can produce six hours of electricity with one litre of urine and conductive woven textiles.

Maker Faire Africa Workshop at Afrofuture

Maker Faire Africa has been running for five years and operates in Ghana, Egypt, Kenya and Nigeria, and has introduced 3D printers to Cairo and Lagos as part of its programme.

Maker Faire Africa Workshop at Afrofuture

The organisation aims to help designers market their products and find funding, as well as introduce them to technologies that could make their items more useful and consumer friendly.

Maker Faire Africa Workshop at Afrofuture

The Afrofuture exhibition took place at the La Rinascente department store in Milan during the city’s design week last month and was curated by Beatrice Galilee.

Maker Faire Africa Workshop at Afrofuture

Upcycling discarded materials in African design was one of the themes that emerged from our Dezeen and MINI World Tour reports from Cape Townwatch Ravi Naidoo explain the movement in our movie.

See more architecture and design from Africa »
See all our coverage of Milan 2013 »

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at Afrofuture
appeared first on Dezeen.