Design award contender exhibits copies of rivals’ objects

Designs of the Year award contender Unfold exhibits copies of Faceture Vase by Phil Cuttance and Papafoxtrot boats by Postlerferguson

News: a nominee for the Design Museum’s Design of the Year award has caused controversy by presenting 3D-printed copies of two of the other finalists’ work.

Antwerp-based designers Unfold presented replicas of projects by fellow nominees Phil Cuttance and PostlerFerguson as part of their Kiosk 2.0 project that went on show at the London museum yesterday.

“Some people have reacted very strongly to it,” said Daniel Charny, a curator who nominated Unfold’s project for the exhibition. “This is part of what’s going to happen with 3D printing. Is it a cheap fake or is it a new piece? When is it okay, when is it not okay?”

Designs of the Year award contender Unfold exhibits copies of Faceture Vase by Phil Cuttance and Papafoxtrot boats by Postlerferguson

Kiosk 2.0 is a mobile 3D printing laboratory modelled on Berlin sausage-vending carts. The replicas were displayed on the cart alongside copies of design classics including Marcel Wanders’ Egg Vase, Alvar Aalto’s vase and Charles and Ray Eames’ wooden blackbird.

Unfold’s Claire Warnier and Dries Verbruggen created versions of Cuttance’s Faceture Vase and PostlerFerguson’s Papafoxtrot toys by watching online movies about how the products were made and downloading drawings from the internet.

“A lot of the classical stuff like the Eames bird, you can just download,” says Verbruggen. “A lot of designers are putting a lot of information about their designs online. A lot of brands, especially in furniture, publish all the digital files because they want architects to use their renderings so they specify their furniture. They don’t understand that a lot of that is production data. You can just replicate it.”

Designs of the Year award contender Unfold exhibits copies of Faceture Vase by Phil Cuttance and Papafoxtrot boats by Postlerferguson

To generate their version of the Faceture Vase, Unfold watched an online video of Cuttance making the product and then wrote a computer script to achieve the same effect with a digital file.

“We didn’t have access to the vases so we couldn’t scan them,” said Verbruggen. “So we reverse-engineered them. Phil has this really nice movie where he details the whole process, so we started counting how many triangles he uses, how many cuts he makes. We translated that into a computer script and we made a programme that generates them.”

Cuttance makes the vases by hand-scoring a sheet of plastic with a triangular pattern, then rolling the sheet into a tube and manipulating it by hand to create a unique shape. This is then used as a mould for a vase, which is cast in resin.

After his initial surprise that his design had been replicated, Cuttance feels that Unfold’s project proves how much harder it is to copy craft objects compared to mass-produced items. “In trying to copy my vases they proved what I’ve been trying to achieve – that a slightly different product comes out each time,” he said. “In craft there’s an inherent value that is hard to copy.”

Designs of the Year award contender Unfold exhibits copies of Faceture Vase by Phil Cuttance and Papafoxtrot boats by Postlerferguson

The process of creating versions of PostlerFergurson’s wooden boats was much simpler: Unfold simply downloaded PDF drawings of the products. After that “an intern modelled it in a couple of days,” Verbruggen says, adding that PostlerFerguson were “kind of flattered” to see their object replicated at the museum.

“This is a project that’s both critical and speculative,” said Charny. “It questions intellectual property, the ego of the designer, authorship and authenticity”.

Verbruggen said: “The kiosk is a platform for us to learn what are the characteristics of digital design and digital manufacturing and how does it differ from physical design. It’s about our role as designers in a post-digital era. We want people to see opportunities, not only threats.”

He added: “We want to visualise things that are brewing up on the fringes and put them in a recognisable scenario.”

The Designs of the Year exhibition is at the Design Museum in London until 7 July. The winner will be announced on 17 April.

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copies of rivals’ objects
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Competition: twenty wooden satellite models by Papafoxtrot to be won

Competition: Dezeen has teamed up with toy company Papafoxtrot to give readers a chance to win one of twenty wooden models of iconic unmanned spacecrafts orbiting the Earth.

Competition: twenty wooden satellite models by Papafoxtrot to be won

Above: Speckt-R satellite model

The five different models depict the following satellites:

» Speckt-R – orbital radio telescope
» ORS-1 – American reconnaissance satellite
» GEOTAIL – observes the Earth’s magnetosphere
» Dragon – shuttles crew and cargo to the International Space Station
» Cygnus – delivery and collection vessel for larger spacecraft

Competition: twenty wooden satellite models by Papafoxtrot to be won

Above: Cygnus satellite model

Each model comes flat-packed in a box that includes assembly instructions and information about the satellite.

Competition: twenty wooden satellite models by Papafoxtrot to be won

Above: Dragon satellite model

The visual identity, packaging and branding were designed by London firm Postlerferguson.

Competition: twenty wooden satellite models by Papafoxtrot to be won

Above: GEOTAIL satellite model

Each satellite model costs £20, or the whole set can be bought for £80 from the Papafoxtrot website should you not be lucky enough to win.

Competition: twenty wooden satellite models by Papafoxtrot to be won

Above: ORS-1 satellite model

See all our stories about toys »
See all our stories about space »

Competition: twenty wooden satellite models by Papafoxtrot to be won

To enter this competition email your name, age, gender, occupation, and delivery address and telephone number to competitions@dezeen.com with “Papafoxtrot satellites” in the subject line. We won’t pass your information on to anyone else; we just want to know a little about our readers. Read our privacy policy here.

Competition: twenty wooden satellite models by Papafoxtrot to be won

Competition closes 6 November 2012. Twenty winners will be selected at random and notified by email. Winners’ names will be published in a future edition of our Dezeenmail newsletter and at the top of this page. Dezeen competitions are international and entries are accepted from readers in any country.

The information below is from Postlerferguson:


Postlerferguson is proud to announce the second series of products designed for Papafoxtrot London! We have selected the 5 most iconic unmanned spacecraft circling the earth and transformed them into Papafoxtrot’s iconic design language which we developed with our series of wooden cargo vessels a year ago. From an interplanetary garbage collection to a future commercial spacebus to Mars these amazing machines are making the world go round day and night.

Postlerferguson has been responsible for the visual identity, packaging design of the series as well as the art direction, web page and brand system continuing our ongoing collaboration with Papafoxtrot.

The post Competition: twenty wooden satellite
models by Papafoxtrot to be won
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Fish packaging by PostlerFerguson

Fish packaging by PostlerFerguson

If carrying a wet papery packet home puts you off fresh fish from the counter at your local supermarket, London designers PostlerFerguson have designed a series of sleek sleeves to promote the less endangered types.

Fish packaging by PostlerFerguson

“Supermarkets are expanding their fresh fish offerings to include more sustainable species like gurnard, mackerel and skate. These fish are cheaper and just as tasty, but customers often shy away from them because they are unfamiliar and occasionally just plain ugly,” says Martin Postler.

Fish packaging by PostlerFerguson

Made from layers of polyethylene, the packs are resealable, airtight and can be topped up with ice to keep everything fresh until you’re ready to cook it.

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Competition: six wooden boats by Papafoxtrot to be won

Dezeen-competition_papafoxtrot

Competition: Dezeen and toy company Papafoxtrot have teamed up to offer readers the chance to win one of six hand crafted wooden boats, each worth more than £100.

Dezeen-competition_papafoxtrot

Papafoxtrot was founded by Ian Ferguson and Martin Postler of London design consultancy Postlerferguson.

Dezeen-competition_papafoxtrot

The toy boats are designed in the shape of the most famous cargo ships in the world. A three-colour boat with container blocks stacked on top is in shape of the longest cargo ship, Emma Maersk.

Dezeen-competition_papafoxtrot

The flat single-colour one is in the shape of the TI Asia cargo ship that used to carry 3 million barrels of oil.

Dezeen-competition_papafoxtrot

The four half-spheres on the third product represent the gas containers on the largest gas cargo ship, Arctic Princess, which use to carry nearly 150,000 cubic meters of liquified natural gas.

Dezeen-competition_papafoxtrot

To enter this competition email your name, age, gender, occupation, and delivery address and telephone number to competitions@dezeen.com with “Papafoxtrot” in the subject line. We won’t pass your information on to anyone else; we just want to know a little about our readers.Read our privacy policy here.

Dezeen-competition_papafoxtrot

Competition closes 7 February 2012. Six winners will be selected at random and notified by email. Winners’ names will be published in a future edition of our Dezeenmail newsletter and at the bottom of this page. Dezeen competitions are international and entries are accepted from readers in any country.

Dezeen-competition_papafoxtrot

Subscribe to our newsletterget our RSS feed or follow us on Twitter for details of future competitions.

Dezeen-competition_papafoxtrot

The information that follows is from Papafoxtrot:


Papafoxtrot

Papa Foxtrot plays with today!

Our wooden toys bring the amazing machines and global systems driving today’s world into the home. Hand-crafted wood and a colourful, reduced aesthetic imbue Papa Foxtrot products with an engaging tactility and playful optimism.

Papa Foxtrot is an international organisation, working with a network of designers and manufacturers around the world. The same global systems that inspire our toys allow us to utilize the best craftsmen and sustainable material suppliers in order to create products of the highest quality.

For everyone who ever sighed at the site of a container ship, swooned over a satellite or wondered where electricity comes from: we make our toys for you.

Papafoxtrot is a wooden toy and lifestyle brand founded by Ian Ferguson and Martin Postler of London based design consultancy Postlerferguson. We think that wooden toys are great so is the world we are living in. Our wooden toys bring the amazing machines and global systems driving today’s world into the home. Hand-crafted wood and a colourful, reduced aesthetic imbue Papa Foxtrot products with an engaging tactility and playful optimism. Our products are manufactured in small exclusive series and we work with our customers on bespoke uniquely designed special editions and seasonal collections.

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Cafe Sonja by PostlerFerguson

Cafe Sonja by PostlerFerguson

Vienna Design Week 2011: London designers PostlerFerguson have created a temporary Viennese coffee house for Vienna Design Week, which continues until Sunday.

Cafe Sonja by PostlerFerguson

They designed all the furniture to be flat-packed and flown to Vienna from their London studio, then slotted together on site.

Cafe Sonja by PostlerFerguson

Dark furniture and golden, reflective panels reference the opulence of traditional cafes on a temporary scale.

Cafe Sonja by PostlerFerguson

Cafe Sonja was one of five Carte Blanche projects at Vienna Deign Week, which invites designers to create urban scenarios in forgotten spaces.

Cafe Sonja by PostlerFerguson

See all our stories about Vienna Design Week here and all our stories about PostlerFerguson here.

Here are some more details from PostlerFerguson:


Cafe Sonja is a temporary cafe we designed for the 2011 Vienna Design Week in the second district of Vienna. Drawing on the unique aesthetics and feel of the traditional Viennese coffee house we designed a space which uses dark colours, complex, interlocking structures and high reflective gold surfaces to create an almost Brothers Grimm like atmosphere.

All furniture and fittings where produced by us in London, flat-packed and flown to Vienna where we set up the Cafe within 3 days.

Cafe Sonja welcomes guests from the 29.09.2011 until 10.10.2011 and operated by the legendary Cafe Drechsler.


See also:

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Zmianatematu by xm3 Café Coutume by
Cut Architectures
Café/day by
Suppose Design Office

Brotzeit by PostlerFerguson

Brotzeit by PostlerFerguson

London designers PostlerFerguson presented this conceptual packaging for an airline meal at Belgrade Design Week last month.

Brotzeit by Postlerferguson

Called Brotzeit, German for ‘Snack’, the design would involve packaging locally produced raw food in a set of pebble-like capsules, to be transported and presented in a wooden box.

Brotzeit by Postlerferguson

Belgrade Design Week took place 23-25 May 2011.

Brotzeit by Postlerferguson

See our Food and Design report »

Brotzeit by Postlerferguson

More packaging on Dezeen »

Brotzeit by Postlerferguson
More about PostlerFerguson on Dezeen »

Brotzeit by Postlerferguson

The information below is from the designers:


Brotzeit

Rethinking Economy Class Food

LH466 Economy
Duesseldorf to Miami / 03.02.2011
Flight duration: 10h 15min
Chicken rice with cooked vegetables, prawn salad, apricot cake

How could design help to introduce a new way to cater economy style travellers in a way that she/he will remember this meal as a great experience? How can an airline redefine its brand around one of the most intimate points of interaction with their customers? What a great opportunity would it be if the customers of a Lufthansa flight actually remembers the journey by the tastes, textures and smells of the food that has been served – just like smelling and tasting the brand itself.

We at Postlerferguson developed the “Brotzeit” design proposal that is aimed to inspire decision makers in the airline industry to rethink their approach on how to deliver and serve meals to their customers and what kinds of products are being selected.

All foods can be supplied by local specialist manufacturers to the airline and packed into the Brotzeit boxes of each passenger. Every culture has a rich “on the go” cuisine of pre-prepared dishes, fresh produce, salads, pickles, conserves or raw foods. These foods are made for travelling and we believe future airlines should take advantage of this healthy and divers food culture – it`s Brotzeit!


See also:

.

Edible tableware
by Rice-Design
Steam Roaster by
Compeixalaigua Design Studio
Food Probe
by Philips Design

Microclimates by PostlerFerguson

These conceptual cooling units by London designers PostlerFerguson would be made from 3D-printed sand.

Called Microclimates, the pods would be printed layer by layer on a large rapid-prototyping machine using locally sourced sand and a magnesium binging agent.

Water evaporating from the porous material would lower the temperature of the sand, in turn cooling the air as it flows through each pod.

A complex internal structure would create a large surface area for this heat exchange to take place efficiently.

The project was designed for Dubai gallery and studio Traffic.

More about PostlerFerguson on Dezeen »

The information below is from the designers:


Microclimates/Postlerferguson 2010

What strikes us about Dubai is the energy and technological sophistication of the city that has arisen in the last few decades in one of the most ancient areas of human civilization. Dubai’s architecture is striking not only for its design, but also for the leaps in construction technology employed to realize it.

Our proposal draws on both the hypermodern, global city of today and the traditional building techniques that are ancient Dubai’s heritage. Microclimates is not just an installation, but a building language that can be reused again and again to create new public spaces. Traditional Islamic architecture dealt sustainably with the harsh desert climate by careful control of light and airflow through elements such as the masharabiya, wind towers, and earthen walls.

Microclimates are built up layer by layer out of locally sourced sand combined with a magnesium based binder. Using custom software, Microclimates is based on a three-dimensional interpretation of the masharabiya built from local sand by using a large scale rapid prototyping machine (developed by D-Shape), with a complex internal structure whose large internal surface area efficiently conditions air passing through it by evaporative cooling.

Combining the principals behind these ancient building elements with the most advanced computer-aided manufacturing techniques, we are able to create new methods of construction that draw on the aesthetic and sustainable benefits of traditional buildings to realize a modern vision of what 21st century architecture in Dubai could achieve.


See also:

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Wooden Giants by PostlerFergusonBuoy Lamps by
PostlerFerguson
Selfridges window
by PostlerFerguson

Wooden Giants by PostlerFerguson

Wooden Giants by PostlerFerguson

Here’s some more nautical design from London designers PostlerFerguson (see their buoy-shaped lamps in our earlier story), this time a set of wooden toy ships. 

Wooden Giants by PostlerFerguson

Top: Container Ship
Above: Oil Tanker

Called Wooden Giants, the three toy boats are based on the three largest cargo ships in the world.

Wooden Giants by PostlerFerguson

Above: Liquid Gas Tanker

The toys were shown as part of the London Design Festival show Translations in September.

Wooden Giants by PostlerFerguson

Translations was curated by Oscar Diaz and presented each designer’s latest project alongside the object or image that originally inspired them – in this case a photograph of the world’s largest container ship.

Wooden Giants by PostlerFerguson

Here’s some information from the designers:


Wooden Toy Ships by Postlerferguson

The Emma Maersk, Arctic Princess and TI Asia are three of the largest cargo ships in the world transporting goods over thousands of miles from continent to continent. From the crude oil pumped into the belly of the tanker in the south Chinese sea to the refinery which produces the main synthetic raw materials to be delivered to factories and manufacturers around the globe, these giant machines are an overlooked but integral part of our daily lives.

Wooden Giants by PostlerFerguson

Behind the sheer gigantic complexity and abstraction of the global logistic system hides an intriguing beauty of radical functionality and almost organic, nerve-like organisation. We aim to translate its machine protagonists into a very familiar format of classic wooden toys and objects. Wooden toys were on the height of success in the middle of the last century and quickly got pushed aside by a tsunami of cheap plastic toys and now barely occupy a niche segment.

Wooden Giants by PostlerFerguson

The Wooden Toy Ship mini-series is about reintroducing a sense of the grandeur of current technological feats to the wooden toy. The quality of the materials, reduced aesthetic and sense of technological optimism draw on the classic language of wood toys, while the updated subject matter introduces essential aspects of global modernism into the home.

Wooden Giants by PostlerFerguson

‘Translations’ acknowledge the fact that objects are just a link on a chain of objects, and cannot be understood in isolation. The exhibition showcases new work by a group of young designers, which use a mix of intuition and observation as a primary tool to generate their ideas. What do they have in common a shovel and a range of outdoor lighting? You may ask.  What about a pencil sharpener and an ashtray?

Wooden Giants by PostlerFerguson

The link could be just a particular shape, a similar way of using them, or simply how the different materials are connected. The designers involved in ‘ Translations’ found inspiration for they projects on dented cars, a shovel, an ashtray, mailing envelopes, the world’s largest container ship, or a lab funnel, for example. In order to explain the designer’s thinking path, each prototype will be displayed alongside to the images or objects that inspired them. Translations’ intends to demystify the creative process by giving a rare insight into what inspire designers, and how they translate ideas into products.

Wooden Giants by PostlerFerguson

Dimensions:

Container Ship:
800mm * 110mm
Birch

Liquid Gas Tanker:

590mm * 98mm
Ash

Oil Tanker:
750mm * 140mm
Maple


See also:

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Buoy Lamps by
PostlerFerguson
More stories from London Design Festival 2010More design stories
on Dezeen

Buoy Lamps by PostlerFerguson

Buoy Lamps by PostlerFerguson

London designers PostlerFerguson have created a collection of lamps shaped like nautical buoys.

Buoy Lamps by PostlerFerguson

Called Buoy Lamps, the pieces comprise wooden ribs bound together with rope.

Buoy Lamps by PostlerFerguson

PostlerFerguson presented the project at Mint shop as part of the London Design Festival in September.

Buoy Lamps by PostlerFerguson

See all our stories about the London Design Festival »

See all our stories about lighting »

Buoy Lamps by PostlerFerguson

The following details are from the designers:


The Buoy Lamps are part of an ongoing investigation to the aesthetics of industrial technology. The most specific, highly engineered objects take functionality to an extreme which is no longer recognizable to the layperson. The odd shapes and brilliant colours of navigational buoys could just as well be from children’s’ toys, Christmas ornaments or giant jewellery.

Buoy Lamps by PostlerFerguson

Underneath the bizarre appearance, however, remains a pleasing materiality that is still comprehensible to the non-engineer upon inspection. There is a logic of balance, construction and materials that is curiously pleasurable, rewarding in its simplicity and inevitability.Buoy Lamps by PostlerFerguson

The Buoy Lamps draw on these qualities, referencing various aspects of marine culture in their design and performance. Wooden ribs bound together by rope support central lights, balanced so that they can be jostled into different angles.


See also:

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Lanterne Marine
by BarberOsgerby
Scaffold Lights by
Lanzavecchia + Wai
More stories about
lighting