Plug Lamp by Form Us With Love for Ateljé Lyktan

Plug Lamp by Form Us With Love for Ateljé Lyktan

Stockholm designers Form Us With Love have integrated an electrical socket into the base of their latest lamp so there’s always a socket to hand when you want to charge a phone or laptop.

Plug Lamp by Form Us With Love for Ateljé Lyktan

Intended for a hotel lobby or bedside table, the Plug Lamp for Swedish brand Ateljé Lyktan has a powder-coated aluminium base and opal blown-glass top.

Plug Lamp by Form Us With Love for Ateljé Lyktan

Form Us With Love presented the lamp alongside other new releases at their Form Us With Friends exhibition during Stockholm Design Week last month – read more about it here.

Plug Lamp by Form Us With Love for Ateljé Lyktan

Photographs are by by Jonas Lindström.

Plug Lamp by Form Us With Love for Ateljé Lyktan

Here are some more details from Form Us With Love:


Plug Lamp from ateljé Lyktan

In today’s society, it seems like we’re always in need of a plug socket to charge our computer, tablet or smartphone. ateljé Lyktan presents a solution to this everyday problem – a lamp with a bonus of an electrical socket.

Plug Lamp by Form Us With Love for Ateljé Lyktan

The design studio Form Us With Love came up with a simple idea based on the new need in today’s society of constantly needing to recharge computers and smartphones. Besides giving you an electrical socket, the Plug Lamp also gives a pleasant aesthetic to the process of recharging.

Plug Lamp by Form Us With Love for Ateljé Lyktan

By integrating the socket in the lamp it also takes away that annoying process of searching for a socket or having to unplug something in order to access an electrical point, says Form Us With Love.

Plug Lamp by Form Us With Love for Ateljé Lyktan

The Plug Lamp has a bulbous shape and a base in moulded and powder-coated aluminium. Here the plug socket is displayed centrally, making it a decorative detail. The light itself is concealed by an opal glass shade and the lamp is dimmable.

Plug Lamp by Form Us With Love for Ateljé Lyktan

The Plug Lamp is great for public places like hotels, cafés and restaurants where people usually are in search for a place to recharge their electrical devices. But it’s also perfect for the home, for example on the bedside table, says Thomas Holm, Marketing Director, ateljé Lyktan.

Available colours: Green, red, grey, black, white

Plug Lamp by Form Us With Love for Ateljé Lyktan

ateljé Lyktan was founded in 1934 by Hans and Verna Bergström. The company moved from Helsingborg to Åhus in 1936 where it still operates in the spirit of the founders. ateljé Lyktan makes lighting for both outdoor and indoor use with a focus on Swedish design. ateljé Lyktan is a part of the Fagerhult Group.

Form Pendants by Form Us with Love for Design House Stockholm

Form Pendants by Form Us with Love for Design House Stockholm

Stockholm studio Form Us with Love has launched a range of lighting for Swedish company Design House Stockholm featuring blown-glass pendants in circular, square and triangular shapes.

Form Pendants by Form Us with Love for Design House Stockholm

The Form Pendants are meant to be hung in clusters using the three different shapes and different lengths of flex to create installations specific to each space. This is their third lighting project for Design House Stockholm – see the Work Lamp in our earlier story.

Form Pendants by Form Us with Love for Design House Stockholm

The project was on show as part of Form Us With Friends at the Swedish Museum of Architecture during Stockholm Design Week earlier this month – see all our stories about the event here.

Form Pendants by Form Us with Love for Design House Stockholm

Here are some more details from Form Us with Love:


The collaboration between Form Us With Love and Design House Stockholm has been focusing on lighting; first the 2007 Cord Lamp, then the 2009 Work Lamp, and now the 2012 Form Pendants.

The idea behind Form Pendants is simple. Three glass pendants are blown in Bauhaus shapes – a circle, a rectangle and a triangle. They are intended to be grouped as installations, encouraging users to explore the interplay between shapes.

At the heart of Form Pendants is the idea of consumers becoming involved in the design process. Form Us With Love may design the lamps, but it is the consumer who designs the installation. And Design House Stockholm has a clear emphasis on the consumer.

Design House Stockholm has a really nice niche. We come to the home of someone we have never met before and the chances are that they have the Design House lamps. In the end, design is about people using it, says Form Us With Love.

Silent Cargo by SX70 Europe for Anki Gneib

Stockholm designer Anki Gneib challenged artistic collective SX70 Europe to transport her enormous carved candlesticks from their place of manufacture in the woods of Sorvi-Pojat in Finland to her studio in Stockholm. They decided to wear suits for the occasion and photograph the journey.

Silent Cargo by SX70 Europe for Anki Gneib

Eirik V Johnsen and Kristian Pohl of Mentalpropell transported the Holy candle sticks as the first in a series of experiments called Overland Express, for which they intend to photograph large and unwieldy objects as they’re transported across different landscapes.

Silent Cargo by SX70 Europe for Anki Gneib

Gneib’s candle holders are each carved from a single piece of wood with a brass insert in the top to protect them from fire.

Silent Cargo by SX70 Europe for Anki Gneib

There’s also a smaller version called Holy Moly.

Silent Cargo by SX70 Europe for Anki Gneib

She showed them at NK department store during Stockholm Design Week, which took place from 6 to 12 February. See all our stories about the event here.

Silent Cargo by SX70 Europe for Anki Gneib

Here are some more details from Anki Gneib:


HOLY – by Anki Gneib

More than ever we need to surround ourselves with objects that inspire us, that create a mood and make us reflect. The monumental candlestick Holy encourages us to celebrate in our everyday lives.

Silent Cargo by SX70 Europe for Anki Gneib

Holy embraces the Scandinavian traditions of worship and the importance of illumination during our long winter nights with the magical warmth of the candlelight.

Silent Cargo by SX70 Europe for Anki Gneib

The shapes are drawn from classical models, each with its own expression, that complement and interact
with each other.

Silent Cargo by SX70 Europe for Anki Gneib

They are turned from a single piece of wood, with a natural finish or painted with Swedish traditional colors.

Silent Cargo by SX70 Europe for Anki Gneib

HOLY MOLY: height 1600, 1400 and 1100 mm.
Adapted for pillar candles with 150 and 80 mm in diameter.

HOLY: height 570, 490 and 390 mm.
Adapted for taper candles, tealights and pillar candles with 40 mm in diameter.

Silent Cargo by SX70 Europe for Anki Gneib

Each candle has a candleholder in brass to protect against fire and candlegrease.

Silent Cargo by SX70 Europe for Anki Gneib

HOLY has had a long journey. I was curious to see how HOLY would interact with the landscape and challenged the artist collective SX70 Europe to travel with HOLY from Sorvi-Pojat in Finland to Stockholm. They have done this in their own inimitable style, and I am proud to share their project SILENT CARGO with you.

SILENT CARGO – an Overland Express project by SX70 Europe

We wanted to explore how HOLY would interact with the slow, flat landscape in Ostrobothnia. The suited gentlemen from mentalpropell.com accepted the task of letting HOLY inspire them on their way from Sievi to Stockholm. Their investigation of HOLY has led us to see new aspects, both of the candlesticks and of the suited gentlemen. Transporting monumental candlesticks led us to new insights on the interaction between physical objects, people and landscapes.

Silent Cargo by SX70 Europe for Anki Gneib

Kristian Pohl and Eirik Vandvik Johnsen has explored Deadline Art projects since 1988. «Silent Cargo» is our 18th project, and the first one in the series «Overland Express». Later «Overland Express» projects will further investigate what happens when large, unwieldy, mysterious objects are transported over large distances.

Silent Cargo by SX70 Europe for Anki Gneib

Light Jars by Kristine Five Melvær

Light Jars by Kristine Five Melvaer

Norwegian designer Kristine Five Melvær designed these storage jars and lamps to showcase small, precious belongings.

Light Jars by Kristine Five Melvaer

She presented the Light Jars as part of the Greenhouse exhibition of young designers at Stockholm Furniture Fair earlier this month.

Light Jars by Kristine Five Melvaer

The wooden stoppers conceal the light source and rise up to support the electrical flex.

Light Jars by Kristine Five Melvaer

See more stories about Stockholm Design Week here and more lighting here.

Light Jars by Kristine Five Melvaer

Here are some more details from the designer:


Light Jars

The family of Light Jars captures the light and displays it as the precious treasure it is. By placing beloved objects and trinkets in them, the lamps can literally be filled with personal meaning.

Light Jars by Kristine Five Melvaer

The members of the Light Jars family all have different postures and proportions, but the same neck size. The lid holding the light source resembles the power plug on the other end of the cord, considering the poetic notion of power transmission as a life-giving source.

Light Jars by Kristine Five Melvaer

Materials: Hand-turned oak, Mouth-blown glass, Textile-covered electrical cord.

Norwegian Designer Kristine Five Melvær investigates the subject of object communication, bridging the disciplines of product design and graphic design. She is focusing on the communicative potentials of objects as a means to create emotional bonds between object and user. By searching for the sensual essence of phenomena’s, she translates these qualities into sensuous objects with a scandinavian simplicity.

Trotters by TAF for Pieces

Trotters by TAF for Pieces

Designers Gabriella Gustafson & Mattias Ståhlbom of TAF have created a collection of storage cabinets and tables for new brand Pieces with large interchangeable feet made from wood, marble or porcelain.

Trotters by TAF for Pieces

Called Trotters, the series comprises low birch benches and table tops in glass with optional birch cabinets that can be stacked in different configurations.

Trotters by TAF for Pieces

Silicon rings in white or orange sit between the feet and the surfaces they support.

Trotters by TAF for Pieces

The project was presented at NK department store during Stockholm Design Week, which took place from 6 to 12 February. See all our stories about the event here.

Trotters by TAF for Pieces

You can see all our stories about TAF here, including their new lamp for Zero that was also presented at Stockholm Furniture and Light Fair that week.Photographs are by Joakim Bergström.

Trotters by TAF for Pieces

The following information is from TAF:


A new Swedish platform dedicated to all possible objects related to our everyday spaces.

Trotters by TAF for Pieces

Pieces are both creators and curators focused on the unique and personal, built through the craft, skill and quality of Swedish production.

Trotters by TAF for Pieces

Pieces was established in 2011 and grew out of a number of ideas that we wanted to develop in a more independent and free context.

Trotters by TAF for Pieces

Our name reflects our focus on creating individual pieces and objects. Sometimes a single item, sometimes a family.

Trotters by TAF for Pieces

One, or many, connected or independent. Every piece will be a new narrative.

Trotters by TAF for Pieces

The first furniture collection from Pieces is “Trotters” – a small family of low tables and open cabinets designed by Gabriella Gustafson & Mattias Ståhlbom from TAF.

Trotters by TAF for Pieces

Trotters are like characters from a cartoon, or small friends.

Trotters by TAF for Pieces

Working with proportion and twisting the balance of the expected in a cabinet or table, the attention has been focused on the often forgotten and understated foot.

Trotters by TAF for Pieces

Playing with simple geometry, the result is both witty and surprising.

Trotters by TAF for Pieces

By altering only the materials of the foot, the collection provides many possibilities in a very simple way.

Trotters by TAF for Pieces

The feet are available in wood, marble, or white glazed porcelain, carrying tables and cabinets of wood and glass.

Trotters by TAF for Pieces

Additional details in pearl white and orange silicone.

Trotters by TAF for Pieces

High quality materials combined with Swedish craft and tradition.

Trotters by TAF for Pieces

Accompanying the furniture collection is a first edition print from Kyuhyung Cho.

Trotters by TAF for Pieces

A contemporary look based on the spirit of Trotters.

Trotters by TAF for Pieces

Screen printed by hand and framed with the same birch wood used in the furniture collection.

Trotters by TAF for Pieces

Pieces first exhibition was presented in collaboration with NK Inredning on February 7-11th at Nordiska Kompaniet, Stockholm. Trotters is exclusively available at NK.

Halo by Benjamin Hubert for David Design

Halo by Benjamin Hubert for David Design

Stockholm 2012: Londoner Benjamin Hubert has designed a fruit bowl for Swedish brand David Design with concentric circles milled out of a slice of oak, cut deeper as they approach the centre to form a stepped dish.

Halo by Benjamin Hubert for David Design

These steps reduce the surface area of the fruit that’s touching the bowl, allowing air to circulate and preventing mould.

Halo by Benjamin Hubert for David Design

Called Halo, the bowl is part of David Design’s Atelier collection, which also includes the Heart Chair by Claesson Koivisto Rune that we published yesterday.

Halo by Benjamin Hubert for David Design

Stockholm Furniture Fair took place 7-11 February. See all our stories about it here.

Halo by Benjamin Hubert for David Design

Here are some more details from Benjamin Hubert:


Halo – Benjamin Hubert x David Design

Halo is a range of geometric CNC cut Solid Oak fruit bowls designed by Benjamin Hubert for Scandinavian brand David Design’s ‘Atelier collection’.

The bowls signature is a series of concentric ribs in the surface, these ribs allow for a minimum surface area contact with the fruit contents. This allows for optimum airflow beneath the fruit decreasing the presence of mould and increasing the shelf life of the produce.

David Design has re-launched under New management and art direction in 2012 working with a number of established and up and coming designers under new management and art Direction.

Halo by Benjamin Hubert for David Design

Materials:

Oak with natural oil
Oak with black stain

Dimensions W320mm x H60mm

Silestone Slab Vases by Form Us With Love for Cosentino

Silestone Slab Vases by Form Us With Love for Cosentino

Stockholm 2012: Swedish designers Form Us With Love presented vases comprising slabs of quartz compound slotted onto a metal frame in Stockholm last week. Watch the movie »

Silestone Slab Vases by Form Us With Love for Cosentino

The Silestone Slab Vases were created for Spanish brand Cosentino to show off their Silestone material, normally used for kitchen and bathroom surfaces.

Silestone Slab Vases by Form Us With Love for Cosentino

The vases can be reconfigured and made waterproof by the addition of a plastic insert.

Silestone Slab Vases by Form Us With Love for Cosentino

The designers presented five new collaborations at their annual Form Use With Friends showcase, this time at Swedish Museum of Architecture, including the Bento chair we’ve already featured. See photos of the show here.

Silestone Slab Vases by Form Us With Love for Cosentino

Stockholm Design Week took place from 6-12 February and you can see all our stories about it here.

Silestone Slab Vases by Form Us With Love for Cosentino

Photographs are by Jonas Lindström.

Silestone Slab Vases by Form Us With Love for Cosentino

Here are some more details from Form Us With Love:


Silestone Slab Vases

Form Us With Love and Cosentino present a project exploring the quartz surface Silestone. Silestone Slab Vases were showed at the exhibition Form Us With Friends at the Swedish Museum of Architecture during Stockholm Design Week. The project aims to break away from the familiar Silestone slab form and explore the material’s tactile dimension.

The Slab Vases consist of rings of Silestone, which have been slipped over a metal bracket to create a sculptural vase. The rings vary in size and are cut so the shape of the vase changes with each assembly. The material is of Iberian origin, but Scandinavian sensibilities run through the Slab Vases project.

Watch this movie on Dezeen Screen »

Marginal Notes 2012 by Note Design Studio

Marginal Notes 2012 by Note Design Studio

Stockholm 2012: Note Design Studio present a collection of furniture inspired by camping and field trips at Stockholm Design Week this week.

Marginal Notes 2012 by Note Design Studio

The Marginal Notes series was developed from doodles the team made in the margins of their sketchbooks and notebooks over the year, revisited and worked through to physical objects.

Marginal Notes 2012 by Note Design Studio

Pieces include benches resempling logs on a sawbuck, a lamp like a butterfly net plus storage boxes and shelves based on cages for trapping specimines.

Marginal Notes 2012 by Note Design Studio

This is the second Marginal Notes series by Note Design Studio – see last year’s here.

Marginal Notes 2012 by Note Design Studio

Stockholm Design Week continues until 12 February and you can see all our stories about it here.

Marginal Notes 2012 by Note Design Studio

Photos are by Mathias Nero.

Marginal Notes 2012 by Note Design Studio

Here are some more details from Note Design Studio:


Marginal Notes 2012 – Collection
In collaboration with Lerch Träinredningar
Stockholm Design Week February 8-10

The Excursion

We went deep into the forest to explore, measure and collect. With warm clothes, good shoes and woolen caps to protect us, we collected samples and took notes. Butterfly nets and soil sifters worked hard to catch the tiniest living things. When all our cages and boxes were filled we went looking for a shaded glade. With tents, mosquito screens, and some logs to sit on we set up a base camp for the night. After a long expedition, we now had plenty to look through back home.

For the second year (over a cup of coffee) we examined our note books in search of the ideas in the margin, those unique sketches that pop out when you look again, the ones you just need to realise.
Many seemed to have a common theme that we simply called “Base Camp”; the simplistic materials and shapes of scientific field expedition tools adapted to stand wear and tear. Screens, filters, cages – to keep things inside, to let things through – were transformed into a few different pieces. Objects that separate, structure and sort Nature (or space) into understandable amounts. Other ideas connected more to the culture of exploration.

After intense discussions, a few eventually left the paper and materialized into the physical world. Just like last year, we ended up with a diverse collection of colours, shapes, materials and expressions; just the way we like it.

A biologic excursion, why did we end up there? We think it may be the inqusitive approach: to explore your surroundings, to find the beauty and detail in them, to find the respect for them, and to find a way to interact in a fair way with them.

Marginal Notes 2012 by Note Design Studio

Tuck

We came across a picture of a bearded man in a choral red tuque (pronounced “tuck”) – or burglar beanie hat – and the color caught our attention. The hat became poufs to sit on, and the their edges were folded just like the edges of the hat.  It added the function of a pocket for magazines and such, something that made us like the piece even more.

Sifter

A gigantic sifter in the center of an excavation site, turned out to be a tall and handsome coat-hanger. Well, we discussed for a long while if it should work as a lamp or a clothes-hanger, but the first thing that comes to mind is usually the best. The net in the sifter helps with the catching of your keys falling out of your pockets, or just as a basket for your hats and gloves.

Nour

Alexis´ girlfriend Maryam came by the studio, and showed us her fascinating multi-colored origami polyhedra. We thought they would look interesting with a light inside, and a process of finding a paper with the right properties ensued. We gave the many sheets the right play of colours and patterns, and then Maryam put them all together by hand.

Mosquito

We needed backdrops for our exhibition, and with all the time we’ve spent searching for inspiration in the worlds of fieldtrips, excursions and excavations, we had the image of an insect screen in our minds. It is the perfect frame to make things in front of (or behind) it look even better.

Peep

How can boxy storage furniture let more light through? We went for making their walls more transparent. After some material tests, we had a colorful group of characters, each with different sizes and functions. They hold your things, and you can decide what you want to show and what not to. The “Keep” boxes complement the Peeps perfectly.

Keep

A frame for display, like a cage in the zoo. Traps to keep things inside and sometimes let things out of. Simple wooden cube boxes where you decide how much you want to show or not. Some have an open side, others have perforated sliding lids really hard to open from the inside.

Settler

To fell a tree, and to cut it up into useful pieces. A thing of pride for a lumberjack or a settler building their first cabin. The iconic shape of a log on a sawbuck inspired these benches, since a dead tree in the forest is really the best
place for a short rest.

The Catch

Gotcha! A firefly in a butterfly net was the visual cue that led up to this swing-arm lamp. Through its central pivot-point it can be swiveled around the room and shine a light wherever necessary. Also, it really catches the light.

Marginal Notes 2012 by Note Design Studio

About Note:

To note something, to get noted: we are named after what we try to achieve.

We like to pay attention to our surrounding, and try to create things that make others to do that as well.. By looking at what is unique in every project and emphasizing that, we transform non-material values into tactile objects and spaces. We work within the fields of architecture, interiors, products, graphic design and design management. Maybe we can help you out.

Us: Alexis Holmqvist, Susanna Wåhlin, Johannes Carlström, Kristoffer Fagerström and Cristiano Pigazzini.

A big thanks for the success of this project go to Lerch Träinredningar who have helped us throw the all process with their knowledge for construction and materials.

Reel Cabinet and Tie Desk by Carlsten Thostrup

Reel Cabinet and Tie Desk by Carlstenthostrup

Stockholm 2012: designers Elin Carlsten and Elisabeth Thostrup show this cabinet with sliding metal doors suspended from wheels on a rail as part of the Greenhouse exhibition of young designers at Stockholm Furniture Fair this week. Reel Cabinet and Tie Desk by Carlstenthostrup

They also present a metal desk that’s fastened shut with a leather cord around two large buttons, inspired by the fastening on an envelope where string wraps around two paper disks.

Reel Cabinet and Tie Desk by Carlstenthostrup

Stockholm Furniture Fair continues until 11 February and you can see all our stories about it here.

Here are some more details from Carlstenthostrup:


Designer duo Carlsten Thostrup have developed a range of furniture which concern the concepts of identity and origin. It has taken its shape in a number of storage units where the details allow taking over. Welcome to see the Tie-desk and Reel cabinet in our stand, V03: 18.

Reel Cabinet and Tie Desk by Carlstenthostrup

Reel Cabinet

Inspired by the old barn door we designed the Reel Cabinet. A cabinet with large wheels that control the doors.

Reel Cabinet and Tie Desk by Carlstenthostrup

Tie Desk

New York in the 1880s. A new invention of envelopes. “Tension,” that opens and are being sealed by wrapping a cord between two round cardboard buttons. A fine detail that we wanted to take on. Which we also had the opportunity to in the process of sketching Tie Desk – our “home office” furniture. Here, we allowed this particular detail to take over. By wrapping the strap around the metal buttons the Tie Desk opens or closes.

Reel Cabinet and Tie Desk by Carlstenthostrup

Tired of all the mess that work from home results in, we decided to design a modern writing desk. Like a box, Tie Desk opens up. When you are finished for the day and close the valves Tie Desk becomes a unique piece of furniture in your home. At the workshop at Konstfack, University College of Arts, Crafts and Design, we found each other directly, and our ability to give each other’s ideas life, and then together develop them is our greatest strength. It makes our cooperation surprising and enjoyable.

Share by Thomas Bernstrand for Nola

Share by Thomas Bernstrand for Nola

Stockholm 2012: these outdoor chairs by Stockholm designer Thomas Bernstrand are joined together like shopping trolleys to encourage park visitors to tidy them away when they leave.

Share by Thomas Bernstrand for Nola

Having visited parks in Paris where chairs are available for people to place where they want, Bernstrand liked the idea of not being confined to fixed benches but felt sorry for the person who has to collect the chairs in order to cut the grass.

Share by Thomas Bernstrand for Nola

The Share system requires users to insert a coin to release a chair from the chain. The coin is released when they return the chair.

Share by Thomas Bernstrand for Nola

Bernstrand presents the prototype with outdoor furniture band Nola at Stockholm Furniture Fair this week, which continues until 11 February. See all our stories about the event here.

Share by Thomas Bernstrand for Nola

His previous projects include stackable slanting shelves for Swedese and furniture for an artificial beach.

Share by Thomas Bernstrand for Nola

“I like to design furniture for the outdoors because I can go there and see how people are using it,” says Bernstrand. “Once I went back to one of my benches and it was half burnt.”

Share by Thomas Bernstrand for Nola

Here are some more details from Nola:


SharePortable Park Chair Designed by Thomas Bernstrand

Share chairs are lightweight outdoor seats designed to nest within each other as they attach to an immovable base. Like the attachable trolleys used in super- markets and airports, the chairs are equipped with coin-operated locking mechanisms that link them together when not in use. Made for parks, city squares and shopping centres, the chairs are mobile seats that individuals can place where they want to. Share chairs provide more flexibility than fixed seating, as they can be positioned to face the sun, enjoy the shade, or take advantage of the view.

The chair’s locking mechanism can be operated by a coin or a token, encouraging users to return the chairs to the correct location after use. Designed similarly to stackable chairs, Share nests inside each another, making them easy to store when returned to base.