Impressive Paper Origami

Coup de cœur pour l’artiste Nguyen Hung Cuong vivant à Hanoï et qui imagine / réalise de superbes créations en technique origami en utilisant des billets ou encore le « Dó », un papier largement répandu au Vietnam. De magnifiques animaux de papier à découvrir en images dans la suite de l’article.

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Life-Size Photography of Whales

Le dernier livre du photographe américain Bryan Austin regroupe des clichés impressionnants de Baleines de Minke. Des images sous-marines magnifiques qui révèlent un monde à la fois sensible, vibrant et apaisant. L’ensemble de la série est à découvrir sur son portfolio et dans la suite de l’article.

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Animals Stuck in Zoo

Certains animaux sauvages naissent, vivent et meurent en captivité. Le photographe allemand Daniel Zakharov a voulu souligner avec sa série « Modern Wilderness » l’étrangeté de cette situation en montrant le quotidien de ces animaux au Zoo. Des images émouvantes à découvrir dans la suite.

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Interview: Becky Crew: Australian science writer and author of “Zombie Birds, Astronaut Fish and Other Weird Animals”

Interview: Becky Crew


Becky Crew spent her childhood in the picturesque Blue Mountains in Australia, with her (human) family and a menagerie that included dogs, cats, pigeons, crabs and all kinds of critters. Suffice to say she has always had a bit of a fascination with…

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Fangblade by Stephan Alexandr: Exploring nostalgia and nature with hand-carved alligator jawbones

Fangblade by Stephan Alexandr


Continuing his curious exploration of alternative uses for animal bones, Portland’s Stephan Alexandr recently released his latest artistic creation—the Fangblade. Carved from alligator jawbones, the handy letter-openers still sport vestigial teeth to remind its user…

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Tjirp by Cas Moor

Product news: this doorstop by Belgian designer Cas Moor is shaped like a tiny bird.

Tjirp by Cas Moor

Called Tjirp, the bird’s slim rear is decorated with a narrow cut and slides under a door to wedge it open.

Tjirp by Cas Moor

The doorstop is handmade from oak by the designer and comes with a white, black or natural head.

Tjirp by Cas Moor

Cas Moor is based in Ghent where he is currently studying multimedia design at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts.

Tjirp by Cas Moor

Other bird-related design we’ve featured includes a bird box inside a flowerpot, a light that looks like birds sitting on a wire and a huge woodland nesting box for birds and humans.

We’ve also featured a wooden doorstop that doubles as a toy car – see all homeware on Dezeen.

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Skyscraper for bees by University at Buffalo students

High-rise living is no longer just for people. A team of architecture students from the University at Buffalo has recently constructed a skyscraper for a colony of bees (+ slideshow).

Skyscraper for bees by University at Buffalo students

Erected amongst a desolate group of disused grain silos beside the Buffalo River, the seven-metre tower provides a new hive for honey bees that had formerly taken up residence in the boarded-up window of an old office block.

Skyscraper for bees by University at Buffalo students

The tower is clad with a honeycomb of hexagonal steel panels. Triangular perforations speckle the surfaces, allowing light to filter gently inside.

Skyscraper for bees by University at Buffalo students

The bees are housed in a hexagonal wooden box suspended near the top of the tower. The base of the box is glazed so visitors can enter the tower and look up into the hive.

Skyscraper for bees by University at Buffalo students

The box is also attached to a system of pulleys so that beekeepers can bring it safely down to ground for maintenance tasks. University at Buffalo students Courtney Creenan, Kyle Mastalinski, Daniel Nead, Lisa Stern and Scott Selin named the project Elevator B, as a reference to this mechanism.

Skyscraper for bees by University at Buffalo students

The tower represents the winning entry of the university’s Hive City competition, which asked students to design a habitat for the bees. Other entries included a wooden cube and a geodesic dome.

Skyscraper for bees by University at Buffalo students

Other stories on Dezeen relating to bees include conceptual proposals for artificial bees and a series of honeycomb vases constructed by bees. See more stories about insects on Dezeen.

Here’s a statement from the design team:


Elevator B

Elevator B is an urban habitat for a colony of honeybees, which originally occupied a boarded window in an abandoned office building in Buffalo, NY. Although not created for a specific client organization per se, the project has generated a great deal of public curiosity because of the combination of the colony of honeybees, an interesting and until very recently, a restricted-access site, and a well-designed object. The site, Silo City, is a group of largely abandoned grain elevators and silos on the Buffalo River. Elevator B is intended as a symbol of the site’s environmental and economic regeneration.

Skyscraper for bees by University at Buffalo students

The 22′ tall tower is a honeycombed steel structure designed and built utilizing standard steel angle and tube sections. It is sheathed in perforated stainless steel panels that were parametrically designed to protect the hive and it’s visitors from the wind, and allow for both solar gain in the winter and shading in the summer. The bees are housed in a hexagonal cypress box with a laminated glass bottom through which the bees can be observed.

This “beecab” provides protection, warmth and separates entry access between bees and humans. Visitors are able to enter the tower, stand below the cypress beecab and look up to view the colony of bees behind glass, similar to an ant farm, as they build their hive. Beekeepers gain access to the hive by lowering it, allowing them to ensure the health and safety of the bees. This feature also caters to the school groups that visit the site, encouraging children to get a close up view.

Visitors to the site have ranged from school groups discussing the natural ecosystems of Western New York and the Great Lakes, to adult photography classes using Elevator B and the site as a subject. A nearby nature preserve has also led several field trips to the project and is in the process of developing a formal education program centered on the bees and on colony collapse disorder, which threatens the species. Interpretive signage about honeybees and the site is currently under development and will be part of the larger redevelopment plan for Silo City.

Skyscraper for bees by University at Buffalo students

The questions asked by visitors range from the simple to the complex, but they would never have been asked in the first place if the visitor did not have the access to bees that is fostered by Elevator B. This is a clear demonstration that architecture can and does do more than serve aesthetic or structural purposes. In Elevator B’s example, it sparks children to learn and adults to reconsider what they thought they knew. This includes the designers themselves, who have not only designed for the needs of their clients but have become inspired to become advocates for them as well.

Location: Silo City in Buffalo NY
Firm Name: Hive City
Team: Courtney Creenan, Kyle Mastalinski, Daniel Nead, Lisa Stern, Scott Selin
Project Sponsors: University at Buffalo School of Architecture and Planning, Rigidized Metals Corporation

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Fashion Zoo Animals

Basé à Barcelone, le graphiste Yago Partal nous propose des photo-manipulations afin de découvrir des animaux variées sous différentes tenues fashions, du costume le plus chic à la chemise hawaïenne. Un rendu drôle pour des visuels réunis sous le nom de Zoo Portraits à découvrir dans la suite en images.

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Pen Decorated Animals

Focus sur le travail de l’illustrateur et infographiste basé à Los Angeles Ben Kwok, aussi surnommé Bioworkz. Il compose de magnifiques créations basées sur des représentations d’animaux décorées et très détaillées uniquement à l’aide d’un stylo. A découvrir en images dans la suite de l’article.

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Barber Campaign

L’agence 180 Amsterdam a imaginé cette série de prints très réussis pour le salon « Barber Shaves & Trims ». Avec un slogan proposant d’apprivoiser la bête, ces visuels nous montrent des animaux sauvages avec des moustaches bien taillées. Un rendu simple et original à découvrir dans la suite de l’article.

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