Movie: Toblerone House by Studio MK27 through the eyes of a cat

Movie: Brazilian architect Marcio Kogan of Studio MK27 used cinematic techniques he picked up in his early career as a movie director to film one of his latest projects through the eyes of the client’s pet cat.

Toblerone House by Studio MK27

Toblerone House is a two-storey residence in São Paulo comprising a glazed ground floor and a timber-clad upper floor, which are separated from one another by an overhanging concrete slab.

Toblerone House by Studio MK27

The movie shows the cat taking a walk along the protruding edges of this slab, as well as through each of the rooms and around the garden.

Toblerone House by Studio MK27

Explaining the decision to film the house in this way, Studio MK27 architect Suzana Glogowski told Dezeen how the team enjoyed making a series of movies for this year’s Venice Architecture Biennale to show “the day by day life of one of our houses, where the architecture is not important” and decided to make another for this house.

Toblerone House by Studio MK27

Studio MK47 also recently unveiled a collection of furniture made by construction workers, as part of the London Design Festival – find out more here.

See all our stories about Studio MK27 »

Photography is by Nelson Kon.

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through the eyes of a cat
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Charlotte Cory

An English artist curiously revisits the Victorian era

Charlotte Cory

When the Queen of England is among your collectors, you know you’re doing something right. But British writer and artist Charlotte Cory doesn’t let this distinction go to her head—that much is clear from the casual way in which she delivered her work to Windsor Castle. “I went and…

Continue Reading…


Origami Animals

Marc Fichou nous propose de découvrir cette superbe série d’origamis représentant différents animaux. La photographie de l’origami elle-même est ensuite pliée et dépliée. La pièce finale est ainsi à la fois photographique et sculpturale. Plus d’images à découvrir dans la suite.

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New Pinterest board: pets

New Pinterest board: animals

The popularity of a staircase designed for dogs (bottom right) we published this week reminded us that pets often creep into architecture and interior photo shoots on Dezeen, so we’ve compiled them all into our latest Pinterest board dedicated to animals. Over 26,000 people now follow us on Pinterest – join them here.

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See all the stories that feature animals on Dezeen »

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“Genetically modified stingrays may interbreed with wild population” says Rayfish shoe brand

Dezeen Wire: Thai shoe brand Rayfish says animal rights activists have broken into its stingray breeding facility, two months after its claims to have developed bio-engineered stingray skin for making customised trainers were met with outrage and and scepticism (+ movie).

The first movie shows a video statement from the company’s CEO Raymond Ong, in which he asks consumers to question the provenance of their belongings, while the second was apparently posted on Youtube by the activists.

"Genetically modified stingrays may interbreed with wild population" says Rayfish shoe brand

Rayfish announced in June that it had pioneered a process of “bio-customisation” that allowed customers to design patterns to be grown on genetically modified stingrays – read reactions to the claims in our earlier story.

Rayfish sneakers

Here’s the release from Rayfish:


Animal Rights Activists Break into Rayfish Footwear Headquarters, Steal Dozens of Stingrays

CEO Raymond Ong promises that company will return “stronger than ever” after setback

This Sunday, August 12, activists broke into the headquarters of Rayfish Footwear, destroying lab equipment and sneakers, and stealing numerous living stingrays. A video on YouTube depicts masked activists removing stingrays from the Rayfish aquaculture facility and releasing the animals into the nearby ocean.

In a video statement, CEO Raymond Ong expressed deep regret over the loss: “Not only is this crime a terrible setback for my company and employees, it is also a personal tragedy.” Ong acknowledged the conflicted public response to Rayfish’s bio-customization technique, but emphasized the company’s commitment to excellent working conditions for its staff and to the humane treatment of its stingrays. “Rest assured that I fully understand that radical technological advances often make us uneasy,” Ong said, adding, “We need to get over our unwillingness to change. We need to learn love the future again.” Ong also noted his concern that the genetically modified stingrays may interbreed with wild populations.

Rayfish Footwear is currently working with local authorities to identify the culprits. A reward of 40,000 THB has been offered to area fishermen for the return of any of the released rays. Despite the damage, Rayfish officials anticipate that the October date for commercial production should be pushed back by no more than two months. The company is suspending its Grow Your Sneaker design contest until further notice, although the online contest page will remain open for entries.

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with wild population” says Rayfish shoe brand
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House Renovation in Vietnam by 07Beach

There’s a special staircase for dogs at this renovated house in Ho Chi Minh City by architecture studio 07Beach.

House Renovation in Vietnam by 07Beach

The pets’ route features narrower treads and shorter risers than the adjacent one for humans, making it more suited to canine strides.

House Renovation in Vietnam by 07Beach

This also means the dogs’ staircase is nearly twice as long so it curls round the back of the TV towards the front door.

House Renovation in Vietnam by 07Beach

We’ve previously featured a house where shelves create a route for a pet cat, as well as a house with a ceiling ledge for a cat to curl up on.

House Renovation in Vietnam by 07Beach

Photography is by Hiroyuki Oki of Decon Photo Studio.

House Renovation in Vietnam by 07Beach

Ground and first floor plans – click above for larger image

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by 07Beach
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Animals Series

Découverte des œuvres de l’artiste londonien Von (également connu sous le nom HelloVon), auteur de nombreuses séries et sérigraphies pour des marques comme Nike ou American Express. Voici ces illustrations originales issu de son dernier projet « Animals Series » visible sur son portfolio et dans la suite de l’article.

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Mousetraps by Johanna Schmeer

Mousetraps by Johanna Schmeer

German designer Johanna Schmeer has created a set of traps for catching genetically modified mice.

Mousetraps by Johanna Schmeer

The first of the three traps is a spiralling tube, designed to capture mice with an inner ear abnormality that affects their sense of balance and causes them to run around in circles.

Mousetraps by Johanna Schmeer

A mouse with a mutation to causes it to sing like a bird should be attracted to the second trap, which is a speaker that plays birdsong, while the third trap is a magnet that will confuse mice with brain implants and temporarily paralyse them.

We’ve previously featured a set of non-lethal mousetraps for catching regular mice.

See more stories about animal-related design »

Here’s some explanation from Schmeer:


The project “Mousetraps No.3, 14 and 18″ aims at creating a reflection and discussion about the altering and design of life forms, by speculating into a future where these new life forms become commonplace, and a part of our natural environment.

The traps are designed for three different genetically and technologically modified rodents, which exist in research laboratories today.

The “waltzing mouse”, the only one of the three that already exists in nature, has a genetic abnormality which, because of a defect of the inner ear, causes the mouse to run in circles due to problems with its balance. The trap captures the mouse in a circular pipe which is closed at the top – due to the genetic defect the mouse will not be able to escape by walking backwards or turning around.

The “cyborg mouse” is a mouse like the many rodents that have been used in laboratories to test brain implants. The trap captures the mouse by attracting it to a strong magnet, which switches off its movement controlling brain implant.

The third trap is shaped like a speaker and plays birdsongs to attract the “birdsong mouse”, a mouse that sings like a bird, which has been created by Japanese researchers.

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Johanna Schmeer
appeared first on Dezeen.

Proposal for Resuscitating Prehistoric Creatures by Marguerite Humeau

Designer Marguerite Humeau has reconstructed the vocal tracts of prehistoric creatures to capture the shrieks and grunts they might have made (+ slideshow + movie).

Proposal for Resuscitating Prehistoric Creatures by Marguerite Humeau

Vocal tracts are made from soft tissue so they do not fossilise, meaning that Humeau had to speculate on what the surrounding tissue would have been like by analysing bones from the head, neck and chest areas of fossilised animals.

Proposal for Resuscitating Prehistoric Creatures by Marguerite Humeau

Scans of elephants, wild boars, dolphins and porpoises – the closest living relatives to the three extinct species Humeau chose to recreate – also helped to map the probable shape of the vocal tracts.

Proposal for Resuscitating Prehistoric Creatures by Marguerite Humeau

Humeau contacted dozens of experts, including palaeontologists, zoologists, veterinarians, engineers, explorers, surgeons, ear and throat specialists and radiologists, to help her work out the designs.

Proposal for Resuscitating Prehistoric Creatures by Marguerite Humeau

She produced models of each extinct animal’s likely resonance cavities, larynx, vocal cords and windpipe, and recorded the sounds that each animal might have made.

Proposal for Resuscitating Prehistoric Creatures by Marguerite Humeau

The first version of the project was presented for her graduation from London’s Royal College of Art last year.

Proposal for Resuscitating Prehistoric Creatures by Marguerite Humeau

The initial project recreated the sounds of the extinct Imperial Mammoth, and was then expanded to include Ambulocetus, known as the prehistoric ‘walking whale’, and Entelodont, known as the ‘terminator pig’.

Proposal for Resuscitating Prehistoric Creatures by Marguerite Humeau

The models have now been presented as part of an installation and performance at the Politique Fiction exhibition at Cité du Design in Saint-Étienne, France.

Proposal for Resuscitating Prehistoric Creatures by Marguerite Humeau

The movie is by Ben Penna and sound is by Association Phonotonic. Photographs are by Felipe Ribon.

Here’s some more information from the designer:


Proposal for Resuscitating Prehistoric Creatures sets up the rebirth of cloned creatures, their wandering and their sound epic. They are seeking to evolve in our contemporary era.

The designer, who became the heroine of a quasi-mystic epic journey, aims to resuscitate the sound of prehistoric creatures by reconstructing their vocal tracts. This is problematic from the scientific point of view: since the vocal tract is made of soft tissue, it does not fossilise. The only things that have been preserved through time are the surrounding bones. The inner parts have to be redesigned.

Humeau had to overcome the difficulty of telling history and prehistory, and also to create a work from non-existent, inaccessible or lost data. Design, fiction, science, speculations and phantasms serve the project ambition. Advice from experts as well as predictions were used to craft the roars of the new creatures. The epic, as real as fantasised, gives birth to three semi-real roaring creatures: a Mammoth Imperator, an Entelodont aka Terminator Pig, and an Ambulocetus “walking whale”.

From the exhibition curator Alexandra Midal:

Marguerite Humeau graduated from the interactive design department of the Royal College of Art in London in 2011. She resurrects the sounds made by prehistoric animals by reconstructing their vocal chords. This task is not easy when you realise that no fossils of these non-bone parts exist. For months, she conducted a dialogue with palaeontologists, zoologists, veterinary experts, engineers, explorers, surgeons, doctors and radiologists. Far from being a backward looking and romantic work, on the contrary she is carried along by the desire to feel the physical presence of these animals from another time.

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by Marguerite Humeau
appeared first on Dezeen.

Ronny by Daniel Böttcher for Formverleih at Dezeen Super Store

These felt elephant toys by German designer Daniel Böttcher are available at our pop-up design emporium Dezeen Super Store at 38 Monmouth Street, Seven Dials, Covent Garden, London WC2.

Ronny and Peggy by Daniel Böttcher for Formverleih at Dezeen Super Store

Called Ronny, the toys are cut out from flat sheets of wool felt and assembled by hand with cotton laces at the corners. The felt is rigid enough to make them stand upright, and the bodies and heads are hollow so they can also be used as puppets.

Ronny and Peggy by Daniel Böttcher for Formverleih at Dezeen Super Store

There’s also a rhino called Peggy but we only have a photo of her from behind:

Ronny and Peggy by Daniel Böttcher for Formverleih at Dezeen Super Store

Böttcher founded design brand Formverleih with Marlene Schroeder last year after they graduated together from Westsächsische Hochschule Zwickau University of Applied Arts in Schneeberg.

Ronny and Peggy by Daniel Böttcher for Formverleih at Dezeen Super Store

Dezeen editor-in-chief Marcus Fairs spotted the toys at the Blickfang Design Workshop in Copenhagen last month. Check out photos from the event in our Facebook album.

Ronny and Peggy by Daniel Böttcher for Formverleih at Dezeen Super Store

See all our stories about toys »
See all our stories about animals »

Dezeen Super Store

38 Monmouth Street, London WC2
1 July – 30 September 2012

Monday to Saturday: 11am to 7pm
Sunday: 11am to 5pm

Here’s some more information from Formverleih:


Ronny and Peggy
limited edition

The elephant Ronny and the rhinoceros Peggy are timeless toys, collectibles or accessories for interior design. Their bodies are hollow and their heads are moveable, that’s why they can be used as hand puppets, too.

Daniel Böttcher developed the felt toy collection for formverleih based on the idea to combine certain felt pieces to build three dimensional objects. All pieces of Ronny and Peggy are connected by hand with cross stitches such as the bindings of shoelaces. All stitches and the 5 mm thick felt body make them robust. The whole production process of Ronny and Peggy is located in Germany.

Formverleih is a German label for product design, which was founded in 2011 by the junior designers Daniel Böttcher and Marlene Schroeder. The name Formverleih is a German wordplay. It means to give something a new form but also to lend a form to somebody.

From 2005 to 2010 both the young designers studied product, object and textile design at AKS Schneeberg in Germany. During this time they worked together for certain projects. After their studies they decided to create and produce limited product collections in collaboration with local companies.

Daniel Böttcher and Marlene Schroeder mostly create furniture, toys and interior accessories with ecological and sustainable materials like felt or wood. They try to combine traditional handicraft techniques and timeless shapes to develop multifunctional products. The two designers are focused on high quality and characteristics of materials to establish a new way of simplicity.

Materials
Bodies: 100 % wool felt
Ribbon: 100 % cotton

Price
Ronny: £85
Peggy: £73

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at Dezeen Super Store
appeared first on Dezeen.