Kulle day bed by Stefanie Schissler features a bobbly surface

Cologne 2014: this day bed by young designer Stefanie Schissler is intentionally lumpy to encourage users to snuggle into it.

Kulle lumpy day bed with boiled-wool bobbles by Stefanie Schissler

The Kulle day bed by Stefanie Schissler has an undulating surface caused by the different sized pieces of upholstery foam concealed beneath its stretchy boiled-wool surface.

Kulle lumpy day bed with boiled-wool bobbles by Stefanie Schissler

The German designer wanted to create a piece of furniture for relaxation that invites the user to lay down through its appearance.

Kulle lumpy day bed with boiled-wool bobbles by Stefanie Schissler

“The look is something new, which is arising curiosity in people,” Schissler told Dezeen. “It is designed to arise the urge to touch and feel it.”

Kulle lumpy day bed with boiled-wool bobbles by Stefanie Schissler

The small cubes of leftover foam used have different densities and heights so the squashiness varies across the surface. “Every bobble feels different,” Schissler explained. “You can feel them but in a very gentle and pleasant way. A lot of people describe it as a massage for the body.”

Kulle lumpy day bed with boiled-wool bobbles by Stefanie Schissler

She added that the piece is not really meant for sitting on but as a landscape for relaxation. “The bobbles at the back are slightly higher so that you can lean your head on them to read a book, but in general the daybed is a piece that is not made to sit on, but to really lie in it, feel it and simply relax.”

Kulle lumpy day bed with boiled-wool bobbles by Stefanie Schissler

Schissler graduates this year from Hochschule für Gestaltung Schwäbisch Gmünd in Germany, but developed this project during an exchange semester at Lund University in Sweden.

She presented the day bed as part of as part of the [D3] Design Talents exhibition at imm cologne earlier this month.

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Oasis by Klára Šumová and Dirk Wright: The design duo collaborates on a collection channeling Art Deco and modernist interiors and the magic of the desert

Oasis by Klára Šumová and Dirk Wright


Strong storytelling plays a vital role in the work of Klára Šumová. Through her interior objects of various typologies and scales, the designer explores poetry and stories in design. Šumová debuted several years ago with her…

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Bookbinder Shelf and bedroom furniture by Florian Hauswirth

Swiss designer Florian Hauswirth has designed a collection of bedroom furniture including an ash shelving unit with components made by a bookbinder.

Bedroom Collection by Florian Hauswirth
Bookbinder Shelf

The three-tier Bookbinder Shelf by Florian Hauswirth features two ladder-like oak side frames and four shelves, joined by wooden components that hook under the side struts.

Bedroom Collection by Florian Hauswirth

“It is a simple system with two screws per plank, which you don’t need an instruction manual to put together,” said Hauswirth.

Bedroom Collection by Florian Hauswirth
Radius Edge Bed

The shelving unit can be enclosed by adding coloured panels to the ends or flaps with tabs to the front, which were made of cardboard covered with textile by a bookbinder.

Bookbinder Shelf and bedroom furniture by Florian Hauswirth
Bookbox

“I adapted this craft and applied it to my furniture design,” he said. “It is somehow logical for a bookshelf to incorporate a bookbinding technique.”

Bookbinder Shelf and bedroom furniture by Florian Hauswirth

His Bedroom Collection also features a bed and storage box for small items kept beside it.

The Radius Edge Bed features a simple curved joint on the legs. “Wooden joints are usually quite sharp and edgy, but as a tree is round it seems logical to break this craft tradition,” explained Hauswirth.

Bookbinder Shelf and bedroom furniture by Florian Hauswirth

The Bedbox is made in the same materials as the panels for the shelving unit. It features a flap on the top for storing a mobile phone and a drawer that pulls out from the front.

Bedroom Collection by Florian Hauswirth
Bookbinder Shelf ash joints

Hauswirth previously worked at Vitra and studied industrial design at the University of Applied Sciences and Arts Northwestern Switzerland. He currently works as a designer and teacher in Beil, Switzerland.

Photography is by Stefan Hoffmann.

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by Florian Hauswirth
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Bumper Bed by Marc Newson for Domeau & Pérès

Product news: Australian designer Marc Newson has surrounded this bed for French brand Domeau & Pérès with chunky bumpers.

Bumper Bed by Marc Newson

Marc Newson enclosed the Bumper Bed within padded leather cushions to evoke the sense of sleeping on a mattress laid directly on the ground.

“Most people I know have at some point in their lives slept on a mattress on the floor,” said Newson. “So I thought it would be nice to design a bed that would [encourage] people like me to replace their faithful mattress with a ‘beautiful bed’.”

Bumper Bed by Marc Newson

One lip sits flush with the mattress and a second wraps around the bed at floor level, with an orange leather strip running between the two.

The sides are deep enough to be used as seats and can be ordered from Domeau & Pérès in white, dove (pictured) or chocolate colours.

Bumper Bed by Marc Newson

Marc Newson recently teamed up with Apple senior vide president of design Jonathan Ive to design a range of products to auction for U2 frontman Bono’s charity (RED).

More beds on Dezeen include one that curls round on itself and another designed to cure insomnia.

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See more design by Marc Newson »

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Campana Beds by Fernando and Humberto Campana for Edra

Milan 2013: a curtain of raffia creates a hairy veil around one of five beds designed by Brazilian duo Fernando and Humberto Campana for Italian furniture brand Edra.

Campana beds by Fernando and Humberto Campana for Edra

The Campana Beds, for Edra’s inaugural bed collection, reinterpret some of the Campana brothers’ most famous furniture designs.

Campana beds by Fernando and Humberto Campana for Edra

Using the materials of the 2010 Cabana cabinet, the Cabana bed (top) is surrounded by long strands of raffia that can be tied back using magnetic leather belts, while the Grinza bed (above) is covered in wrinkled leather, just like the 2011 Grinza chair.

Campana beds by Fernando and Humberto Campana for Edra

The fake fur-covered Cipria sofa from 2009 is reimagined for the Cipria bed (above), which comes with a fluffy pink headboard.

Campana beds by Fernando and Humberto Campana for Edra

The Corallo bed (above) has a jumbled frame of golden wire, similar to the 2004 Corallo chair.

Campana beds by Fernando and Humberto Campana for Edra

The fifth bed in the collection is Favela (above and below), which is made from wooden boards that have been roughly glued and nailed together. The design first appeared in the Favela chairs, which were used within the Campana’s first hotel interior.

Campana beds by Fernando and Humberto Campana for Edra

The Campana beds were shown last week in Milan at the Edra showroom.

See more design by Fernando and Humberto Campana, including their famous Cartoon Chairs made from stuffed toys and a recent collection for Louis Vuitton.

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Here’s some more information from Edra:


In the Edra showroom, visitors will be also treated to a preview of the collection “Campana beds” – five beds created by Fernando and Humberto Campana, which continue that journey between roots and identity started with couches and armchairs already in the collection. These beds are highly unique because of their use of unusual materials inspired by nature and creativity, refined by great manual skills and advanced technologies.

Edra opens its new division, Edra beds, with the Campana Brothers. The five beds that make up the collection are: “Corallo bed” with headboard and footboard made by a weave of inox wire that has been hand-curved and finished with a special golden finish, that contains pure gold; “Favela bed” which is all made of wooden small boards, glued and nailed together by hand one over the other, according to an intentionally casual scheme; “Cabana bed”, screened by raffia veils treated with a special fire-proofing process and featuring leather belts with magnetic clips to control the drapery; “Cipria bed” stuffed with expanded polyurethane and synthetic wadding, with headboard made of four pillows attached to a metallic structure and covered in eco-fur; “Grinza bed” featuring a metallic structure covered by abundant hanging drapery, available in leather.

All the beds in the “Campana beds” collection come with sheets and comforters made of pure natural linen.

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Humberto Campana for Edra
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Area Bed by Alain Gilles for Magnitude

The Interieur Foundation’s Designer of the Year Alain Gilles will launch a bed that lets users hide chairs, a desk or even a bath behind its adaptable headboard at design fair Interieur 2012, which opens tomorrow in Kortrijk, Belgium.

Area Bed by Alain Gilles for Magnitude

The Area Bed has a modular headboard with a range of pieces, both curved and straight, which act as room dividers.

Area Bed by Alain Gilles for Magnitude

Belgian bed manufacturer Magnitude asked Gilles to develop a design that would fit with its standard box-spring bed bases. “I presented several beds [and] they eventually picked the ‘room in a room’ concept,” Gilles told Dezeen.

Area Bed by Alain Gilles for Magnitude

“The headboard becomes a piece that can redefine the whole architecture of the room and its general dynamic,” he explained.

Area Bed by Alain Gilles for Magnitude

It’s made of wooden panels covered with a layer of foam and upholstered with fabric. Two bedside tables, a lamp and a bench, all made from aluminium and steel, complete the collection.

Area Bed by Alain Gilles for Magnitude

Gilles was named Designer of the Year 2012 by the Interieur Foundation and will be presenting a retrospective of his work including his Big Table for Bonaldo alongside Area Bed at the Interieur 2012 design exhibition in Belgium until from tomorrow until 28 October.

Area Bed by Alain Gilles for Magnitude

Other work by Gilles we’ve featured on Dezeen includes modular containers made from bright white boxes and chairs made from discarded objects.

Area Bed by Alain Gilles for Magnitude

See all our stories about Alain Gilles »
See all our stories about beds »

Area Bed by Alain Gilles for Magnitude

Here’s some more information from the designer:


Area Bed – the room within a room concept

This novel bed concept is about understanding and taking into account not only what a bed is used for today, but also for what different functions a bedroom can be used for. The idea was then to design a bed that answers these new needs and opens up the possibilities.

The bedroom has become more than just a place where people sleep. In some cases it is now also used as a bathroom, a personal office, or as an extra room or living room. So the idea is to offer a bed that through the modularity of its bed head can also serve as room divider and room organiser. The bed head then becomes a piece that can redefine the whole architecture of the room and its general dynamic just like a wall or room practitioner would. The bed itself can now be used to define a space for a bathroom, or for a small office behind the bed for instance, thus creating a sort of room in a room concept.

But the headboard can also become an element that wraps around the walls to create a cocoon-like-space where a small desk or armchair can be placed along the bed as in some hotels, thus creating warmer and more confined spaces. The “Area” bed can be configured in a lot of different possibilities, since the ends of the headboard are treated as add-ons that can either be curved at 90 degrees or straight, thus offering the possibility to create more opened or closed spaces.

Visually, the “Area” bed plays on asymmetry to bring a dynamic to something that is usually seen as rather static. It is also a fairly graphic bed thanks to its extra elements such as the small bedside table, “pocket table”, repositionable lamp and bench. All these elements create a contrast with the bed itself thanks to the use of aluminium and steel.

As for the “pocket table” it is the answer to the need people have to sometimes hide things in a drawer. It is a drawer without the drawer… a drawer with easier access at night since there is no need to open it. It is a visually light element where the functionality of the drawer is created thanks to the shadow created by the opening… a pocket where things can be partly hidden in a very subtle manner.

As for the lamp, it can be repositioned by the user along the top of the bed head that then acts as a supporting rail. All the extra elements such as the bedside table or bench for instance have been designed using the minimum amount of material and transformation needed and in order to bring an idea of lightness to the warm, comfortable and welcoming beds that Magnitude stands for.

This bed is very much about offering new opportunities to the end-users and architects, the possibility to create rooms in rooms or to define areas thanks to its modular headboard and to offer playful elements to organize the area where one sleep.

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for Magnitude
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Habitat Valencia 2011, Part Two

From space-saving storage to upcycled plastic buckets, fresh design spotted at Spain’s biggest design fair

A slightly more sober follow-up to last week’s report on anthropomorphic design spied at Habitat Valencia, here we’ve surveyed the best in clever furniture solutions from Spain. The following spans ideas for minimalists who don’t even want to own candleholders to those who never want to buy another bedframe, all tied together by their inventive take on common household needs.

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Mentira Cadira’s Doce, simple nesting cubes, incorporates elastic bands that make stashing magazines and remotes easy. By skipping the complications of a drawer or pocket, the concept saves space too.

The modular design of “Veinte” allows for expansive storage in an unconventional shape. The round cylinders group together or stand alone as needed, providing bright pops of yellow, green and blue.

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The all-in-one design of design collective Un4verde’s Candelara turns a simple taper “into a decorative, singular object” in and of itself. The built-in base catches drips and eliminates the melting and whittling that it sometimes takes to fit a candle into a holder. It’s available now from Un4Verde for €20.

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Vandidoo’s elegant v-shaped rack is a shelf that’s anything but boring. Available in several colors, it holds objects at an angle, incorporating a simple dowel for even more usefulness.

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Sometimes a simple hook is all that’s needed to transform an unused space into a clutter-organizing center. Adding contemporary looks to the age-old concept, Nachacht’s oak Pauli rack comes in two different asymmetrical versions.

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Luis Eslava’s Cap light for Almerich features a symmetrical design, using the same A-line shape for the light shade as well as for a cup at the base. The added storage—for plants, pens or any other clutter—adds to the visual harmony.

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The aptly-named Infinite bed by
Bm
not only expands for growing families, but doubles as a built-in bedside table if you so desire.

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Seen among Mexico’s standout student work from the Tecnológico de Moterrey, Cristina Diaz’ prototypes play on the adapted use of a common plastic bucket as a stool. Reimagining them as thrones and gilded stools, she calls the collection simply Sátira.


Best of CH 2010: Top Five Cool Hunting Videos

America’s biggest antiques show, handmade instruments plus artisan cars, beds and chocolate from our favorite videos of 2010

Another great year for Cool Hunting Video, 2010 saw a cast of fantastic characters from Brooklyn to Bristol. While each video is its own compelling story, some of our personal favorites are highlighted below.

Micachu and the Shapes

We got an inside look at how British musician Micachu makes her instruments and her music with The Shapes. Their hands-on approach and experimental nature brought this piece to life, not to mention their irresistible charm.

Hästens

The quality and process of the Hästens mattress production was fantastic enough in itself to merit a video, but we quickly discovered that the dedicated group of people behind the scenes are as equally intriguing as their product.

Mast Brothers

Friends and now chocolate collaborators, the Mast Brothers gave us a walk-through of their delectable factory. Their unique process and philosophy make these siblings stand out in the chocolate world and we hope to work on more delicious projects with them in 2011.

Bristol Cars

We went to London’s Kensington area to check out where and how Bristol makes their luxurious cars. The experience made it clear why driving a hand-built custom car has its perks—the beauty in the design and thought that goes into each instant classic was a reminder of how much work it takes to stay classy.

Brimfield Dealers

At Brimfield we found a perfect slice of Americana. The items varied as widely as the people, but both were definitely worth getting to know. In our video about the dealers we met a couple who had been selling collectibles for most of their adult lives, offering valuable insight on the market while expressing true love for what they do and serving as an inspiration to the eccentric in all of us.


Cool Hunting Video Presents: Hästens

In this video, we visit the family-run business Hästens at their factory in Köping, Sweden where they’ve been building their notoriously luxurious beds for five generations. Johan Luukas leads the tour, while senior project manager Perry Forsberg explains how the company evolved from their saddle-making roots into the most coveted built-to-order bed business today.

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Blend by Mieke Meijer

Dutch designer Mieke Meijer has created a bed that is merged into a pair of chairs. (more…)