Angolo hooks by Sébastien Cordoléoni for Moustache

Angolo hooks by Sébastien Cordoléoni for Moustache

Product news: French designer Sébastien Cordoléoni has created a range of wall-mounted containers and hooks for Parisian brand Moustache.

Angolo hooks by Sébastien Cordoléoni for Moustache

Called Angolo, the set comprises three metal pockets for stashing small items, like keys and sunglasses in the hallway, while larger things like coats or umbrellas can be hooked over their tops.

Angolo hooks by Sébastien Cordoléoni for Moustache

Moustache launched the designs at Maison&Objet in Paris last month alongside a series of vases with tops that loop over the flowers and new pieces in the Balcon range by Inga Sempé. Sébastien Cordoléoni has a studio in Aix en Provence.

Angolo hooks by Sébastien Cordoléoni for Moustache

See all our stories about design at Maison&Objet here, including cutlery based on chopsticks by Toyo Ito and a chair draped in a wooden mat by Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance.

More designs for coat hooks »
More products from Moustache »

The post Angolo hooks by Sébastien Cordoléoni
for Moustache
appeared first on Dezeen.

Angolo hooks by Sébastien Cordoleani for Moustache

Angolo hooks by Sébastien Cordoléoni for Moustache

Product news: French designer Sébastien Cordoleani has created a range of wall-mounted containers and hooks for Parisian brand Moustache.

Angolo hooks by Sébastien Cordoléoni for Moustache

Called Angolo, the set comprises three metal pockets for stashing small items, like keys and sunglasses in the hallway, while larger things like coats or umbrellas can be hooked over their tops.

Angolo hooks by Sébastien Cordoléoni for Moustache

Moustache launched the designs at Maison&Objet in Paris last month alongside a series of vases with tops that loop over the flowers and new pieces in the Balcon range by Inga Sempé. Sébastien Cordoleani has a studio in Aix en Provence.

Angolo hooks by Sébastien Cordoléoni for Moustache

See all our stories about design at Maison&Objet here, including cutlery based on chopsticks by Toyo Ito and a chair draped in a wooden mat by Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance.

More designs for coat hooks »
More products from Moustache »

The post Angolo hooks by Sébastien Cordoleani
for Moustache
appeared first on Dezeen.

Brassware by Skultuna

Stockholm 2013: Swedish designers Claesson Koivisto Rune, Monica Förster and Folkform have collaborated with 400-year-old fine metals company Skultuna to produce this collection of brass objects.

Brassware by Skultuna

For Stockholm Design WeekSkultuna’s brassworks teamed up with Stockholm studio Claesson Koivisto Rune to produce Face, three coat hooks made of solid brass (above and below).

Brassware by Skultuna

Stockholm-based designer Monica Förster came up with a series of spun brass flower pots in three sizes (top), while design duo Folkform created a bookend based on geometric shapes (bottom).

Brassware by Skultuna

Skultuna was founded in the Swedish town of the same name in 1607, and remains under royal warrant to produce fine metal objects such as chandeliers, candlesticks and cufflinks. In 2011, Venetian designer Luca Nichetto presented a series of brass bowls for the brand.

Brassware by Skultuna

Other products launching in Stockholm this week include a collection of porcelain and wood pendant lamps and a chair that can be dressed up in an assortment of garments – see more products from Stockholm Design Week 2013.

See all coat hooks »
See all brass »

Here’s some more information from Skultuna:


Face wall hangers by Claesson Koivisto Rune

Face is a series of three wall hangers designed by Claesson Koivisto Rune for Skultuna. The wall hangers are cast in solid brass and highly polished to create an almost mirror like surface. The wall hangers are in the last stages of development and will be released during the spring of 2013. Skultuna is one of the oldest companies in the world, founded in the year 1607 as a brass foundry by King Karl IX.

Flower Pots by Monica Förster

Some time ago the Swedish design icon Monica Förster met up with Viktor Blomqvist, managing director of Skultuna and discusses a possible design cooperation. Skultuna is one of the oldest companies in the world, founded in the year 1607 as a brass foundry by King Karl IX. Staying true to the historic production methods of Skultuna, Monica Förster and her design studio came up with a series of three Flower Pots made in the very old method of metal spinning. Metal spinning is a production method that has been in constant use during the last centuries in Skultuna and makes it possible to make large round three dimensional objects out of sheet metal. The Flower Pots resemble classical pots made of terracotta with a small inclination in the lower part. The Flower Pots comes in three sizes and are made of highly polished brass plate.

Bookend by Folkform

The Bookend is the latest product from the red hot Swedish designer duo called Folkform. With its geometrical sharp shapes and the highly polished surface, the Bookend is a striking composition. The Bookend is in the last stage of development and will be released during the spring of 2013. Folkform consists of designers Anna Holmquist and Chandra Ahlsell that began their partnership in 2005. The Stockholm-based studio is already represented in the Swedish National Art collection and the National Museum of Art, Architecture and Design in Oslo. Folkform has previously designed the popular candlestick Collage for Skultuna.

The post Brassware by
Skultuna
appeared first on Dezeen.

Contemporary Craftsmanship

The Made Collection from designer David Okum blends a beautiful, mid-century modern-inspired vibe with contemporary craftsmanship in a series of four distinct items – salt and pepper shakers, trivet, coat pegs, and desktop organizer. In a variety of materials ranging from American walnut and white maple to Coran and aluminum, each is an attractive addition to refined spaces.

Designer: David Okum


Yanko Design
Timeless Designs – Explore wonderful concepts from around the world!
Yanko Design Store – We are about more than just concepts. See what’s hot at the YD Store!
(Contemporary Craftsmanship was originally posted on Yanko Design)

Related posts:

  1. Ceramic Craftsmanship
  2. Contemporary Crafstmanship

Ladder Coat Rack by Yenwen Tseng

Ladder Coat Rack by Yenwen Tseng

Two ladders are joined by hidden hinges to create this adaptable slimline coat rack by Taiwanese designer Yenwen Tseng.

Ladder Coat Rack by Yenwen Tseng

The coat racks come in yellow and black and can be positioned against a wall or freestanding according to space and storage requirements.

Ladder Coat Rack by Yenwen Tseng

The coat racks will be on show during London Design Festival in the Fresh Sense Taiwan exhibition at Tent London, open from 20–23 September at the Old Truman Brewery, E1 6QL.

Ladder Coat Rack by Yenwen Tseng

We recently featured another spindly ladder in an apartment in Milan.

Ladder Coat Rack by Yenwen Tseng

We also previously featured a slimline coat rack with hanging pockets inspired by a kimono rack and another comprising three Y-shaped components leaning against each other.

Ladder Coat Rack by Yenwen Tseng

See all our stories about coat hooks »
See all our stories about ladders »
See all our stories about London Design Festival 2012 »

The post Ladder Coat Rack by
Yenwen Tseng
appeared first on Dezeen.

Skale by Sarah Böttger

Skale by Sarah Bottger

German designer Sarah Böttger scaled the same rectangular shape up and down to create this tubular metal hall stand.

Skale by Sarah Böttger

“Skale can be what you make of it – a wardrobe, side table, shoe shelf or simply to display your favorite outfit,” says Böttger. “Its form is based on a collage of one original shape that has been multiplied, scaled, turned and nested into one another.”

Skale by Sarah Böttger

See Böttger’s containers made of glass components joined with plastic rings and disks in our earlier story.

Skale by Sarah Böttger

See more coat racks on Dezeen »

The post Skale by Sarah Böttger appeared first on Dezeen.

Breeze by HawaSoo

Breeze by HawaSoo

Seoul designers HawaSoo have designed a clothes rail, a lamp and a stool that are styled like components of a bicycle.

Breeze by HawaSoo

Called Breeze, the collection features a lamp with a long pole and handlebar-like supports to lean against the wall, a red stool with one diagonal leg echoing the usual line of a saddle support and a rack for clothes with a wheel at just one end.

Breeze by HawaSoo

See all our stories about bicycles here and all our stories about furniture here.

Breeze by HawaSoo

Here are some more details from the designers:


Hi! We are HawaSoo that the project team is composed of 2 designers, SungHa Lee and Minsoo Park, who work in Seoul.

Breeze by HawaSoo

We design what just interest us. So it seems that we are just a bit lazy, but we think design must be fun! Our works are actually interesting, and we are proud of ours.

Breeze by HawaSoo

We love something fun and stories in it. The story we mentioned here is not a simple storyline like a fairy tale. It emerges with users’ experiences when people use the products.

Breeze by HawaSoo

We hope that our design catches people’s interests and they find the hidden wit within the form. And we expect that it is not just a object but it creates a new story to people.

Breeze by HawaSoo

‘breeze’ is a furniture series that is designed with hidden various structures and functions in a bicycle frame. Lighting, hanger, stool have individual functions and systems however they form a look and a bicycle together with each other.

Breeze by HawaSoo

When people use ‘breeze’, they can experience joyful activity from the bicycle. In addition, people will recognize the ‘breeze’ as a great bicycle.

Brush Hooks by Dominic Wilcox

Brush Hooks by Dominic Wilcox

London designer Dominic Wilcox claims he meant to leave these paint brushes unwashed so they would harden into coat hooks.

Brush Hooks by Dominic Wilcox

The Brush Hooks are on show at KK Outlet in London as part of an exhibition called Object Abuse. Designers including Michael Marriot, Max Lamb, Peter Marigold and F.A.T were asked to repurpose everyday objects. Object Abuse continues until 25 September and coincides with the London Design Festival. Check out our plans for the festival here.

Brush Hooks by Dominic Wilcox

Earlier this year Dominic Wilcox made a stylus that straps over his nose for using his touch-screen phone in the bath and coated the entire contents of an abandoned office in white paint.

The information below is from Wilcox:


‘Object Abuse’ at the KK Outlet, Hoxton Square, London.

The challenge given to a group of leading artists, designers and stylists was to ‘take an everyday object, remould, rebuild and repurpose it to create an entirely new item, using as little additional materials as possible.’

Inspired by the experience of forgetting to wash brushes after use and later finding the bristles hardened with paint, I turned some paint brushes into coat hooks.

Object Abuse – September at KK Outlet

Private View: Thursday 1 September
Exhibition Runs: 2 – 25 September

KK Outlet present Object Abuse as part of London Design Festival 2011.

KK Outlet have challenged a group of leading artists, designers and stylists to take an everyday object, remould, rebuild and repurpose it to create an entirely new item using as little additional materials as possible.

A hula-hoop becomes an atom.
For sale signs become a flat pack birdhouse.
A lightbulb becomes a micro-greenhouse
A sofa becomes a Pantomime horse

The aim of the project is to create a collection of re-imagined objects which highlight not only how everyday items can be recycled into something completely new but also how we think differently when we work with our hands and how physical interaction creates new ideas we wouldn’t have conceived staring at a screen.

The full collection of transformed works will be show at KK Outlet throughout September as part of London Design Festival and the ICON Design Guide.

Each item will be for sale during the show with all proceeds being donated to the St Monica’s of Hackney Primary School Art Department.


See also:

.

DIY Series by
Andre Pereira
Sticks and Stones and Broken Bones by Studio ToogoodSaucer by Eric Degenhardt
for Schönbuch

Lodelei by Martin Pärn and Edina Dufala-Pärn for Nils Holger Moormann

Lodelei by Nils Holger Moormann

German design firm Nils Holger Moormann will present this leaning coat stand by designers Martin Pärn and Edina Dufala-Pärn at the Salone Internazionale del Mobile in Milan next month.

Lodelei by Nils Holger Moormann

Called Lodelei, the design features an ash frame and loop of fabric to catch loose items.

Lodelei by Nils Holger Moormann

More about Nils Holger Moormann on Dezeen »

Lodelei by Nils Holger Moormann

The information that follows is from Nils Holger Moormann:


Wardrobe looking for wall.

Lodelei, 94/38/193, values elegant loden, loves the company of jackets and coats, with consistent sagginess and in need of care.

Lodelei by Nils Holger Moormann

Looking for a stable place with a strong wall to lean on for mutual hanging around.


See also:

.

Axis by
Ramei Keum
20 litre Coat Stand
by Peter Marigold
Beaugars by
Meike Langer

Axis by Ramei Keum

South Korean product designer Ramei Keum has designed a clothes rail where the ends of the frame are shaped like hangers. (more…)