Ready Made Curtain by Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec

Product news: French designers Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec have come up with a DIY kit for making curtains using a hanging cord that winds up like a guitar string.

Ready Made Curtain by Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec

Launching at trade fair imm cologne this week, Ready Made Curtain is a collaboration between Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec and Danish textile manufacturer Kvadrat.

Ready Made Curtain by Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec

The curtain is designed as a flexible hanging system that users can adapt to fit any window.

Ready Made Curtain by Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec

The kit comprises a hanging cord, wall fixings, pegs and your choice of Kvadrat textiles.

Ready Made Curtain by Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec

The hanging cord can be adjusted to fit any width of window using its winding mechanism, which the designers say was inspired by the tension in a guitar string.

Ready Made Curtain by Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec

The cord can be wound tighter when needed in order to maintain the right length and tension, and is easily transferable to another window.

Ready Made Curtain by Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec

“Little skill and few tools are needed, margin for error has been considered and perfection isn’t an absolute requirement,” Ronan and Erwan Bourourllec explain. “In fact, the charm of the imperfect in opposition to the overly sanitised interior is something we believe in.”

Ready Made Curtain by Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec

The curtain is available in a lightweight, semi-transparent fabric and a woollen fabric, both of which come in three colours. There’s also a variety of colours for the winding mechanism, cord and pegs.

Ready Made Curtain by Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec

We’ve featured several projects by Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec, including a collection of cutlery for Alessi and a range of wooden furniture for a Danish university – see all our stories about the Bouroullecs.

Ready Made Curtain by Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec

We also featured a huge purple curtain installed as a room divider at the Venice Architecture Biennale last year.

Ready Made Curtain by Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec

See all our stories about curtains »
See all our stories about textiles »

Here’s some more information from the designers:


Kvadrat and designers Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec have come together to solve the challenges posed by a little explored area of domestic interior architecture: the curtain. The result is Ready Made Curtain, an original and simple hanging system to suit every window. Kvadrat’s first direct to consumer product will launch at the IMM in Cologne, January 2013.

Ready Made Curtain by Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec

The Ready Made Curtain is the culmination of Kvadrat’s lengthy research into the world of the domestic curtain. Working with ReD Associates, an innovation and strategy consultancy firm, Kvadrat started by investigating existing curtain solutions and comparing them to the requirements of the homeowner. Based on their findings, Kvadrat approached Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec to create Ready Made Curtain a simple yet novel approach for consumers to introduce high quality curtains to their home.

Ready Made Curtain by Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec

The Ready Made Curtain requires the participation of the owner in its making. Everything one needs to fix the curtain is provided: a hanging cord, wall fixings, pegs, and a selection of Kvadrat textiles.

Ready Made Curtain by Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec

“The ambition was to create a new system that allows anyone to install a quality curtain in record time. Little skill and few tools are needed, margin for error has been considered and perfection isn’t an absolute requirement. In fact, the charm of the imperfect in opposition to the overly sanitised interior, is something we believe in,” note Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec.

Ready Made Curtain by Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec

The mechanics of the new hanging system have been refined over and over again by the designers until the absolute minimum required material and skill were achieved. This is a purposefully elementary product. The process of installation is straightforward as well. “We wanted to escape a hi-tech situation but we didn’t want to make something rustic or heavy either. We reflected on the popular method of fixing a poster to a wall, just simply with a staple.” Similarly, Ready Made Curtain is an enjoyably effortless method of fixing fabric to a window.

Ready Made Curtain by Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec

The ingenuity of the hanging cord – a replacement for the traditional curtain pole – is found in the winding mechanism that enables it to fit any window: “The starting point was a picture in a Japanese book from the fifties. The book was a catalogue of objects and in it was a guitar. From there, we began to explore the system of string tension in guitars.” The cord is an efficient and elegant solution to hanging a curtain. It can be rewound when need be, in order to maintain the right tension, and is easily transferable from window to window.

Ready Made Curtain by Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec

Anders Byriel, CEO Kvadrat, adds: “A curtain is, we believe, much more than something to keep light out and privacy in – a curtain offers the opportunity to control light and create or completely change the atmosphere in a room.” To that end, Ready Made Curtain is available in two different Kvadrat fabrics: a light, semi-transparent fabric or a woolen textile. Both are available in three different colourways and, in turn, a different colour palette of the mechanism, cord and pegs.

Ready Made Curtain by Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec

Ready Made Curtain is an evolution of previous collaborations between the Bouroullecs and Kvadrat in that it offers the customer the opportunity to adapt, change and enhance their interior through the use of textile. “One of the ambitions of our work with Kvadrat is to bring more fabric into interiors. The difference between this and previous products, such as Clouds and North Tiles, is that here we chose not to do any intervention on the fabric. The system is very simple, we have used the lightest touch.”

The post Ready Made Curtain by
Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec
appeared first on Dezeen.

Dutch Pavilion at Venice Architecture Biennale 2012

Curtains glide along tracks on the ceiling to constantly reconfigure the space inside the Dutch Pavilion at the Venice Architecture Biennale.

Dutch pavilion for Venice Architecture Bienalle 2012

Called Re-set: new wings for architecture, the installation is a sequel to the Vacant NL exhibition held on the same spot at the 2010 biennale: where the earlier show sought to highlight the quantity of empty buildings available for reuse, this new intervention hints at the possibilites for transforming existing, underused space.

Dutch pavilion for Venice Architecture Bienalle 2012

It was designed by Dutch designer Petra Blaisse of Inside Outside and curated by Ole Bouman, director of the Netherlands Architecture Institute.

Dutch pavilion for Venice Architecture Bienalle 2012

The curtains are made up of panels with varying levels of opacity, including fine gauze, heavy velvet and shiny metallics.

Dutch pavilion for Venice Architecture Bienalle 2012

The Venice Architecture Biennale opens to the public today and continues until 25 November.

Dutch pavilion for Venice Architecture Bienalle 2012

Check out our pick of the best five Giardini pavilions »
See photos of the preview on Facebook »

Dutch pavilion for Venice Architecture Bienalle 2012

Watch our interview with biennale director David Chipperfield »
Read all our stories about the biennale »

Dutch pavilion for Venice Architecture Bienalle 2012

Here’s some more information from the organisers:


During the upcoming edition of the International Architecture Exhibition in Venice, a single visit to the Dutch pavilion will not be enough. Anyone who wants to experience the full potential of an empty building will return. Perhaps more than once. Every five minutes the situation in the pavilion will be totally different, and anyone who stays for a while will witness a visually astounding transformation. With Re-set, new wings for architecture, Inside Outside / Petra Blaisse demonstrates that architecture possesses the power to start anew. The exhibition is being curated by Ole Bouman, Director of the Netherlands Architecture Institute (NAI). The 13th International Architecture Exhibition in Venice runs from 29 August to 25 November 2012.

An untouched tract of land and a substantial budget were for many years the chief preconditions for fine architecture, but the social issues of this day and age demand different points of departure. Taking advantage of existing potential and the creation of value in places where it seems to be vanishing – the ‘reanimation’ of desolate buildings – is increasingly becoming the architect’s core task.

With Re-set, Inside Outside / Petra Blaisse reveals a whole array of possibilities that an existing structure has to offer, taking the given situation as the starting point. With a mobile, tactile intervention, Petra Blaisse gives an impulse to a building that has stood vacant for 40 years – the Dutch Pavilion is in use for just three months of the year – an impulse that still awaits thousands of other Dutch buildings.

Petra Blaisse: ‘We are not going to hang Objets d’Art, exhibit works or stage events. We are responding to the vacant architecture itself. One single mobile object occupies the space for three months and emphasises the building’s unique qualities. This object will flow through the interior, re-configure its organisation and create new rooms along the way. Through relatively simple interventions the experience of light, sound and space will be manipulated so that new perspectives emerge.’

Re-set is the sequel to the Dutch submission to the International Architecture Exhibition in 2010, titled Vacant NL, a presentation by the Netherlands Architecture Institute (NAI) and Rietveld Landscape that shed light on the huge amount and enormous potential of disused buildings in the Netherlands. This presentation became a hot topic – in Venice, in the Netherlands, around the world – and one of the many things it spawned is the creation of an MA course on this very subject in the Netherlands.

The post Dutch Pavilion at Venice
Architecture Biennale 2012
appeared first on Dezeen.

Clouds by Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec

clouds-by-ronan-and-erwan-bouroullec-squ3bouroullec_clouds-insta.jpg

French designers Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec have designed a modular room-dividing system called Clouds for textile manufacturers Kvadrat. (more…)