“We need to redesign our thinking with LED lamps” – Marcel Wanders

Dutch designer Marcel Wanders discusses how he overcame the challenges of using LED technology in his new lamp for Moooi and defends the high cost of design products in this movie Dezeen filmed in Milan

"With LED lamps we need to redesign our thinking" - Marcel Wanders
Flattering by Marcel Wanders at Moooi’s Unexpected Welcome exhibition Milan

Wanders‘ new lamp for Moooi is called Flattering and features an ornate copper-coloured frame that supports 32 LED lights enclosed by tiny individual transparent lamp shades. It was on show as part of Moooi’s Unexpected Welcome exhibition in Milan.

"With LED lamps we need to redesign our thinking" - Marcel Wanders

“With LEDs we need to redesign our thinking about what to do,” says Wanders of the challenges of working with the technology.

“You have these little lights, but each of them is very sharp. If you want enough light in an LED lamp you have to put them together and [if] you have a lot it [will] blind you completely. One of the solutions is to put these little lights further away from each other.”

"With LED lamps we need to redesign our thinking" - Marcel Wanders

Normally, spreading apart so many individual LEDs would result in a lot of messy wiring to power them all. However, Wanders explains that Moooi has developed its own proprietary technology called Electrosandwich, which allows the LEDs to be powered directly through layers of conductive material within the frame.

“Here we have developed a patented technology which makes it possible for us to put lights anywhere we want without putting special cables and fittings,” he says.

"With LED lamps we need to redesign our thinking" - Marcel Wanders

Wanders then goes on to defend the high cost of products that design companies like Moooi produce.

“If Moooi makes a design, the company doesn’t only make this object in a really good way, with the right materials, with the right techniques and with the right perfections,” he says.”It also did all of the development. To get there is really difficult.”

"With LED lamps we need to redesign our thinking" - Marcel Wanders

“You will always find that the companies who copy something sell only the things that sell really well,” he continues. “A company that does design has to also find a way to make it’s margins for all the other things that fail, which is part of design.”

Wanders concludes: “Ultimately, an original design product will have a cost higher than its copy.”

"With LED lamps we need to redesign our thinking" - Marcel Wanders

Wanders also believes that owning an original product rather than a copy is important.

“If you want an authentic life, if you want to be an authentic being then you want to connect with with your surroundings,’ he says.

“My grandfather used to say ‘show me your friends and I’ll tell you who you are.’ Show me your surroundings and I’ll tell you who you are.”

"With LED lamps we need to redesign our thinking" - Marcel Wanders

We also filmed interviews with Wanders about Moooi’s Unexpected Welcome exhibition in Milan, as well as about his new Dressed watch for Alessi.

Wanders also features in this movie about the phenomenon of copying in design.

See all our Milan 2013 coverage »
Watch our Dezeen and MINI World Tour video reports from Milan »

The post “We need to redesign our thinking
with LED lamps” – Marcel Wanders
appeared first on Dezeen.

Entfaltung collapsible fashion by Jule Waibel

Royal College of Art graduate Jule Waibel has designed a series of folded paper clothes and accessories including a dress that adjusts and expands as you move and a concertinaed handbag (+ movie).

Transforming simple sheet materials into three-dimensional objects, Waibel’s project, called Entfaltung (unfold/expand/develop), features a yellow dress that changes its shape according to the movement of the body, a green expandable bag and an orange-coloured umbrella.

Entfaltung by Jule Waibel

“Collapsible structures reflect how our world is constantly changing,” says designer Julie Waibel. “This project celebrates the beauty found between geometry, transformation and play.”

Entfaltung by Jule Waibel

Waibel told Dezeen how she spent months folding and pleating different materials, such as shower curtains, leather and polymers.

Entfaltung by Jule Waibel

The final structures are made from Tyvek, a lightweight, waterproof and tear-proof synthetic paper. The coloured gradient is printed on to the paper before it is folded.

Entfaltung by Jule Waibel

“I got inspired by Mary Poppins and her magical handbag,” Waibel told Dezeen. “Everything seems to fit inside: a mirror, a hatstand, a plant and more.”

Entfaltung by Jule Waibel

Waibel completed the project whilst studying on Platform 18 of the Royal College of Art’s Design Products course, led by Sarah van Gameren and Philippe Malouin. She presented it at Show RCA 2013 last month.

Entfaltung by Jule Waibel

Here’s a video from Waibel showing her making the structures:

Other graduate projects that have caught our attention this year include a workstation with an integrated pulley system by Micaela Nardella and a series of adornments designed for introverts by Lilian Hipolyte Mushi.

See our coverage of graduate shows 2013 »
See more fashion design »
See more stories about paper »

The post Entfaltung collapsible fashion
by Jule Waibel
appeared first on Dezeen.

Painted Chair by Andreas Preis

Focus sur le nouveau projet de l’illustrateur et artiste allemand Andreas Preis qui a eu l’opportunité de peindre et customiser cette chaise pour le collectif « Werkstatttraum » à Berlin. Cette création sera bientôt mise aux enchères, et elle est à découvrir dès maintenant en images dans la suite de l’article.

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Interview: Tinker Hatfield of Nike: A one-on-one talk with the Vice President of Creative Concepts about facilitating innovation and inspiration

Interview: Tinker Hatfield of Nike


During Nike’s recent Nature Amplified summit at their Beaverton, OR headquarters, we were presented with a series of innovations that comprise the next palette for product development from the sportswear giant. A visit to the Nike Sports Research Lab meant a deep…

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Patch Project by Beza Projekt

Patch Project by Beza Projekt

Polish design studio Beza Projekt has created a range of joints for DIY furniture that resemble plasters from a first-aid kit.

Patch Project by Beza Projekt

The Patch Project by Beza Projekt consists of crosses and strips made from sheet metal with five holes at each tip to accommodate screws.

Each one is bent in a different way to form a range of angles when used to join standard sections of softwood from a hardware store.

Patch Project by Beza Projekt

The components are finished in red so they become a stand-out feature of the resulting furniture, rather than technical details to be hidden away.

“There is no need to install them evenly,” say the designers. “Chaos is incorporated into their design, so you can spontaneously form constructions where the technical component is also a decorative one.”

Patch Project by Beza Projekt

“Usually these details are considered extremely technical,” they continue.

Patch Project by Beza Projekt

“We suggest that they are the most important element of the furniture and construction. By material, finish, shape and colour they interact and define the character of the furniture.”

Patch Project by Beza Projekt

To demonstrate the system they’ve built a work station based on a pirate ship, shown here with their Pole Chair made of cork.

Patch Project by Beza Projekt

Beza Projekt comprises designers Anna Łoskiewicz-Zakrzewska, Zofia Strumiłło-Sukiennik and Tomasz Korzewski.

Photos are by Jacek Kołodziejski, with retouching by Wojciech Stopiński.

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Beza Projekt
appeared first on Dezeen.

Mobile Hotel Room

Antonio Scarponi et Roberto Deluca ont imaginé cette « chambre d’hôtel mobile ». Appelée « Hotello », cette création surprenante et bien pensée permet de mettre tout le nécessaire pour dormir dans une valise. Ce projet à découvrir dans la suite a été présenté en avril dernier durant la Milan Design Week 2013.

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Lasvit Tour de France Trophy 2013: The world’s most celebrated bicycle race marks its 100th year with a hand-blown crystal trophy

Lasvit Tour de France Trophy 2013


As the 100th Tour de France came to close on Sunday, 21 July, Briton Chris Froome hoisted the trophy for the first time. While the athletic accomplishment is an impressive one,…

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Pillow by Snarkitecture: Hand-cast from gypsum cement, the design firm’s latest concept fools the eyes and cradles your phone

Pillow by Snarkitecture


Founded by architect Alex Mustonen and contemporary artist Daniel Arsham, design firm Snarkitecture has a history of making work from the unexpected. Their latest product, a resting dock…

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WaterBean Filter: The portable water purifier aims to decrease bottled water consumption with the help of crowd-funding

WaterBean Filter


While there are a plethora of water filtration containers on the market, from the popular Bobble to the elegant Nava by Kor or Eau Good, WaterBean proposes to do the same, without the bottle. On a fishing trip with his…

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Buchetta delle lettere moderna

Bill Playso e Justin Hutchinson sono gli autori australiani di questa simpatica buchetta delle lettere dalla forma zoomorfa. L’intenzione era creare un oggetto originale, diverso dalle buchette delle lettere tradizionali, e che si accostasse bene alle architetture di gusto contemporanee.
Missione brillantemente riuscita: la forma di Koo Koo è ispirata a quella di un uccello e le linee stilizzate gli danno un aspetto moderno che non passa inosservato. In questa pagina di Cool Hunter (il blog che ha parlato per primo di questo progetto) abbondano gli esempi di abbinamento tra Koo Koo e splendide ville contemporanee.