Just Black by Marsotto Edizioni

Milan 2013: work by the late James Irvine and other international designers has been reproduced in black marble for this collection by Marsotto Edizioni, unveiled in Milan this week.

Marsetto Just Black

Above: Ipe tondo and Ipe quadro sidetables by James Irvine

Just Black inverts a selection of Italian brand Marsotto Edizioni‘s products in white Carrara marble by replicating the designs in black Marquina marble.

Marsotto Just Black

Above: Gina fruit bowl by James Irvine

British designer James Irvine, who passed away in February, was the company’s art director. Dark versions of his Ipe tondo and Ipe quadro side tables and his simple fruit bowl designs are included in this collection.

Marsotto Just Black

Above: Pia fruit bowl by James Irvine

Thomas Sandell‘s melting bookcase features alongside Claesson Koivisto Rune‘s monolithic low square table and Jasper Morrison‘s London, Paris and Rome tables.

Marsotto Just Black

Above: Pina fruit bowl by James Irvine

Other contributing designers include Konstantin GrcicNaoto Fukasawa and Ross Lovegrove.

Marsotto Just Black

Above: Gallery table by Claesson Koivisto Rune

The original collection was presented during Milan design week in 2010 and has been annually reinterpreted ever since – see our story about the range here.

Marsotto Just Black

Above: London table by Jasper Morrison

On show until tomorrow, the exhibition is located at Galleria d’Arte, Via Brera 16.

Marsotto Just Black

Above: Melt bookcase by Thomas Sandell

See all of our stories about Milan 2013 »
See our Milan 2013 map »

Here’s some more information from Costanza Olfi and Mario Marsotto:


Just black 2013

Variations on a theme. After the absolute predominance of white, Marsotto edizioni now presents a selection of products in Black Marquina marble. The radical contrast produces entirely different effects, as in a sort of reversed image of the objects. Last year, it was the individual lines that stood out. Now it is the piece as a whole that reveals the essence of its design.

Marsotto Just Black

Above: Taksim side table by Konstantin Grcic

The black, non-light, forcefully asserts its presence, emphasizing the character and functionality of each object. Thus the collection acquires a renewed balance: alongside the ethereal lightness of white are the depth, weight and texture that are so ideally expressed in black.

Marsotto Just Black

Above: Eco book ends by Ross Lovegrove

The harmonious proportions that have always been the hallmark of each item in the Marsotto edizioni collection are naturally unvaried, together with that touch of elegance which black cannot but enhance.

Marsotto Just Black

Above: Poodle table by Naoto Fukasawa

And so a veritable metamorphosis has occurred, where the vibrant impact of black actually reinterprets each single piece. Enriching it with emotional, totemic values that strike a chord.

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The Sandwichbike: A flat-packed wooden bicycle delivered to your door for self assembly

The Sandwichbike


First introduced as an imaginative concept by Dutch design agency Bleijh about seven years ago, the Sandwichbike has finally reached maturity. Upon its first introduction by designers Basten Leijh…

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Boston invites designs for new public transport map

Boston invites designs for new public transport map

News: Boston’s public transport authority has launched a competition to redesign the city’s subway map.

From now until the end of April, the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) is accepting submissions to transform the map’s cramped layout into a more user-friendly design.

The competition has already proved controversial due to the terms and conditions of entry stating that the transit authority owns the entire copyright of all submissions – a detail criticised as “insulting” by Australian graphic designer Cameron Booth.

“If the MBTA likes my ideas for their map — and they’ve surely seen enough of my body of work to know that it’s good — then they can bloody well pay me for it,” wrote Booth in a blog post, as reported by online magazine The Atlantic Cities.

Booth’s extensive portfolio of map designs includes a diagram of the American interstate road system in the style of the London Tube map.

Boston invites designs for new public transport map

Above: the current “spider map”

Entries to the competition will be judged on their creativity, aesthetic quality, clarity and usefulness, and the winning designs will be announced in mid-May as part of National Transportation Week.

We’ve featured lots of map designs on Dezeen, including dinner plates that collectively form a map of France’s Michelin-starred restaurants and a London Tube map redesigned to be geographically accurate – see all maps.

Projects in Boston we’ve published include Renzo Piano’s wing for the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum and a branch of skin and haircare brand Aesop that uses wooden cornices as shelving.

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Amazing Lego Sculpture

Basé à New York, le graphiste Mike Doyle a créé une sculpture impressionnante de 200 000 pièces de LEGO appelée Contact 1. Appelant à un financement via Kickstarter, il veut créer une série de sculptures célébrant la spiritualité, et les valeurs pacifiques de mondes fantastiques sous le nom « Contact Séries ».

Lego Sculpture4
Lego Sculpture3
Lego Sculpture2
doyle-1
Lego Sculpture

Simple by Philippe Malouin

Milan 2013: London designer Philippe Malouin is exhibiting furniture built from slats of two-by-four, sand-cast chairs and a spinning candle at the ProjectB gallery in Milan.

Simple by Philippe Malouin

Simple, a show of Malouin‘s recent work, includes the Slat table, made of two-by-four timber lengths laid horizontally to create a top and arranged radially on end to create two cylindrical legs.

Simple by Philippe Malouin

The table is accompanied by shorter benches in the same style, which can be stacked up into a bookshelf.

Simple by Philippe Malouin

Horizontal bands circle the lamp, bookends and containers in the series of Functional Shapes, formed from lathed and polished layers of black MDF.

Simple by Philippe Malouin

Each Type Cast Chair is sand cast in aluminium or iron to create a single piece covered in marks left by the process.

Simple by Philippe Malouin

Three slender legs support a thin seat that’s curved at the back and an equally svelte back support that follows the same shape.

Simple by Philippe Malouin

The Pendulum installation comprises a candle lit at both ends, which is suspended on wires stretching between two walls.

Simple by Philippe Malouin

As melting wax from one end drips to the floor, the weight distribution changes and the candle spins upside down, then the process repeats.

Simple by Philippe Malouin

Also on display are wall hangings covered in geometric patterns produced by slicing through layers of MDF.

Simple by Philippe Malouin

ProjectB gallery is located at Via Maroncelli 7 in Milan and the exhibition continues until 10 May.

Simple by Philippe Malouin

See more designs by Philippe Malouin »
See all our coverage of Milan 2013 »
See our Milan 2013 map »

Read on for more information from the gallery:


ProjectB is proud to present the first solo exhibition in Italy by Canadian designer Philippe Malouin in the occasion of Milan’s furniture fair in April 2013. Malouin has emerged as one of the strongest voices of today’s design with his simple and yet sophisticated products that always develop from an endless research on materials, forms and techniques.

The power of Malouin’s objects and furniture relays on their permanence and durability: from a rug made of metal, to an all-in-one meeting room with hanging chairs; from a racking system in metal that includes the lighting, to a series of lamps inspired by classical shutters. The designer often begins his design process from an existing reality to develop new unprecedented projects.

Simple by Philippe Malouin

For his solo show at ProjectB SIMPLE, Malouin is presenting two new series of objects – commissioned by Emanuele Bonomi’s gallery, Slat and Type Cast Chairs – and an installation titled Pendulum that coherently represents his wide spirit of action. Pendulum is a reflection on gravity and by contrast a speculation on ephemera.

Malouin’s research is based on the power of materials: for Functional Shapes, black MDF sheeting is cut and laminated and the resulting material is then turned into shape on a lathe. MDF is extensively hand-polished, transforming this extremely rudimentary material into something new, light and highly tactile. The simple geometric shapes are dictated by their function revealing a lamp, bookends and nestling boxes, presented for the first time in a pitch black finishing.

Simple by Philippe Malouin

The same color is to be found in the Type Cast Chairs, a series of sand casted sitting tools in iron or aluminum as a single component. The chair is extremely thin with no mechanical fixings and surprisingly resistant. The sand leaves its mark on each chair, transmitting something of its own history and making each one of them slightly different than the other.

In Philippe Malouin’s Slats pieces, standard timber slats are translated and repeated, forming a linear pattern, revealing a tabletop, rotated around an axis, forming a base and reflected for support. The resulting table gives the impression of a building, columns and ceiling. The same simple process is applied to benches that can stacked to become a bookshelf.

Malouin’s objects and installations are new simple classics. As he expresses in his own words: “Simple timber slats, positioned in the right rhythm and proportions create benches, a table, a library. A Simple chair, exhibiting modest geometry and simple boxes, bookends and a lamp composed of a readily available and humble material such as MDF, just cut and polished. A simple natural phenomenon, powering an installation. SIMPLE is an exercise in restraint. The statement is the absence of complication, nothing is hidden, nothing is faked, everything is displayed. A complicated needs to lead to a visually and tactually simple outcome. A traditional process leads to a well-balanced object. An unexpected discovery creates a deceptively simple installation. A traditional process is used to facilitate simplicity of shape and thickness” (Philippe Malouin, 2012).

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Tree o’clock

Raphaël Charles vuol farci riflettere sul concetto di tempo rappresentato da questa crepa che lentamente si modifica all’interno del ceppo di legno. Pezzo unico. Solido.

Tree o’clock

“To visit Milan is to experience the antithesis of design”

"To visit Milan is to experience the antithesis of design"

Opinion: Dezeen editor-in-chief Marcus Fairs reports from Milan design week, where he finds a city seemingly determined to make life unbearable for visitors.


Grey skies over grey buildings make for a grey mood. I’m in Milan for the annual design fair and it’s impossible not to be affected by the miserable weather. But the unseasonal chill that has descended on this dour northern Italian city seems to be a metaphor for the fortunes of the world’s biggest design gathering.

The Fuori Salone events around town feel much less busy than in recent years. You can walk down Via Tortona without running the risk of being crushed to death. Exhibition spaces are unfilled. Taxis are plentiful. I’ve met people who’ve found hotel rooms at the last minute – and not been ripped off. All these things would have been unthinkable in previous years.

There’s also little sense of the excitement of past years when Twitter, SMS and Bar Basso would be buzzing with hot tips and must-see recommendations. As one designer said to me the other night: “It must be a bad year – Alice Rawsthorn has hardly tweeted anything”.

It’s not surprising, since Europe – and Italy in particular – is mired in a seemingly endless economic crisis and the Milanese design brands that form the fair’s backbone are suffering. None will admit it openly but I’ve heard talk of four-day weeks, extended summer shut-downs and mothballed research and development centres.

The Milanese are masters of surface confidence – whenever I’ve asked senior figures asked about their company’s fortunes, the answer has always been a variation of the conspiratorial stock reply: “We’re doing well, but our competitors are finding things very difficult.”

The Salone Internazionale del Mobile (the official fair held in a vast Fiera Milano exhibition centre on the edge of the city) has dealt with the tough conditions by pretending they don’t exist, hilariously plastering Milan in 2009 with banners declaring “Crisis? What crisis? Salone is here!”

But the arrogance and swagger of previous years has finally ebbed, and more than one local has nervously mentioned last September’s article by Julie Lasky in the New York Times, which declared that London had usurped Milan as the world’s design capital.

I don’t (yet) agree with Lasky on this point and nor do any of the senior designers I’ve spoken to in Milan this week. For them, it’s still the paramount get-together of the year and the place where the key product launches take place. They love the city and desperately want it to thrive. Milan’s sheer size and heritage remain unparalleled. The Salone itself gets over 300,000 visitors and citywide an estimated half a million people are involved in the week in one way or another.

Milan practically invented the contemporary furniture industry in the second half of the last century and the Salone, established in 1961, has long been the definitive fair. This dominance stems from the network of family-run companies, prodigious home-grown design talents and highly skilled artisans who collaboratively turned Milan into the furniture design and production capital of the world in the post-war era.

Yet towards the end of the twentieth century the city’s stock of great designers mysteriously began to peter out – Sottsass, Castiglioni and their ilk left few protégés of note – and Milanese companies instead turned to foreign designers to design their products and give them marketing cachet. This has led to the curious situation today where rival Milanese furniture companies work with the same promiscuous pool of international names, resulting in product portfolios that are often indistinguishable. It’s hard to think of another industry where brands would allow their identities to be blurred in this way.

Now the companies themselves seem to be under threat from more adventurous overseas operations that are making the running on their home turf. The most impressive individual show this year is the vast, lavish, recession-defying installation by Dutch brand Moooi. The most innovative new players over the past few years have been the Dutch-run Ventura Lambrate district and the MOST exhibition at the city’s science museum instigated by British designer Tom Dixon (and this year sponsored by US online retailer Fab.com). Unlike his Italian counterparts, Dixon understands the digital forces that are changing the way design is manufactured, marketed and sold.

But the thing that most threatens Milan is Milan itself. The city treats fair visitors with contempt, allowing hotels to more than double their rates during the week, fleecing exhibitors with permits, bamboozling them with red tape (such as the Byzantine impossibility of getting a licence to sell products direct to the public) and doing nothing to help baffled foreigners negotiate the arcane taxi-booking system or the complex public transport network.

There is little evidence of curation across the city, with good shows mixed up with dreadful ones. Cosmit, the company that owns and operates the Salone, has appeared to lose touch with reality in recent years, commissioning lavish cultural spectacles in the city or organising sprawling press trips that had no relevance to the business of selling chairs and lights.

Through greed and mismanagement, the Tortona district managed to turn the most vibrant core of the fair into an overpriced, over-branded and overcrowded hell. The other districts and the Salone itself seemingly refuse to communicate with each other. There is no overarching organisation linking everything together, no decent free guidebook (the ubiquitous Interni guide is a navigational disaster) or map  (although our digital one is pretty darned good) and – astonishingly – no agreed brand name for the week. Is it Milan Design Week? Milan Furniture Fair? I Saloni? The Fiera? Nobody knows.

Milan’s hotels and exhibition venues appear to treat the internet as a nuisance, making it as difficult as possible for visitors to get online. Its design brands don’t seem to be capable of printing enough press packs to last beyond the first day or setting up a functional and up-to-date online presence. “How can they produce such beautiful furniture yet do everything else so badly?” exclaimed an exasperated American architect over dinner earlier this week.

Most incredibly of all, the Salone doesn’t even have a website, but rather piggybacks on the domain of its Cosmit parent, which provides little useful information beyond the dates of the fair. How can the world’s biggest design fair not have its own website?

In short, to visit Milan during the Salone is to experience the antithesis of design. Given the sheer hassle and expense of attending, it’s little wonder people are staying away. Compare that to London, which has brought all its sprawling September design events under the London Design Festival banner with a clear identity, website, guide and purpose. London is ten times the size of Milan but the London Design Festival is ten times easier to comprehend. If I were a rookie foreign design journalist trying to choose between the two cities, I know which I’d go for.

Another fair that understands the importance of the visitor experience is Kortrijk’s Interieur design biennale, which last year made huge strides towards treating that experience as a design task. “I sometimes get a bit frustrated coming back from Milan and feeling that even though I travelled a lot, I missed a lot,” its curator Lowie Vermeersch told me, pointing out the paradox that as a design fair, it “is not designed.” But Milan doesn’t seem to be listening.

The one glimmer of light in Milan this year seems to be the Salone itself, which has been packed with visitors after several years in which it felt like an increasingly optional sideshow to the events in the city. Besides being under a roof and therefore offering one of the few warm and dry experiences in town, this was surely helped by the common-sense decision to at last present a high-profile and relevant design-related exhibition – Jean Nouvel’s Project: Office for Living show – at the fair itself, rather than in a remote palazzo.

Last December, Cosmit appointed Claudio Luti – the savvy chairman and owner of thriving Milanese design brand Kartell – as its president and the word is that further long-overdue changes are afoot. Perhaps the next thing Luti should do is put together a high-powered Milanese design delegation, and visit London.

Top: photograph by Nicole Marnati at Ventura Lambrate 2013

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The Capsule by Tom Dixon for Adidas

Milan 2013: tracking along conveyer belts at MOST in Milan, British designer Tom Dixon’s collection for Adidas includes garments that convert into luggage and camping equipment (+ slideshow).

Adidas by Tom Dixon

Named The Capsule, Dixon‘s range for the sports brand includes parkas that transform into sleeping bags and hooded tops that zip into small pouches.

Adidas by Tom Dixon

The designer has also created a set of overalls that can be deconstructed with zips and poppers to form a long coat, a cropped jacket, trousers, a skirt or shorts.

Adidas by Tom Dixon

Backpacks unfold to form wardrobes packed with enough clothes and accessories for a weekend away.

Adidas by Tom Dixon

Hung individually or displayed against tarpaulins, items rotate continuously along rails, while others are laid out on camp beds.

Adidas by Tom Dixon

The exhibition is housed in a former railway station, so sounds of steam trains and industrial activity are played around the space and smoke is pumped out into the air.

Adidas by Tom Dixon

The lightweight waterproofs and outdoor apparel are coloured in shades of blue, yellow, grey and green, and will be available in Adidas stores from mid November.

Adidas by Tom Dixon

Dixon has also launched a collection of champagne buckets and faceted furniture inspired by gemstones at MOST, an exhibition venue he founded in 2012 at the Museum of Science and Technology on Via Olona.

Adidas by Tom Dixon

See more designs by Tom Dixon »
See all our coverage of Milan 2013 »
See our Milan 2013 map »

Here’s the press release from Adidas:


Adidas by Tom Dixon unveiled at MOST during Milan’s Salone del Mobile

Mobility, modularity, and a dynamic, 21st-century life are the core concepts at the heart of a new collaboration between Adidas and the renowned British industrial designer Tom Dixon.

Adidas by Tom Dixon

Debuting this month at MOST in an experimental factory installation, created by Design Research Studio and set in an immense environment of a reconstructed 19th Century railway station, the resulting collection runs the gamut from convertible travel bags and luggage to sleek sportswear and apparel.

Adidas by Tom Dixon

The adidas by Tom Dixon collection uniquely reflects both Adidas’ forward-thinking technologies and Dixon’s inventive style.

Adidas by Tom Dixon

The teaming up of Tom Dixon and Adidas is an opportunity for grand exploration into the sport’s world expertise in performance, matched with British ingenuity, both representing unique craftsmanship and innovation.

Adidas by Tom Dixon

Known for his radical and highly influential selvage aesthetic, Dixon has since the 1980s championed a return to honest materials and British craftsmanship.

Adidas by Tom Dixon

In the first instalment of his two-year partnership with Adidas, this singular sensibility is expressed in padded parkas that convert to sleeping bags, ‘ultralite’ hoodies that can be zipped into small pouches during travel, and a spectacular modular five-in-one overall design that converts to a coat, jacket, pant, skirt, or short.

Adidas by Tom Dixon

Accessories also work double and triple duty as duffle bags convert to suitcases and garment bags to backpacks. The innovative collection offers an exciting glimpse at the future of sport style.

Adidas by Tom Dixon

Apparel is priced from €110 to €1300, while footwear ranges from €170 to €270 and accessories from €220 to €350. Adidas by Tom Dixon will be available in stores worldwide from mid November 2013.

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LED Cloud

Focus sur ce studio Sophie Valla Architects, basé à Amsterdam, et qui a réalisé cette superbe installation lumineuse appelée « LED Cloud ». Proposant un puzzle géant de 60 panneaux indépendants, elle compose ainsi un ciel artificiel aux multiples couleurs de 400m2. Plus d’images dans la suite de l’article.

De Tanker, Sophie Valla architects
De Tanker, Sophie Valla architects
De Tanker, Sophie Valla architects
De Tanker, Sophie Valla architects
De Tanker, Sophie Valla architects
De Tanker, Sophie Valla architects
De Tanker, Sophie Valla architects
De Tanker, Sophie Valla architects
De Tanker, Sophie Valla architects

Rib & Hull Heirloom Carryall : The Warsaw studio adds another perfectly minimal bag to the lineup

Rib & Hull Heirloom Carryall


The Rib & Hull Heirloom Tote strikes a perfect balance of richly handsome leather with a timeless and functional silhouette, but just when we thought that was the only bag we’d ever want or need, its…

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