Autumn Winter 2013 collection by Sylvio Giardina

Autumn Winter 2013 collection by Sylvio Giardina

Bulging fabric sausages constrict the outfits in Italian fashion designer Sylvio Giardina’s Autumn Winter 2013 collection, shown a few days ago during Paris Fashion Week.

Autumn Winter 2013 collection by Sylvio Giardina

Giardina‘s monochrome garments are embellished with mounds of fabric that entwine around the body and loop over shoulders like tentacles.

Autumn Winter 2013 collection by Sylvio Giardina

Heavily textured, traditional materials such as tweed are stitched to modern neoprene to form abstract shapes.

Autumn Winter 2013 collection by Sylvio Giardina

High necklines and pencil skirts evoke shapes from the 1950s but materials such as mesh and PVC create a more futuristic look.

Autumn Winter 2013 collection by Sylvio Giardina

Different weaves of mesh are used for sleeves, across the shoulders and for a whole top in one instance.

Autumn Winter 2013 collection by Sylvio Giardina

Many outfits combine a variety of sheens, which break up the grey tones.

Autumn Winter 2013 collection by Sylvio Giardina

Inspiration for the collection came from the soundtrack of the 1983 film The Hunger starring David Bowie, whose retrospective will go on show at London’s V&A museum later this month and album artwork we wrote about earlier this year.

Autumn Winter 2013 collection by Sylvio Giardina

Autumn Winter 2013 collections we’ve already featured include garments adorned with bridge truss patterns, oversized knitwear and wooden clothes.

Autumn Winter 2013 collection by Sylvio Giardina

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Autumn Winter 2013 collection by Sylvio Giardina

Photographs are by Severine Queyras.

Read on for more information from the designer:


The melody of Leo Delibes’ Lakmè opera acts as a background to the eternal seduction game in the movie “The Hunger”, where sensuality properly merges with dark atmospheres.

Autumn Winter 2013 collection by Sylvio Giardina

The new collection by Sylvio Giardina draws its inspiration from the density of this emotional and narrative context and from the proportions unique to the style codes of the 40’s and 50’s fashion.

Autumn Winter 2013 collection by Sylvio Giardina

Entirely played on the harmonious fusion of iconic and artful classic references and of edgy and subtly provocative formal solutions, the new pieces combine classic and sartorial textiles – such as tweed and gabardine – with materials and codes typically associated with fetish clothing (vinyl, mesh, neoprene).

Autumn Winter 2013 collection by Sylvio Giardina

An astonishing mixture of contrasting inputs and suggestions, which inevitably enraptures the sight inside a sophisticated voyeuristic trap.

Autumn Winter 2013 collection by Sylvio Giardina

If mesh, as in the bondage practices, follows the contours of the body, partially revealing it, emphasising cleavage and indulging in the new shoulder proportions, on the opposite, the typically mannish wools cover, in a tight-fitting manner, the silhouette, conjuring up an idea of (malicious) chastity.

Autumn Winter 2013 collection by Sylvio Giardina

For example, skirts – although demurely elongated to the calf – cling to the body, strongly enhancing the fluidity of the sinuous line, typical of the gap, purely feminine, between waist and hips.

Autumn Winter 2013 collection by Sylvio Giardina

While shoulders – even if notably streamlined, important, statuesque – provide the silhouette with a more polished line and reinforce the sense of compositive eurhythmy of proportions, distinguishing each outfit of the collection.

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by Sylvio Giardina
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Me mirrors by Mathias Hahn for Asplund

Product news: these mirrors by London designer Mathias Hahn can be swivelled up and down with wooden handles sticking out the sides.

Me mirrors by Mathias Hahn

Mathias Hahn combined a classic hand mirror with a slim stand to create the Me mirror, which comes as a tall, freestanding design or a small tabletop version.

Me mirrors by Mathias Hahn

They’re available in a range of colours and are now in production with Swedish homeware brand Asplund.

Me mirrors by Mathias Hahn

We previously featured Hahn’s collection of coloured glass vessels inspired by making jam and a pendant lamp that clamps to its own flex, plus he discussed five examples of his work in a movie we filmed in Cologne in 2011 – see all designs by Mathias Hahn.

Me mirrors by Mathias Hahn

We also recently published a matte steel sink with a polished patch that acts as a looking glass and a mirror and vanity box that hang off a leather strap – see all mirrors.

Here’s some more information from the designer:


Me mirror

A classic hand mirror held by a wooden handle. Being attached to a stand the mirror can be rotated and adjusted by both the axis of the handle and the vertical section of the stand. A plain and diverse to use mirror, reminiscent of historic mirror stands, that is located in bath rooms, dressing rooms or hallways, giving this product a rather independent and furniture related feel than a wall mounted vanity mirror.

The Me mirror family consists of two different sizes: one tall, floorstanding version and a smaller one for tables or sideboards. The mirrors are now in production with Swedish manufacturer ASPLUND and are available in a variety of colours.

Thinking of the typology of mirrors, the usual concept is either a wall hung piece or a hand held mirror sitting in a drawer. The idea for the ‘ME’ mirrors is, to turn the tool of the mirror itself into a product which is able to move into different areas of a domestic environment. Rather being treated as a a piece of occasional furniture than a product which is linked to singular location.

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for Asplund
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November chair by Veryday

Product news: Swedish design consultancy Veryday picked up a Gold Award at the iF Design Awards last week for this wooden chair created for an art and design centre in Stockholm.

November by Veryday

Veryday designed the November chair to reflect the surroundings of the Artipelag centre, which opened last June and is situated on an island in the Stockholm Archipelago, enveloped by woodland.

The chair comes in ash or walnut and is available to buy at Artipelag.

November by Veryday

The designers picked up their prize at the iF Design Awards in Munich on 22 February.

Other wooden chairs we’ve featured lately include a bent wood design that looks like it’s wearing a cape and a plywood design inspired by beams used in the construction industry – see all stories about chair design.

November by Veryday

Here’s some more information from the designers:


This year Veryday (previously known as Ergonomidesign) has been credited with four iF Design Awards and are happy to announce that despite over 4500 entries, the jury honored the chair November with a Gold Award, which signifies the very best designs and is a confirmation of Veryday’s position internationally as one of the world’s leading design consultancies.

The chair November, designed for Artipelag, the highly acclaimed new art and design center in Stockholm’s Archipelago, is a beautifully crafted chair made entirely out of wood. Björn Jakobson, the founder of BabyBjörn and the man behind Artipelag approached Veryday designers Peter Ejvinsson and Emmy Larsson only eight months prior to the opening of the center. The request was to design a chair specifically for the Artipelag with the potential of becoming a furniture classic. The requirements were that the chair should be comfortable, beautiful and durable. The architecture and interior design of the Artipelag is all about the interplay between art and nature; this as well as the muted light and long shadows of the low November sun inspired the design team in their design work. The soft shapes and surfaces creates lines that builds the character.

Most of the design work was done using scale models, carefully sculpturing each part of the chair by hand. This allowed the designers to dictate the smooth transition between the shapes and angles of the chair with full control, making sure the chair was beautiful from every angle. Not the least the back, which actually is the front when placed at a table.

“We wanted to create an extremely rigid and durable design, with a soft touch and feel and therefore I am so glad to hear that many visitors stop and want to touch the chair and sit in it,” says Peter Ejvinson, industrial designer at Veryday.

Apart from the aesthetically pleasing and sophisticated form, the design team has also considered the ergonomic aspects. In short November is ergonomically designed for comfort. Of interest is also that this wooden artefact is manufactured at a carpentry with almost 100 years of experience of chair production, whilst using the latest technology to guarantee superb quality and longevity.

“This chair has a great ergonomic shape while still retaining all of its sculptural look and feel. It perfectly sums up excellent Scandinavian design and the Nordic tradition of handmade chairs, yet November is a dining room chair made by a machine. A round of applause and an iF gold award!” – the official Gold Statement from the iF jury.

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by Veryday
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Buttons by Studio Swine

London-based Studio Swine has produced a set of gold and silver clip-on buttons inspired by the textures and shapes of modernist architecture (+ movie).

Buttons by Studio Swine

Studio Swine designed the accessories to clip over standard shirt buttons so they’re easy to transfer to different outfits.

Buttons by Studio Swine

“We felt that men’s accessories were quite limited,” the studio told Dezeen. “We wanted to create some that are accessible and make it easy to customise your clothes into a special piece.”

Buttons by Studio Swine

The seven designs are largely based on patterns of modernist concrete buildings, like the ones in São Paulo that feature in the movie above. “We wanted to make buttons that would carry tactile information; wearable architecture.”

Buttons by Studio Swine

Shapes include a perforated gem, square gem, cloud, triangle, factory, star and special-edition pixel.

Buttons by Studio Swine

Ranging from seven to twelve millimetres in diameter, the hand-finished buttons are available in 18-carat gold or silver plate.

Buttons by Studio Swine

They have recently launched on crowd-funding website Kickstarter.

Buttons by Studio Swine

Our last story about Studio Swine featured a movie about an open source chair made from plastic salvaged from the sea.

Buttons by Studio Swine

More jewellery posts on Dezeen include a ring made from human leather and body jewellery inspired by Japanese baskets.

Buttons by Studio Swine

See all our stories about design by Studio Swine »
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Studio Swine
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The Ultimate Deck : Cardistry stars and acclaimed magicians Dan and Dave introduce a set of art driven playing cards

The Ultimate Deck

A bewitching collaboration between branding agency Stranger & Stranger and renowned magicians Dan and Dave, the Ultimate Deck is a set of 54 playing cards a year in the making. Each card in the deck features a custom illustration that relates to the card’s suit and number, all with…

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Ran Out by Shlomit Bauman

Israeli ceramics designer Shlomit Bauman combined white porcelain with the very last batch of clay from a local pit to make these stretched and distorted objects (+ slideshow).

Ran Out by Shlomit Bauman

The objects in the Ran Out collection combine porcelain with a type of Israeli terracotta that has almost been used up completely.

Ran Out by Shlomit Bauman

“The local authorities realised that mining this clay would cause it to become completely extinct, so they closed the mine,” Shlomit Bauman told Dezeen. “I bought that last ton of clay from the suppliers.”

Ran Out by Shlomit Bauman

Bauman turned a variety of everyday objects into moulds, including a mobile phone, a television and a megaphone.

Ran Out by Shlomit Bauman

Two of the moulds – a teapot and a fish – were salvaged from a ceramics factory in Tel Aviv that had closed down in the 1990s.

Ran Out by Shlomit Bauman

Bauman then combined the moulds by casting them one on top of the other or by attaching them after casting. “The broken appearance is a result of the different shrinkage characteristics of the materials,” she explained. “But for me, it symbolises the distortion of the process of trying to mix two different cultures together.”

Ran Out by Shlomit Bauman

Bauman teaches ceramic design at Holon Institute of Technology in Israel.

Ran Out by Shlomit Bauman

Other similar designs we’ve featured include a set of crockery made from roughly carved moulds and a project to make tableware from muddy clay found on the banks of the River Thames – see all ceramics.

Ran Out by Shlomit Bauman

Here’s some more information from the designer:


Ran Out is a ceramic design project that raises a discussion concerning the extinction of natural resources, of conception or objects that are running out. The project brings together local clay – a ceramic material that ran out in Israel and abroad (S5), and porcelain – the fashionable and noblest ceramic material. This project makes use of historical molds and materials from closed Israeli ceramic factories.

The different characteristics of these materials in cultural, technological and formal terms result in contrast, cracking and distortion of objects. This creates a tension between the desire for likeness and connection, and the exposure of the differences and the distorted. These works deal with the loaded field of the extinction of natural, cultural and personal resources.

Shlomit Bauman is an Israeli ceramic designer that relates to the ceramic design field as a “cultural research lab” by dealing with cultural, technological and traditional aspects. Along her work she explores the methods and strategies of action in the wide context of material culture. Her creative activity covers many fields that include design, art, education and curation as a way of life.

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Shlomit Bauman
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Mount Your Maker by Stephan Alexander: An artistic pop of candy paint brings life to an otherwise macabre trophy

Mount Your Maker by Stephan Alexander

When we last caught up with Portland-based artist and designer Stephan Alexander, he had just put the finishing touches on a stunning SS11 collection for Sticks & Stones accessories—a label he co-founded in 2009. While time hasn’t changed his role as the brand’s creative director, Alexander has recently begun…

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Dezeen at SXSW

Dezeen at SXSW

Next week Dezeen will be at the SXSW technology conference in Austin, Texas, as part of Hackney House Austin, a showcase of the most exciting creative and digital companies from the London borough.

From 8 to 11 March, SXSW attendees will be able to meet representatives from more than 20 companies inside Hackney House Austin, a “capsule” edition of the Shoreditch pop-up space that hosted Dezeen’s Designed in Hackney Day during the London 2012 Olympics.

Between 10am and 2pm, attendees will be able to watch short films by Dezeen, Protein, onedotzero and ITV, pick up pre-ordered business cards from Moo and visit the Sugru repair shop.

Panels and workshops will be hosted by MakieLab and onedotzero in the afternoons, while Protein will relaunch its online video channel Protein TV with a forum discussing the Future of TV featuring speakers from ITV and Vimeo plus the site’s founder and CEO William Rowe.

Other companies exhibiting will include design studios Bare Conductive, Not Tom and Hulger and web designers Poke as well as design consultancy BERG and electronics “haberdashery” Technology Will Save Us, both of whom took part in our Designed in Hackney Day.

See all Designed in Hackney projects »
See all technology »

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Althaus Restaurant Design

Situé dans le centre de Gdynia en Pologne, le restaurant « Althaus » parvient à séduire ses clients de par son ambiance très forte et épurée. Un design réalisé par le studio Pb/Studio en coopération avec le créatif Filip Kozarski. A découvrir en images de manière complète dans la suite de l’article.

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SixE stacking chairs by PearsonLloyd for HOWE

Product news: London studio PearsonLloyd has designed a range of plastic stacking chairs with colourful metal legs for Danish brand HOWE.

SixE by PearsonLloyd for HOWE

The SixE chairs stack neatly on top of one-another and have thin legs that can be coordinated with the colour of the seat shell or ordered in contrasting shades. Other options include armrests that extend up from the back legs and padded seats are also available in a range of colours.

SixE by PearsonLloyd for HOWE

The chairs were first launched at Orgatec trade fair in Cologne last year and began production with HOWE earlier this year. They will also be exhibited in Milan this April, where Zaha Hadid will launch a system of twisting auditorium chairs for Poltrona Frau Contract and OMA will release a furniture collection for Knoll.

SixE by PearsonLloyd for HOWE

Based in Hackney, PearsonLloyd has also designed workstations for office brand Bene and a collection of rocking toys that we’ve featured previously.

SixE by PearsonLloyd for HOWE

See all our stories about designs by PearsonLloyd »
See all our stories about chair design »

Here is some more information from HOWE:


SixE by PearsonLloyd – Manufactured by HOWE

PearsonLloyd has designed a new stacking chair that is uniquely suited to our contemporary society. A thorough market analysis led PearsonLloyd to identify new areas of unfilled need which resulted in the SixE chair. A two year long process led to a design that is as beautifully expressive as it is practical. It’s name SixE represents its credentials: Elegant, Ergonomic, Environmental, Efficient, Easy to handle, and Economic.

SixE by PearsonLloyd for HOWE

SixE is available in many guises – as a side chair, an armchair and with or without an upholstered seat pad. In addition, the SixE family will grow steadily introducing new versions in the near future.

The SixE chair was firstly introduced at the Orgatec fair in Cologne. It will also have a leading role in HOWE’s exhibition “Breathing diversity” at the Milan fair in April.

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for HOWE
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