Comfortable Seating At Airports!

Now that I have your attention, let me elaborate on this amazing project by Kwon Jin-Seok. Comfort Airport is an adjustable airport seating system that helps passengers pass time comfortably while waiting for their flights. The operative word here is ‘comfortable.’ The seating system takes into account our activities while we wait for our flight to be called.

We often do various things while taking a rest – for example, using a computer, reading a book, or eating something. Comfort Airport offers an easier environment. It is a convertible chair that can be easily transformed into a table on which people can use computers and mobile devices. In a grouped table configuration, it can also serve as a place to converse with friends or family. With its backrest and table folded down, it can be transformed into a daybed on which passengers can lay down for a nap.

Comfort Airport is a 2012 red dot award: design concept winner.

Designer: Kwon Jin-Seok


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(Comfortable Seating At Airports! was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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Autumn Winter 2013 collection by Mary Katrantzou

Autumn Winter 2013 collection by Mary Katrantzou

Latticed bridge trusses and hazy streetscapes adorn the garments of fashion designer Mary Katrantzou’s Autumn Winter 2013 collection shown during London Fashion Week.

Autumn Winter 2013 collection by Mary Katrantzou

The angular shapes of the trusses are embossed onto leather and woven into lace to create repeating patterns.

Autumn Winter 2013 collection by Mary Katrantzou

Fabric is extended up from the bodice, flared out from the shoulders or exaggerated across the bust to create hard, architectural shapes.

Autumn Winter 2013 collection by Mary Katrantzou

In contrast, softer capes and dresses are draped in spirals around the body forming asymmetric layers of chiffon and silk.

Autumn Winter 2013 collection by Mary Katrantzou

Foggy streets and landscapes printed onto satin and silk are inspired by the black-and-white photography of Edward Steichen, Clarence White and Alfred Stieglitz.

Autumn Winter 2013 collection by Mary Katrantzou

More abstract prints look like leafless trees set against a dreary winter sky.

Autumn Winter 2013 collection by Mary Katrantzou

Subtle swathes of colour seep into some outfits and blend together like watercolour paintings.

Autumn Winter 2013 collection by Mary Katrantzou

Some outfits carry the same print throughout, whereas others mix simple tops with printed trousers or skirts.

Autumn Winter 2013 collection by Mary Katrantzou

Mary Katrantzou graduated from Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design with an MA in fashion textiles and won the Emerging Talent – Ready-to-wear award at the British Fashion Awards 2011.

Autumn Winter 2013 collection by Mary Katrantzou

The collection was shown during London Fashion Week last week, where Sister by Sibling presented a range of giant crocheted garments and accessories.

Autumn Winter 2013 collection by Mary Katrantzou

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Autumn Winter 2013 collection by Mary Katrantzou

Read on for more text from the designer:


Mary Kantrantzou Autumn Winter 2013

For autumn/winter 2013, Mary Katrantzou turns to landscape, inspired by the shadowy vistas of turn-of-the-century black-and-white photography of Edward Steichen, Clarence White and Alfred Stieglitz.

Autumn Winter 2013 collection by Mary Katrantzou

This isn’t nature – but a man’s view of nature, captured, refracted and ultimately distorted by the camera lens, fixed in black-and-white for eternity.

Autumn Winter 2013 collection by Mary Katrantzou

In a similar way, with Katrantzou’s aesthetic wizardry, all is seldom what it immediately seems. Her graphics blur reality with fantasy, re-engineering nature to frame the female body.

Autumn Winter 2013 collection by Mary Katrantzou

Pablo Picasso rinsed his paintings of colour to highlight the formality of structure and his obsessive interest in line and form. Colour was distraction.

Autumn Winter 2013 collection by Mary Katrantzou

In a similar search for purity, for autumn/winter 2013 Mary Katrantzou finds focus in a similar stripping-back, the collection revolving around a rainbow of monochrome, velvety black, soft grey and crisp white, all strictly-controlled.

Autumn Winter 2013 collection by Mary Katrantzou

Pattern, rather than print, is the focus of this collection. It’s pattern conveyed through the intricacy of intarsia knits, embroideries, jacquards and brocades, custom knit, woven and engineered to re-render a landscape across her clothes.

Autumn Winter 2013 collection by Mary Katrantzou

Lace is specially woven to mimic a latticed ‘Bridge’ design, while leather is embossed with graphics derived from Katrantzou’s prints.

Autumn Winter 2013 collection by Mary Katrantzou

Print, of course, is still present – it is Katrantzou’s leitmotif. For this collection, however, it is one part of a harmonious, multi-textured palette of effects, giving depth and vigour to the rigour of her designs.

Autumn Winter 2013 collection by Mary Katrantzou

Cotton embroidery is overprinted to give a blurred painterly mood, needle punched felt mimics the fade of black winter-stripped trees into a pale sky, sometimes embedded with Swarovski crystal.

Autumn Winter 2013 collection by Mary Katrantzou

Reversed brocade, when digitally printed, creates a blurred, holographic landscape. Colour flushed through the monochrome prints allows Katrantzou to invent her own landscapes, artificially engineered with the trickery of print.

Autumn Winter 2013 collection by Mary Katrantzou

The silhouette is linear – attenuated, elongated, elegant. For day, the silhouette is stark, architectural and austere, a symphony of angular lines focussed on the diagonal.

Autumn Winter 2013 collection by Mary Katrantzou

For night, those same shapes are reinterpreted as ghosts of their firmer selves in flowing organza, prints overlaid to create a hazy, misty optical illusion. The diagonal line becomes a spiral, a winding road meandering around the landscape of the woman’s body.

Autumn Winter 2013 collection by Mary Katrantzou

In Mary Katrantzou’s hands, even nature becomes a fabrication – a moment in time immortalised in cloth. This season, each garment is a world in its own right.

The post Autumn Winter 2013 collection
by Mary Katrantzou
appeared first on Dezeen.

Cuts by Philippe Nigro for Ligne Roset

Product news: books and magazines slot inside the deep cross-shaped notch in this table by designer Philippe Nigro for Ligne Roset.

Cuts by Philippe Nigro

Designed by Philippe Nigro for Ligne Roset, the Cuts table is made from moulded polyurethane and reinforced with a steel frame.

Cuts by Philippe Nigro

Deep folds disrupt the lacquered white surface to create four tabletops at three different heights.

Cuts by Philippe Nigro

Two years ago in Cologne, Nigro presented interlocking pendant lights and a set of bright yellow divans, tables and a foot stool, both for Ligne Roset – see all designs by Philippe Nigro.

Cuts by Philippe Nigro

Other Ligne Roset products shown in Cologne this year include a chair inspired by cooked spaghetti and an asymmetric desk with a bright yellow top – see all design from Cologne 2013.

See all tables »
See all Ligne Roset »

Here’s some more information from the designers:


Philippe Nigro loves to explore concepts in depth. For years now he has been working with Ligne Roset on the theme of intersections, interweavings and assemblies. He brilliantly demonstrated this with his Confluences settee (2009), and then his indoor/outdoor collections Passio and Résille (2011). In 2010, he blazed a new trail whilst playing with the concept of notches, resulting in the Inséparable footstool/table (2010), a concept which was later masterfully transformed into the Cuts shelving (2011).

In 2013, he develops that same idea of the notch, this time applying it to the low table: a flat surface is ‘disrupted’ by notches to create 4 distinct tops positioned at three different heights. The angulation of the two intersecting notches is 28°.

The irregular architecture of the low table thus obtained contrasts with the slimness (just 8 mm) of the single material and its immaculate whiteness to create a result which is more than appealing: the varying dimensions and differing levels of the tops are practical whilst the notches can be used as magazine storage.

Whichever of its each four sides it is viewed from, its contours are different yet always surprisingly light, like a paper aeroplane.

Low table in 8 mm thick satin white lacquered expanded moulded polyurethane, reinforced with a steel framework.

Width: 100
Depth: 100
Height: 15/23/30

The post Cuts by Philippe Nigro
for Ligne Roset
appeared first on Dezeen.

The Black Desk by Sigurd Larsen: Architecture and minimalism combine forces in a sleek piece

The Black Desk by Sigurd Larsen

By Ikechukwu Onyewuenyi The sleekly minimal Black Desk is the latest offering from Berlin-based Danish architect Sigurd Larsen. The pared-down aesthetic of the Black Desk is a far cry from Larsen’s multifarious labyrinth of the Shrine. However, what the Black Desk lacks in complexity is offset by a responsiveness to…

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Times Square’s New Heart

Situ Studio a réalisé sur Times Square cette installation artistique appelée Heartwalk. Cette sculpture est composé d’éléments récupérés suite au passage de l’ouragan Sandy et représente avec beauté un coeur dans lequel les plus romantiques peuvent s’installer quelques instants. A découvrir dans la suite.

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Times Square's New Heart2
Times Square's New Heart1
Times Square's New Heart8

Scott & Scott Architects Alpine Cabin: A beautifully rugged, off-the-grid powder haven inspired by snowboarding

Scott & Scott Architects Alpine Cabin

Having grown tired of life in established firms, Vancouver-based architects Susan and David Scott ditched their digs in favor of the road less traveled, founding Scott and Scott Architects to focus on designing projects in more challenging environments. Launching today, 21 February, the small shop proudly introduces their first…

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Eden Replacement Kit for Apple iPhone

I tedeschi di Eden hanno sviluppato questo kit per sostituire la back cover del vostro iPhone con una in vero legno. La trovate qui.

Eden Replacement Kit for Apple iPhone

Lumio Lamp

Lumio è una lampada portabile a forma di libro. La puoi così mettere dappertutto. Resta per ora un progetto lanciato su kickstarter, aspettiamo la release ma a giudicare dagli obiettivi raggiunti sono messi piuttosto bene.

Lumio Lamp

Interview: Ethan Lipsitz of Apliiq: We talk fabric and more with the founder of the LA-based custom appliqué company

Interview: Ethan Lipsitz of Apliiq

By Vivianne Lapointe Ethan Lipsitz founded the Apliiq shop to satisfy his obsessive fabric hunting habit and to encourage creativity in the average shopper by allowing them to apply appliqués to garments. Inspired by popular shoe brands like Nike who offer a personalized experience by letting you customize their shoes,…

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Plastic Bags Installation

L’artiste Pascale Marthine Tayou aime utiliser des objets du quotidien pour ces œuvres. Sa dernière création, exposée au musée d’art contemporain de Rome, s’appelle « Plastic Bags » et propose un structure de 10 mètres de haut composée de milliers de sacs pour symboliser le consumérisme de notre société.

Plastic Bags Installation
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