Dezeen Watch Store pop-up now open at Seven Dials Presents

Dezeen Watch Store at Seven Dials Presents pop-up shop

Our first Dezeen Watch Store pop-up of 2013 is now open as part of the Seven Dials Presents pop-up shop on Neal Street in Covent Garden, London.

Dezeen Watch Store at Seven Dials Presents pop-up shop

Customers will be able to browse our carefully curated selection of watches by boutique brands and named designers, including the bestselling Uniform Wares range (top) and Braun collection (above). You will also be able to pick up a copy of the Dezeen Book of Ideas (below) for just £12.

Dezeen Watch Store at Seven Dials Presents pop-up shop

Seven Dials Presents is a collaborative pop-up shop and presentation space showcasing upcoming talents in men’s fashion to coincide with London Collections: Men, the first event in the 2013 menswear fashion calendar. You can find out more information about Seven Dials Presents here.

Dezeen Watch Store pop-up shop at Seven Dials Presents

Dezeen Watch Store at Seven Dials Presents
35 Neal Street
Seven Dials
London
WC2H 9PR

Opening hours:

Monday to Saturday, 10am to 7pm
Sunday, 11am to 5pm

Dates:

Monday 7 to Wednesday 16 January 2013

If you can’t make it to the pop-up, you can buy all our watches online at Dezeen Watch Store here and the Dezeen Book of Ideas here.

www.dezeenwatchstore.com

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at Seven Dials Presents
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Wind-powered mine detonator on Kickstarter

Mine Kafon mine detonator

News: a project to bring cheap and easy-to-build mine detonators to Afghan minefields has just nine days left to raise the final $14,000 of its $100,000 goal on crowdfunding website Kickstarter.

Conceived by Design Academy Eindhoven graduate Massoud Hassani, who grew up in Kabul, Afghanistan, Mine Kafon is made of bamboo and biodegradable plastic, and rolls along the ground like tumbleweed.

Mine Kafon mine detonator

Light enough to be propelled by the wind, the detonator is also heavy enough to set off mines as it rolls over them with its round feet, as Hassani explains in this movie filmed by Dezeen at the Design Academy Eindhoven My Way talks in Milan last year (below).

“Every ball has GPS navigation integrated into it,” he says. “You can see the balls on the internet, so you can see where they went and how many mines they touched. You can also select an area and it will calculate how safe the area is.”

With each detonation the Mine Kafon loses only a few legs, so it can destroy three or four landmines in one journey. The construction is modular so components that return in one piece can easily be reused and sent out again.

Hassani’s team is hoping to raise $100,000 through Kickstarter to cover the cost of engineering, fabrication and transportation to an affected region, as well as making a short documentary.

Mine Kafon mine detonator

Trend forecaster Li Edelkoort commented on Mine Kafon during her Dezeen Live talk during London Design Festival last year, noting that the design originated from a paper toy Hassani had played with in his youth. “It’s a mine killer, but it’s completely organic and very cheap,” she said, adding, “it’s very beautiful how a childhood toy can become such an amazing device.”

The design made the shortlist of the Design Museum’s Designs of the Year 2012 and has also been acquired by MoMA in New York, where it will be exhibited from March.

Above: Hassani introduces Mine Kafon in this movie for Kickstarter

We’ve featured many projects launched on Kickstarter, including squishy headgear that lets you take a power nap wherever you are and a watch strap for an iPod Nano that raised $1 million on the crowdfunding website.

See all our stories about Kickstarter »
See all our stories about design »

Photographs are by Massoud Hassani.

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on Kickstarter
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Handmade Towels: Kara Weaves: Dry off with these traditional, Fair Trade linens from Kerala

Handmade Towels: Kara Weaves

The new year has us updating our old routines around the house, and fresh linens seem like one of the easiest ways to make a clean start. This week, we’ve gathered up five beautifully crafted towels to help spruce up the bath and get us going on cold mornings….

Continue Reading…

Massive Aerial Structure

On Space Time Foam est le nom de la dernière création interactive réalisée par l’architecte argentin Tomás Saraceno au centre d’arts HangarBicocca de Milan. Cette installation composé de 3 niveaux permet aux visiteurs de se plonger dans un monde suspendu et mouvant. A découvrir dans la suite.

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Trafiq Bar Identity

Situé dans le cœur de Budapest, le Trafiq Bar a fait appel au designer hongrois Miklos Kiss pour repenser toute son identité graphique. Le résultat est une véritable réussite, entre modernité et références graphiques à l’histoire de la ville durant les précédents siècles. A découvrir en images dans la suite.

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Vertebrae Staircase by Andrew McConnell

This staircase concept by Canadian architect Andrew McConnell is based on a whale’s backbone (+ slideshow).

Vertebrae Staircase by Andrew McConnell

Andrew McConnell came up with the Vertebrae Staircase concept by simplifying the shape of a whale’s vertebra into a single component.

Vertebrae Staircase by Andrew McConnell

Each piece would incorporate one step, one banister and part of the hand rail, interlocking to create a rigid, self-supporting structure.

Vertebrae Staircase by Andrew McConnell

Two slightly modified components would be used to connect the floor plates, while metal fittings would mate one element to another.

Vertebrae Staircase by Andrew McConnell

“One benefit of this design is that its fabrication would require the production of essentially only one element repeated several times,” McConnell told Dezeen.

Vertebrae Staircase by Andrew McConnell

“There are no other hidden supports as the Vertebrae Staircase is designed to act as one structural element, bearing the loads of its users and transferring these forces to the floor plates.

Vertebrae Staircase by Andrew McConnell

McConnell completed his Master of Architecture in Calgary, Canada, before starting work as an architect in Rotterdam, the Netherlands.

Vertebrae Staircase by Andrew McConnell

We’ve featured dozens of unusual staircases on Dezeen, including one built into a kitchen counter and another that looks like a slice of Swiss cheese – see all our stories about staircases.

Vertebrae Staircase by Andrew McConnell

We’ve also published objects made of bones collected from an abattoir and a range of handles and hooks shaped like sticks and bones.

Vertebrae Staircase by Andrew McConnell

See all our stories about staircases »

Vertebrae Staircase by Andrew McConnell

Here’s some more information from the designer:


Inspired by the spine of a whale, the Vertebrae Staircase is not simply mimicry of organic form but an exploration in shaping structure. Much of the design work went into refining the single component, or vertebra, that mate with each other creating a unified spine running from floor plate to floor plate. These interlocking vertebrae provide a rigid structure for the steps, railing and its users. And the railing is reinforced by connections that help the staircase resist rotational forces caused by the cantilevered steps.

The Vertebrae Staircase is a reconfiguration of a familiar form and its connections, resulting in a unique yet functional piece of vertical circulation.

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by Andrew McConnell
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Rain Sculpting

Nazar Bilyk est un sculpteur ukrainien basé à Kiev au talent incroyable. Ce dernier compose des oeuvres à la fois belles et intrigantes, avec notamment cette création appelée « Rain ». D’une hauteur d’1m87, cette magnifique sculpture d’homme au visage masqué par une bulle est à découvrir dans la suite en images.

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To Have and To Hold by JamesPlumb

The illusory shadows of burning candles and unexpected assemblages of decrepit furniture make up the latest collection by British designers JamesPlumb.

To Have and to Hold by JamesPlumb

Above: photograph by Gisela Torres, courtesy of Kandasamy Projects

Hannah Plumb and James Russell, who work together as JamesPlumb, created the To Have and To Hold collection from discarded and broken antiques.

To Have and to Hold by JamesPlumb

Above: photograph by Gisela Torres, courtesy of Kandasamy Projects

Included in the collection is a nineteenth century chandelier shown alongside a moving image of its silhouette.

To Have and to Hold by JamesPlumb

Above: photograph by Gisela Torres, courtesy of Kandasamy Projects

“The talking point was the beauty of the shadow,” James Russell told Dezeen, explaining that they wanted to show the shadows of candle smoke without using bright lights, which would have destroyed the candlelit atmosphere.

To Have and to Hold by JamesPlumb

Instead, they recorded the chandelier burning overnight and then projected the video alongside it in the chapel of St. Barnabas.

To Have and to Hold by JamesPlumb

“None of our shows are in typical white cube spaces,” said Russell. “We love to evoke an atmosphere.”

To Have and To Hold by JamesPlumb

The collection also includes assemblages such as an eighteenth century wing chair combined with church pew seats to create a long bench, and a Victorian pulpit repurposed as a cocooned reading room.

To Have and to Hold by JamesPlumb

Document boxes with mirrored tin linings are raised on steel plinths and illuminated from inside, while a corner cupboard has been transformed into a freestanding upholstered bench.

To Have and to Hold by JamesPlumb

A dresser from an apothecary and a set of artist’s pigment drawers are extended with steel frames that outline the missing fragments of the original furniture.

To Have and to Hold by JamesPlumb

Above: photograph by Gisela Torres, courtesy of Kandasamy Projects

“The majority of the work is about vessels or containers, whether for people or objects,” said Russell. “It’s nearly always a broken or incomplete object, one that the antique dealers aren’t drawn to.”

To Have and to Hold by JamesPlumb

To Have and to Hold by JamesPlumb

Above: photograph by Gisela Torres, courtesy of Kandasamy Projects

The pieces were exhibited inside the House of St. Barnabas, a former women’s refuge in Soho, during last October’s Frieze art fair. To Have and To Hold was the first exhibition by newly founded “nomadic gallery” Kandasamy Projects.

To Have and to Hold by JamesPlumb

Other projects by the same designers we’ve featured on Dezeen include antique furniture with cast concrete inserts and an award-winning interior for a fashion boutique in east London – see all our stories about JamesPlumb.

To Have and to Hold by JamesPlumb

See all our stories about furniture »
See all our stories about exhibitions »

To Have and to Hold by JamesPlumb

Photographs are by JamesPlumb, courtesy of Kandasamy Projects, except where stated.

To Have and to Hold by JamesPlumb

Above: photograph by Gisela Torres, courtesy of Kandasamy Projects

Here’s some more information from Kandasamy Projects:


Kandasamy Projects is proud to present its inaugural exhibition To Have and To Hold by James Plumb. The installation will showcase a significant new body of work, and marks the designers first solo show with a London gallery.

To Have & To Hold presents the artist’s core ethos – the desire to look again at the overlooked. It is the pieces they find that are the starting point of all their work. With a desire to treat each one preciously, they marry apparently disparate fragments into new assemblages that appear as if they could have always existed.

The site for the exhibition reflects the tone of the works. The House of St. Barnabas was a place of sanctuary in its former life as a women’s refuge. The installation will encompass the on-site Chapel, where a unique lighting piece will be presented. A 19th C chandelier – patinated as if dragged from the ocean floor – is exhibited alongside its own silhouette – a shimmering moving image that brings a unique balance of the analogue and the digital.

The focus on the preciousness of objects is borne out in a new limited edition of sculptural luminaires. A collection of old solicitor’s document boxes have been given their own elegant steel plinths. Illuminated from within, their mirrored tin linings become a home for cherished belongings.

The Monro Room will showcase a new collection of unique assemblages. An old corner cupboard that has been released from its confines and allowed to stand freely in the middle of the room, is transformed into a ‘settle’ that celebrates its distinctive shape. A Victorian pulpit, discovered in a tangled mess of overgrown brambles has had its former purpose for delivering sermons to the masses refocussed to create a one of a kind reading room for the individual. The utilty of the pulpit has been transformed from a platform for public speech to a cocooned space for quiet contemplation.

An 18th C wing chair finds new function as a day bed-come-bench with the addition of oversized church pew seats that project from within. A fragment from an old apothecary dresser, and a pair of old pigment drawers are extended by steel frameworks which reference the other parts now missing and forgotten. An allusion to the fact that their present forms are merely fragments of their former selves – an ethereal reminder of their initial purpose.

Each piece is a study in refined interventions that are designed to elevate but not dominate their subjects.

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by JamesPlumb
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ILI-ILI lamps by Grupa

Product news: different modular elements stack up to make these pendant lamps by Croatian design studio Grupa (+ movie).

The mix and match lamps by Grupa are called ILI-ILI, which means “either-or”.

ILI-ILI lamps by Grupa

There are six modular elements to be combined in various ways.

ILI-ILI lamps by Grupa

Each module, made from powder-coated aluminium, is available in blue, green, yellow or grey,& in three shades of each colour.

ILI-ILI lamps by Grupa

Grupa was founded in Zagreb in 2006 by Filip Despot, Tihana Taraba and Ivana Pavic.

ILI-ILI lamps by Grupa

Similar products we’ve featured recently include stackable vessels made from marble, cut glass and 3D printed resin and a set of stackable lamps made from wood and recycled glass.

ILI-ILI lamps by Grupa

We’ve also featured lots of hanging lamps on Dezeen, such as a lamp made from ten metres of coiled electrical cord and another made from concrete and wood.

ILI-ILI lamps by Grupa

See all our stories about lamps »
See all our stories about design »

Here’s some more information from the designers:


The Studio Grupa is well-known Croatian design trio consisting of Tihana Taraba, Ivana Pavic and Filip Despot. They have presented several products over the last few years, presenting exceptionally good design with reasonable prices, thus creating original yet affordable designer products.

Grupa has a new product, series of lamps named ILI-ILI (EITHER-OR) which brings a completely new concept of the DIY approach to the Croatian lighting-fixtures market, i.e. design hanging fixtures, considering that their project enables the buyer to mix and match both shapes and colors. The designers created a concept based on six fundamental modular elements, different dimensions and diameters that can be mutually paired and combined, thus providing unlimited possibilities.

As the designers explain in their own words: “It’s possible to assemble six different elements through the simple act of linking them together, hence creating various lighting fixtures. The forms are adjusted according to dimensions, so they fit each other, while the elements are mutually connected with carrying clasps.”

In addition to matching and pairing various elements it’s also possible to combine several colour modules. The designers selected a spectrum of blue, green, yellow, and grey, through three shades of each. As the very photos illustrate, the color shades and their mutual combinations, with the six abovementioned forms, offer solutions that can be applied and used in various situations. The final choice of the product’s elements can lean towards either one colour or be complemented in a multi-coloured combination, always varying in form and shape.

This innovative approach towards the flexibility of the product and one’s own choice, along with the constant possibility of upgrading or changing, already known to the international market, conceptually aims at a wide spectrum of application and provides the user with a product that’s all but run-of-the-mill and boring.

“With the help of a recognisable manufacturing technique of metallurgy grinding and the traditional manufacturing art, the product is handmade from aluminium and powder coated in twelve different matte shades. Combining the traditional production technique with contemporary design opens up the possibility for users to design their own ideal combination, the choices are extensive, and as the name of the product states, it’s possible to mix and match them EITHER this way OR that.”

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by Grupa
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Fubiz x MyProvence 2013

Pour une nouvelle année, Fubiz est partenaire du festival My Provence : un concours (photo, création graphique) ouvert à tous et lancé avec un thème qui laisse libre court à l’imagination « Bain de Foule ». A l’issu du concours, les lauréats et artistes membres du jury viendront partager une résidence artistique éphémère.

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