Head In Legos
Posted in: UncategorizedElroy Klee, studio de design, nous fait découvrir une série photo en utilisant des blocs de construction « Lego » en guise de perruques. Les différentes coiffures traduisent des types et des couleurs de cheveux différents, en utilisant des pièces noires, rouges et jaunes. Une nouvelle façon de voir la construction d’une coiffure.
Unempire Socks: The Melbourne-based brand offers a sanitary way to wear sausages, cheese or tuna on your toes
Posted in: aus
To say there aren’t many creative sock brands around right now would be a lie—but that doesn’t mean there isn’t room for more.The latest brand to bring a smile to our face (via their feet) is…
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Bon Vivant: Leather goods, handmade in Brisbane, inspired by the many forms of the Good Life
Posted in: leathergoods
The Good Life is a concept best left to individual dreamers to interpret. While some may see it as a life spent lamping in the sun or lapping the local ski hill, others feel it’s defined as time dedicated to a passion project….
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Craig Robins: “Furniture companies key to regenerating Miami Design District”
Posted in: design movies, Dezeen and MINI World Tour 2013, Dezeen movies, World Tour 2013: MiamiDezeen and MINI World Tour: in the second part of our interview with Craig Robins, the Miami property developer explains how bringing back furniture showrooms was the catalyst for transforming the city’s derelict Design District into the thriving luxury shopping destination it is today.
After the successful redevelopment of South Beach in the 1980s and 1990s, Robins began acquiring properties in Miami’s historical Design District, an area so named because of the proliferation of furniture companies that congregated there in the 1920s.
“It became a centre for furniture design in Miami,” Robins explains. “But by the mid-eighties, as places became more and more mallified in America, the Design District fell into disrepair.”
Robins says the key to redeveloping the Design District was to encourage furniture companies away from the malls and back onto the streets.
“What we did initially was to bring back the furniture design,” he says. “[American designer] Holly Hunt was one of our first tenants. That began the process and now you can walk around the Design District and see all the great furniture design.”
In 2005, collectible design show Design Miami launched in the Design District. Architect Zaha Hadid was named Design Miami Designer of the Year and Robins commissioned her to create a sculpture called Elastika in the atrium of the Moore Building, one of the area’s original 1920s furniture showrooms.
“Theodore Moore built the first furniture showroom in the neighbourhood in the 1920s,” Robins says. “It’s still an unbelievable structure. Zaha Hadid was commissioned to do a really magnificent installation inside the historical space.”
Other high-profile designers have left their mark on the Design District. Design Miami’s 2006 Designer of the Year Marc Newson created a white, undulating fence for the neighbourhood’s Design Architecture Senior High school (DASH).
Once the cultural and economic centre of the Design District was restored, Robins says it wasn’t long before restaurants and galleries started to open too, which in turn helped him to lure other lucrative businesses to the area.
“We had a cultural presence,” he says. “Restaurants were starting to open, galleries. It was then that I realised that the final ingredient to really catapult this neighbourhood into another level of creative offering would be if we could bring the fashion industry here.”
Hermès, Céline and Christian Louboutin were some of the early brands to set up stores in the district, and others soon followed: “Louis Vouiton, Christian Dior, Prada,” Robins lists. “I think we have a chance to be the most interesting neighbourhood in the world that has this balanced concentration of art, design, fashion and food.”
He continues: “The idea of synergies is that they start feeding each other and that the sum of those parts becomes so much greater than the whole, there’s this explosion that happens. Of course, I don’t think one can ever be arrogant, and despite our success, we have a lot of work to do. The goal, though, is just to make [the Design District] a great place: a great place to shop; a great place to find furniture; a great place to just walk around.”
We drove around Miami Design District in our MINI Cooper S Paceman. The music in the movie is a track called Jewels by Zequals. You can listen to the full track on Dezeen Music Project.
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to regenerating Miami Design District” appeared first on Dezeen.
Martijn Van Strien’s Dystopian Brutalist Outerwear is “a kind of trend forecast”
Posted in: design movies, Dezeen and MINI World Tour 2013, Dezeen movies, Dutch Design Week 2013, World Tour 2013: EindhovenDezeen and MINI World Tour: graduate designer Martijn Van Strien explains that his range of coats made from single sheets of black tarpaulin are designed for an imagined future world where money and resources are in short supply.
Dystopian Brutalist Outerwear, which Van Strien exhibited at the Design Academy Eindhoven graduate show during Dutch Design Week last year, consists of five coats made out of cut sheets of folded tarpaulin.
“It’s a kind of trend forecast for a dystopian future that, when everything is not so great with the economic stuff that’s going on right now, we might be heading towards,” says Van Strien. “It will be cold; people will be unhappy; we’ll be living in buildings that are just grey blocks. These are coats that we could produce for people that don’t have a lot of money, when we don’t have a lot of materials, when a coat needs to last for a lifetime.”
Van Strien says he chose tarpaulin because it is cheap, resilient and simple to work with.
“[The coats] are all cut from a single piece of black tarpaulin,” he says. “You then have to weld the parts together with heat. In the front I’ve made closures with magnets and that’s pretty much it. This material is super easy to work with, you don’t need to finish it or anything and it will last forever.”
The coats were designed to provoke a reaction and make people think about where the world could be heading, Van Strien says.
“A lot of people feel a bit creeped out [by the coats] and that is the goal, that we think about how we’re handling our social malaise,” he explains. “I see myself as a fashion designer, so I’ve looked at this from a purely aesthetic point of view. But the thought behind it is something that I feel very strongly about. I never make a garment just because it’s pretty, it always has to tell a story.”
Despite being designed for a future that does not exist yet, Van Strien says he has been approached by a number of people interested in putting the coats into production.
“I was not planning on putting these coats into production when I first made them, it was just a statement,” he says. “But a couple of parties have come up and they asked me if I wanted to take them into production so now I’m considering it.”
We drove around Eindhoven in our MINI Cooper S Paceman. The music in the movie is a track called Family Music by Eindhoven-based hip hop producer Y’Skid.
You can listen to more music by Y’Skid on Dezeen Music Project and watch more of our Dezeen and MINI World Tour movies here.
The post Martijn Van Strien’s Dystopian Brutalist
Outerwear is “a kind of trend forecast” appeared first on Dezeen.
The ABC’s of Beyoncé
Posted in: Knowles, The ABC's of Beyonce, vivian lohPour un projet d’études, l’illustrateur Vivian Loh a conçu un alphabet original et amusant en hommage à l’icône pop qu’incarne Beyoncé. Les lettres de l’alphabet se forment d’elles-mêmes à partir des poses contorsionnistes de Beyoncé dans ses clips. L’alphabet complet est disponible dans la suite.
A Void in Time
Posted in: Accessories & Fashion, timepieceDesigned for the Fossil brand, the O Ring watch is a metaphorical symbol of the consistency of time which has no lapse. The open center piques the viewers interest when it becomes clear that the mechanical functionality doesn’t emanate from the center as we’re familiar with. On a side note, I’m suddenly craving a doughnut.
Designer: Eugeni Quitllet
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(A Void in Time was originally posted on Yanko Design)
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Andrea Galvani Photography
Posted in: A few invisible structures, Andrea Galvani, Andrea Galvani Photography, balloon, round, smoke, structureAndrea Galvani, une photographe italienne basée à New York et au Mexique, a fait cette série de photos intitulée : « A Few Invisible Structures ». Elle intègre des éléments cachés dans le décor et joue avec des structures et figures telles que des formes symétriques, triangulaires, circulaires ou linéaires.
Royal Mansour Architecture
Posted in: luxe, Marrakech, riad, riads, royal mansourFocus sur ce lieu étonnant situé à Marrakech, dans un domaine de 3,5 hectares cerné de remparts historiques avec, à l’intérieur, l’hôtel hors normes Royal Mansour composé de 53 riads. Une architecture impressionnante réalisée par les artisans marocains. Plus d’images du lieu dans la suite de l’article