Front designs Tetris storage system made of stacking blocks

Stockholm 2014: Swedish design studio Front has launched a modular storage system called Tetris that’s made up of stacked blocks (+ slideshow).

Front designs Tetris storage system made of stacking blocks

The product is named after the puzzle video game where the aim is to rotate and shift falling blocks of different shapes and sizes so they slot together.

Front designs Tetris storage system made of stacking blocks

Front‘s system for Swedish brand Horreds can be layered in different configurations to allow the user to create their own piece of furniture.

Front designs Tetris storage system made of stacking blocks

The modules are available in two different sizes, one square and one rectangular, of varying depths. They can be wall-mounted or piled on top of each other in any quantity and orientation to form furniture or room dividers.

Front designs Tetris storage system made of stacking blocks

By leaving the block as an open box it becomes a bookcase, glass doors create a display cabinet or solid doors create a cupboard.

Front designs Tetris storage system made of stacking blocks

“Everything from large, convenient devices for the office to small and fun furniture for your home can be created,” said Front. “You just have to mix and build!”

Front designs Tetris storage system made of stacking blocks

The customer can choose materials such as wood, felt, copper, leather, brass and steel. Each block can be a different material and colour or the whole can be coordinated.

Front designs Tetris storage system made of stacking blocks

Details such as steel legs and leather handles can be added to further personalise the design.

Front designs Tetris storage system made of stacking blocks

Tetris was launched during Stockholm Design Week, which took place last week. Front also presented spherical glass lamps that appear to be steamed up.

Front designs Tetris storage system made of stacking blocks

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Front designs misted-up Fog lamps for Zero

Stockholm 2014: Swedish studio Front presents spherical glass lamps that appear to be steamed up at the Stockholm Furniture Fair and Northern Light Fair, which opens today.

Front designs Fog lamps for Zero

Front‘s Fog pendant lamps for Swedish lighting brand Zero consist of a glass ball that is frosted on the bottom and gradates to transparent at the top. “With no apparent light source, Fog looks like a flaming planet, a mystical hovering globe,” said the designers.

Front designs Fog lamps for Zero

The spheres were sand-blasted on the inside to create the foggy effect and at first glance the light seems to shine from this cloudy base. “The light appears to shoot up from the bottom of the globe, emitting an ambient glow that rises like a magically fiery fog,” the studio said.

Front designs Fog lamps for Zero

In fact an LED light source is hidden in the socket, which illuminates the frosted glass so it glows. The effect is intensified in the dark, when the contrast between the top and bottom is amplified.

Metal fixtures are available in copper or powder-coated in black or white, and also with a black or white cord. The lamps are currently on display at the Stockholm Furniture Fair and Northern Light Fair, which continues until Saturday.

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Häagen-Dazs Cloud ice cream by Front

Swedish design collective Front has designed a cloud-shaped ice cream in collaboration with dessert company Häagen-Dazs.

Häagen-Dazs Cloud ice cream by Front

Häagen-Dazs‘ ice cream by Front comes in two graduated colours named dawn and dusk.

The flavour of the red dawn cloud is champagne truffle with Belgian chocolate whilst the dusk orange cloud incorporates Haagen-Dazs’ well-known flavours, dulce de leche and cookies and cream.

“As Scandinavians snow is an essential part of our winters,” said the designers. “We were inspired by how the snow clouds in the north transform the landscape. We made an ice cream snow cloud that sprinkles snowflakes on your plate.”

Häagen-Dazs Cloud ice cream by Front

The Clouds are sold throughout France and in Brussels, Liège, Madrid, Barcelona, and London.

Last year, London designers Doshi Levien designed an ice cream cake in the shape of a cratered moon for Häagen-Dazs.

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Layers of Glass on Objects

Né à Tokyo et vivant à Dusseldorf, Ramon Todo imagine de magnifiques créations en insérant des blocs de verre dans divers objets. Des oeuvres splendides et surréalistes, utilisant des roches volcaniques, des livres ou encore des fragments du mur de Berlin que l’on peut retrouver au Art Front Gallery.

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“We wanted to wake people’s curiosity about whisky”

Movie: Swedish designers Front have created a whisky-serving set for whisky brand Ballantine’s 12 that can be stacked into a balancing tower. In this Dezeen movie, Front’s Sofia Lagerkvist explains how the project was informed by a visit to the Ballantine’s production facilities in Scotland.

We wanted to wake people's curiosity about the whiskey

Called Ballance, Front‘s sculpture for Ballantine’s 12 year-old blended whisky comprises an oak coaster, whisky glass, copper ice container, water jug and a copper spoon that fit together to create a seemingly precarious stack. The five individual pieces can be taken apart and used to serve whisky.

We wanted to wake people's curiosity about the whiskey

“We were invited by Ballantine’s to create an object that celebrates the ritual of drinking whisky,” explains Lagerkvist in the movie.

“We have made hand-crafted objects that we have balanced on top of each other in a seemingly magical way. We really wanted to create a magical element to our object because we wanted to wake people’s curiosity about the whisky.”

We wanted to wake people's curiosity about the whiskey

Lagerkvist goes on to explain that several elements of the sculpture are informed by the whisky-making process itself.

“We went to Scotland to see the intricate production of making whisky,” she says. “We made a coaster that is a reference to the oak barrels that they use in the production.”

She adds: “The copper container, which is for the ice, relates to the copper stills.”

We wanted to wake people's curiosity about the whiskey

The square water jug is a reference to the distinctive shape of the Ballantine’s 12 bottle, Lagerkvist says, while for the whisky glass itself Front sought the advice of Ballantine’s master blender Sandy Hyslop.

“We asked the master blender what kind of glass he would prefer, what would be the ultimate glass for him,” Lagerkvist explains.

“He described a glass with a rounded bottom that you can keep in your hand, which warms the whisky and contributes to the flavour. It also has a slightly tapered top, which keeps the aroma close to the nose.”

See all our stories about Front »

We wanted to wake people's curiosity about the whiskey

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WaterDream by Front for Axor

Swedish design trio Front have created a giant, three-headed shower installation constructed from a maze of standard copper pipes (+ slideshow).

Axor WaterDream by Front

Sofia Lagerkvist, Charlotte von der Lancken and Anna Lindgren of Front created the WaterDream installation for bathroom brand Axor as part of a project to explore the future of the bathroom.

Rather than propose a high-tech solution, the designers decided to expose the copper pipework that is usually hidden from view. “We used our personal perception of the shower and showering to draw attention to the technology behind the wall, which is often concealed,” explains Charlotte von der Lancken.

Axor WaterDream by Front 2

“We played around with the most elementary components that are used to bring water to us – pipes, valves, couplings, and funnels,” added Front’s Sofia Lagerkvist.

Philippe Grohe, head of Axor and the grandson of the founder of parent company Hansgrohe, said: “Front show how something that is normally hidden from view can become a visually appealing and valued spatial construct.”

Axor WaterDream by Front

The installation was unveiled last week at Axor’s headquarters at Schiltach in the Black Forest, Germany, along with a second shower-light installation by Japanese designers Nendo.

Front design trio

Here’s the full press release from Hansgrohe:


Axor presents new “WaterDream” with Front and Nendo.
Re-thinking the shower – the search for a new archetype.

For 20 years now, Axor, the designer brand of Hansgrohe SE has been developing alternative visions for the bathroom as a living space. “In this regard, the focus is not primarily on the products, but on providing additional scope for creative development, for breaking down established behavior patterns, and for conducting an open, interdisciplinary dialogue,” says Philippe Grohe, Head of the Axor brand. Axor continuously engages in this dialogue with various internationally renowned design partners, which from now on also include the Swedish design trio Front, and the Japanese design studio Nendo. Following on the heels of Phoenix Design, Jean-Marie Massaud, Patricia Urquiola and the Bouroullec brothers, Front and Nendo now present their own personal Axor WaterDream. “Within our overall understanding of the use of space, the interaction with water, and the multifaceted individual needs of people, we focused specifically on the shower this time, interpreting it anew with Front and Nendo,” Philippe Grohe, the grandson of the company’s founder Hans Grohe, explains.

Living and showering: back to the origins

The invitation to re-think the shower produced two installations that couldn’t be more different from each other: whereas Nendo draws inspiration from an emotional living space outside of the bathroom, Front explores the technical origins of the water installation. Despite operating within different cultural contexts, the visions developed by the two design studios have one thing in common. Both present new archetypes in a charming and captivating manner: light and water pathways are re-interpreted in surprising and unconventional ways, and long-established functional and spatial separations between the living and bathroom spheres are challenged.

Front: a visual appreciation of water pathways

The Axor WaterDream created by Sofia Lagerkvist, Charlotte von der Lancken and Anna Lindgren allows us to experience the path water takes in its most original form. “Front show how something that is normally hidden from view can become a visually appealing and valued spatial construct,” says Philippe Grohe. “We used our personal perception of the shower and showering to draw attention to the technology behind the wall, which is often concealed,” explains Charlotte von der Lancken. “It was important for us to foster an awareness of what is the most archetypal aspect of the bathroom – the installation itself.” “For this reason, we played around with the most elementary components that are used to bring water to us – pipes, valves, couplings, and funnels,” adds Sofia Lagerkvist. With a simplicity that is characteristic of Scandinavian design, Front present their Axor WaterDream as an homage to artisanry and to the aesthetics inherent in technology and installation.

Axor, the designer brand of Hansgrohe SE, successfully realises “Designer Visions for Your Bathroom”. In cooperation with Axor, leading product designers, architects and interior designers develop their vision for the bathroom as a living space. The Axor collections offer a great number of unique and sustainable solutions to create personalised bathrooms of the highest aesthetic and technological levels. To date, Axor design partners include Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec, Antonio Citterio, Front, Jean-Marie Massaud, Nendo, Phoenix Design, Philippe Starck, and Patricia Urquiola. They all contribute towards making life in and around the bathroom a little more meaningful and beautiful. The Axor brand is headed by Philippe Grohe, grandson of the company’s founder Hans Grohe.

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New furniture and lighting by Front

Milan 2013: Swedish collective Front will launch six new products in Milan next week, including leather stools shaped like squidgy animals and a plywood table with burnt-on doodles (+ slideshow).

Front will also present a lamp shaped like a mobile, a see-through ash cabinet, a globe-shaped lamp with a frosted exterior and a set of three low tables.

The products will be exhibited at the the Salone Internazionale del Mobile and Spazio Rossana Orlandi from 9 to 14 April. Find the venues on Dezeen’s Milan 2013 map.

Last year in Milan the Stockholm company exhibited a lamp that blows a bubble every few seconds to form a transparent shade and a chair with a flexible back.

See more design by Front »
See all our previews of Milan 2013 »

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Frost by Front for Stelton

Stockholm 2013: Swedish studio Front has designed a collection of glassware with frosted bottoms for Danish brand Stelton.

Frost by Front for Shelton

Inspired by ice forming on the outside of a window, Front has created an ice bucket, two glasses and a carafe with a rounded cork stopper.

Frost by Front for Shelton

The simple vessels have curved translucent bases that gradate into clear glass halfway up.

Frost by Front for Shelton

We’ve previously featured a coffee pot designed by Paul Smith for Stelton‘s 50th anniversary.

Frost by Front for Shelton

Other stories from Stockholm Design Week include blown-glass sculptures that look like trees and an installation of glass objects and robotic arms.

Frost by Front for Shelton

See all our stories about glassware design »
See all our stories about designs by Front »
See all our coverage of Stockholm Design Week »

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Gentle by Front for Porro

Gentle by Front for Porro

Milan 2012: the flexible back of this chair by Swedish designers Front comprises a thick spring wrapped in black leather.

Gentle by Front for Porro

Presented for Italian brand Porro in Milan last week, the Gentle chair has a matching black leather seat but pale wooden front legs, which continue up and around the backrest in one loop to form arms.

Gentle by Front for Porro

Over at Spazio Rossana Orlandi Front also showed a lamp that blows bubbles – check it out in our earlier story and see all our stories about their work here.

The Salone Internazionale del Mobile took place from 17 to 22 April. See all our stories about Milan 2012 here.

Here are some more details from Porro:


Gentle design Front

Stolen from a fairy tale, directly coming from a children book, the result of any dream coming true, the Gentle chair entirely reinterprets the seat archetype, making its shapes far more modern and purified.

If at a first glance it looks like a continuum, a pattern drawing drafted without moving the pencil from the paper, in reality it perfectly hides a complex project, matching metal covered by soft leather at the back legs level, moving up to the back arch, to the light wood of the front legs, becoming the arm and back supports, in a subtle opposite contrast.

The soft back and the leather upholstered seat make the chair “soft” at the touch and at sight, in an harmonic double-coloured optical effect, graphical and retro at the same time, always two colours perfectly and elegantly matched.

Surface Tension Lamp by Front

Milan 2012: this lamp by Swedish designers Front blows a bubble every few seconds to form a transparent shade round an LED.

Tension Lamp by Front

Over the 50,000-hour life of the bulb the lamp will blow over three million bubble shades.

Tension Lamp by Front

Presented for new Dutch lighting brand Booo, the Surface Tension Lamp is on show at Spazio Rossana Orlandi.

Tension Lamp by Front

The Salone Internazionale del Mobile takes place from 17 to 22 April. See all our stories about Milan 2012 here.

Tension Lamp by Front

See all our stories about Front here.

Here’s some more information from Front:


Surface Tension Lamp

A bubble is brief, and bursts at your touch. But while it lasts, it catches the light and reflects the room like a multi-coloured temporary structure. We wanted to create a constantly changing lamp that combines the most ephemeral of lampshade with an LED light source that will last for 50 000 hours. In the time it takes the LED to burn out, the lamp will have had 3 million different globe shades.