workframe iPad home office

workframe is: picture frame (if closed) magnetic memo board, home office, charging station, iPad nest, wall desk, room saver, high desk, concealment….

Dressed collection by Jens Praet

Design Miami: Belgian designer Jens Praet used bronze drapes cast from sheets of cloth to dress these pieces of brass furniture.

Dressed by Jens Praet

Jens Praet created the Dressed collection in collaboration with his father, artist Jan Praet. “What I did is take leftover fabric and cut it in a triangular shape,” Praet told Dezeen at the Industry Gallery booth at Design Miami. “All the fabric is then dipped in hot wax, and when it’s still hot you drape it over the under-structure.”

Dressed by Jens Praet

The finished piece is then cast from this wax model in bronze and given an oxidised copper patina, before being placed on top of the brushed brass under-structure.

Dressed by Jens Praet

Previous projects by Praet we’ve featured on Dezeen include a table made from shredded paper and resin and a collection of Corian tables with grooves worn into their sides.

Dezeen was at Design Miami last week reporting on the highlights from the fair, including Snarkitecture’s bundle of inflatable sausages over the entrance and Glithero’s Gaudí-inspired inverted domes – see all our stories about Design Miami.

See all our stories about Jens Praet »
See all our stories about furniture »

Photographs are by Jiri Praet.

Here’s some more information from the designer:


Dressed is a series of contemporary furniture items composed by bronze dresses and brass under-structures, designed in collaboration with Jens’ father and artist Jan Praet.

Leftover and discarded fabric has been immortalised in functional art objects. To this end triangular shaped fabric is being dipped in hot wax, draped and shaped by hand over a rigid under-structure and cast in bronze.

The bronze dresses, patinated in a reminiscent oxidised green color, are placed over a contrasting geometrical brushed brass under-structure in order to complete the functionality of each furniture item.

Each item is the result of different production steps, and in order to preserve the tactile feeling of the fabric, most is done by hand. The bronze patina and brushed brass surface may slightly vary in color over time, a beautiful aspect that is characteristic to the ageing process of these archaic materials. Each Dressed piece is unique.

Materials:
Oxidised green patinated bronze, brushed brass

Dressed Chair
Dimensions:
800 x 450 x 500 mm (h x w x d)

Dressed Table
Dimensions:
760 x 1950 x 950 mm (h x w x d)

Dressed Bench
Dimensions:
450 x 1710 x 400 mm (h x w x d)

Dressed Stool
Dimensions:
450 x 400 x 400 mm (h x w x d)

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by Jens Praet
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belTable

The belTable is project of table based mainly on simplicity. We got 4 parts which are used to create the belTable. Top, Legs, Pegs and Belt. That&rsqu..

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With the style of a precious jewel, the new Diamond sideboard, colored in green emerald, will make a splash in interior design since it is one of the ..

R18 Ultra Chair by Clemens Weisshaar and Reed Kram

Design Miami: design duo Clemens Weisshaar and Reed Kram have used technology from the car-racing industry to develop a chair made by robots that weighs just 2.2 kilograms (+ movie).

Clemens Weisshaar and Reed Kram worked with experts at Audi’s Lightweight Design Centre to produce the R18 Ultra, a chair named after and inspired by Audi’s ultra lightweight prototype race car.

R18 Ultra Chair by Clemens Weisshaar and Reed Kram

“We started using technology that you find in [the R18 Ultra] car and translated it into a piece of furniture, which is quite exciting because we got access to technology the furniture industry can’t even dream of,” Weisshaar told Dezeen at Design Miami.

R18 Ultra Chair by Clemens Weisshaar and Reed Kram

Earlier this year Dezeen reported on the public beta testing for the R18 Ultra, where hundreds of visitors to the Milan furniture fair sat on the chair while it was hooked up to advanced stress-analysis sensors.

“It’s a process somewhat borrowed from the testing and development of a racecar,” said Kram. “Sitting is a very dynamic activity, weirdly, and everybody uses the chair differently,” added Weisshaar. “So simply putting weight on it and doing static load tests doesn’t get you anywhere. You actually need people to engage with it.”

R18 Ultra Chair by Clemens Weisshaar and Reed Kram

Using data from the public beta testing, the designers worked out where they could trim off unnecessary weight from the carbon-fibre shell. “The nature of composite is it’s always a layering process,” said Weisshaar.”That also allows you to just take off layers where you don’t need the material.

“It’s completely different from any subtractive manufacturing or moulding, where you have a continuous wall thickness and continuous materiality. Here, not only can you manipulate the wall thickness, you can also manipulate the materiality.”

R18 Ultra Chair by Clemens Weisshaar and Reed Kram

The legs of the chair are cut out from flat sheets of aluminium and then put together using the same cold metal transfer technology that Audi uses to make cars.

“They’re mass production techniques,” said Weisshaar, “but there are even more exciting mass production techniques in the making in the labs, which we couldn’t use because they’re totally locked away and top secret. So what we’re showing here is what’s happening tomorrow – but what’s happening the day after tomorrow is even more exciting.”

R18 Ultra Chair by Clemens Weisshaar and Reed Kram

In 2010 Kram and Weisshaar worked with Audi to install eight robotic arms in London’s Trafalgar Square, where they spelled out messages in mid-air.

Dezeen was in Miami last week reporting on all the highlights of the Design Miami collectors fair, including the sausage-shaped inflatables around the fair’s entrance, an “ice halo” of Swarovski crystals and an installation of perfect natural curves inspired by the art nouveau history of a champagne maker – see all our stories about Design Miami.

R18 Ultra Chair by Clemens Weisshaar and Reed Kram

See all our stories about Kram and Weisshaar »
See all our stories about chairs »

Here’s some more information from the designer:


R18 Ultra Chair
designed by by Clemens Weisshaar and Reed Kram
for Audi

December 5-9, 2012
Design Miami/
Miami Beach, FL, USA

Clemens Weisshaar and Reed Kram have developed a chair using methods borrowed from the future of automotive manufacturing in collaboration with Audi’s Lightweight Design Center. The chair’s multi-material space frame is made from carbon composites, carbon micro-sandwich and high strength aluminum and weighs only 2.2 kg or 77 ounces. The chair embodies Audi’s ultra lightweight design credo completely by following strict guidelines to shave off every ounce of excess weight.

The R18 Ultra Chair’s genesis incorporates crowd-sourced data acquired through thousands of testing sessions held in Milan during the Salone Internazionale del Mobile in April 2012. Using advanced physics simulation software, the big data set enabled designers and engineers to analyze a wide variety of load scenarios and carefully adjust and optimize the carbon fiber lay up, geometry and dimensions of the final object accordingly.

At Design Miami/ the chair’s designers and engineers are giving visitors an intimate insight into their studios and labs, displaying drawings, samples, models, mock-ups, moulds and prototypes from the various stages of the development process. This includes an industrial welding robot and the chair’s namesake and inspiration, the R18 Ultra – the pace car for an entire technology: Audi ultra.

Audi ultra stands for state of the art lightweight construction, technology and design aimed at streamlining and optimizing efficiency across the board. This begins with the raw materials sourced for production all the way through various manufacturing stages, the operation of the vehicle, its fuel consumption and its deconstruction and recyclability at the end of its life cycle.

Aluminum is a key material in Audi’s repertoire of lightweight design technologies: The chair’s legs are made of folded sheet aluminum, welded by an industrial robot using a cold metal transfer process. The chair’s seat shell is fabricated from the latest carbon composite materials: a combination of carbon micro-sandwich and carbon rubber composites extrapolated directly from components of the racecar. The R18 Ultra Chair manifests Audi’s ultra lightweight design credo in a 2.2 kg (77oz) piece of furniture that is ultra light and extremely durable.

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and Reed Kram
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Competition: five Pilot Stools by Quinze & Milan to give away

Competition: Dezeen is giving readers the chance to win one of five Pilot Stools in collaboration with Belgian design brand Quinze & Milan.

Competition: five Pilot Stools by Quinze & Milan to give away

The stools have gently-curved seats with a matte top and glossy underside, finished in black or white.

Competition: five Pilot Stools by Quinze & Milan to give away

The ends of the tapered oiled-oak legs are threaded so they screw into the seat, exposing four small dots of wood in the top.

Competition: five Pilot Stools by Quinze & Milan to give away

Rounded caps in the same material as the seats cover the bottoms of the legs to prevent damage to floor surfaces.

Competition: five Pilot Stools by Quinze & Milan to give away

Designed by Patrick Rampelotto and Fritz Pernkopf, the Pilot range includes a small stool, which can be won in this competition, as well as a kitchen stool and bar stool.

Competition: five Pilot Stools by Quinze & Milan to give away

Other designs for Quinze & Milan we’ve previously featured include a folding aluminium chair designed by KiBiSi and giant versions of David Weeks’ Cubebot toys.

Competition: five Pilot Stools by Quinze & Milan to give away

See all our stories about stools »
See all our stories about furniture »

Competition: five Pilot Stools by Quinze & Milan to give away

To enter this competition email your name, age, gender, occupation, and delivery address and telephone number to competitions@dezeen.com with “Pilot Stools” in the subject line. Please specify whether you would like a black or white stool. We won’t pass your information on to anyone else; we just want to know a little about our readers. Read our privacy policy here.

Competition: five Pilot Stools by Quinze & Milan to give away

Competition closes 8 January 2013. Five winners will be selected at random and notified by email. Winners’ names will be published in a future edition of our Dezeenmail newsletter and at the top of this page. Dezeen competitions are international and entries are accepted from readers in any country.

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Quinze & Milan to give away
appeared first on Dezeen.

Splinter by Nendo for Conde House

Product news: Japanese studio Nendo has designed a collection of furniture with components that look like they’re peeled away from wooden stems (+ slideshow).

Splinter by Nendo for Conde House

“We splintered each piece of wood as though peeling it away,” says Nendo. “We kept larger pieces of wood at their original thickness to provide strength where necessary, and used thin pieces of wood that had splintered off for more delicate parts.”

Splinter by Nendo for Conde House

“We approached the wood gently, going with the grain so that the wood would retain its original pliancy,” Nendo adds.

Splinter by Nendo for Conde House

Called Splinter, the range includes a chair, coat stand, side table and two mirrors.

Splinter by Nendo for Conde House

It is produced by Conde House, a manufacturer based in Japan’s Asahikawa wooden furniture region.

Splinter by Nendo for Conde House

The series will be presented at imm cologne in Germany from 14 to 20 January 2013.

Splinter by Nendo for Conde House

Nendo have been Dezeen regulars for a long time and their recent projects include chairs covered in fishing line rather than varnish, bowls so thin they quiver in the wind and the Dark Noon series of watches available from Dezeen Watch Store.

Splinter by Nendo for Conde House

See all our stories about design by Nendo.

Splinter by Nendo for Conde House

Photos are by Yoneo Kawabe.

Splinter by Nendo for Conde House

The post Splinter by Nendo
for Conde House
appeared first on Dezeen.

Imagination-Inspiring Chair

Gotta love this awesome kid’s chair by Japanese design firm, h220430! The unique design was inspired by the art of Furoshiki, where all forms of an object are created by wrapping them with a single piece of cloth, and the folding art of Origami where shapes are formed by folding. Flat-pack-ready, the chair arrives as a planar piece to be folded into position by the little one, inspiring their creativity through interaction as they help it come to life! So. Effing. Cool. I need an adult size for myself ASAP!

Because it can be returned to a planar shape, it’s easily storable and transportable. Composed entirely of flexible EVA material, it’s lightweight, durable, recyclable, and capable of being produced in a variety of color options.

Designer: h220430


Yanko Design
Timeless Designs – Explore wonderful concepts from around the world!
Yanko Design Store – We are about more than just concepts. See what’s hot at the YD Store!
(Imagination-Inspiring Chair was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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Shiro Kuramata’s ‘Laputa’ Bed on the Block at Phillips

One of the less memorable parts of Jonathan Swift‘s Gulliver’s Travels sees the titular voyager astonished at the sight of “an Island in the Air, inhabited by Men, who are able (as it should seem) to raise, or sink, or put into a Progressive Motion, as they pleased.” This is Laputa, where inhabitants combine mathematics and music in wildly impractical ways and live in homes that are free of right angles (paging Frank Lloyd Wright!). The floating kingdom was an inspiration for Shiro Kuramata‘s final furniture design: the “Laputa” bed (pictured), created for a 1991 group exhibition at the Palazzo Strozzi in Florence, Italy. Nearly 14 feet in length, the aluminum bed comes with Kuramata’s “Star Piece” silk sheets. One of the 30 beds made hits the block tomorrow afternoon at Phillips de Pury & Company as part of its Design Masters sale. Ready to float away to dreamland in Laputa? The bed is estimated to fetch between $80,000-$120,000, so probably best to sleep on it.

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