Dezeen Screen: Moody Nest by Hanna Emelie Ernsting

Moody Nest by Hanna Emelie Ernsting

Dezen Screen: Moody Nest is part of Hanna Emelie Ernsting‘s series of furniture for stroppy people. Watch the movie »

Moody Nest by Hanna Emelie Ernsting

The quilted textile shell on a foam base is designed to envelope its ill-tempered owner while they calm down.

Moody Nest by Hanna Emelie Ernsting

It’s a development of her Moody Couch project, which was awarded second prize at this year’s [D3] Contest young designers competition in Cologne.

Moody Nest by Hanna Emelie Ernsting

Watch an animation of the Moody Couch on Dezeen Screen and watch our interview with the Frankfurt designer here.

Moody Nest by Hanna Emelie Ernsting

Hanna Emelie Ernsting more recently took part in the Blickfang designworkshop in Vienna – watch our series of movies about the event here.

Moody Nest by Hanna Emelie Ernsting

Here are some more details from Hanna Emelie Ernsting:


Moody Nest was created with the intention to provide an especially intense feeling of comfort, warmth and intimacy. The user should be fully absorbed by the opulent cover in order to be able calm down completely. The sofa invites the user to be laid-back, express feelings and let everything out. With its large cover Moody Nest will resemble the moods of its user, looking crabby, sleepy, playful or naughty.

The textile part of Moody Nest is more dominant while the base is reduced, compared to Moody Couch. The forming and cushioning characteristics of the textile fabric are strengthened by quilting two layers of 3D textile together.

The stitched squares are getting smaller towards the top to increase a sense of three-dimensionality of the textile surface. The base resembles a nest and consists of one wooden board at the bottom and 16cm of soft foam fixed onto the wood.

A double foam rim goes around the edge, strengthened with a plastic sheet in the middle, bending slightly but preventing the foam from bending down when you really lean back.


See also:

.

Moody Couch by
Hanna Emelie Ernsting
Interview with
Hanna Emelie Ernsting
Blickfang
designworkshop

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COD by Rami Tareef

COD by Rami Tareef

Young designer Rami Tareef creates chairs with geometric patterns by wrapping and weaving cords around spare, steel frames.

COD by Rami Tareef

The chairs are the product of Tareef’s COD Project (Crafts Oriented Design), in which the designer aims to update and preserve traditional weaving techniques.

COD by Rami Tareef

He applies skills learned from a wicker craftsman in the Old City of Jerusalem to contemporary forms and materials.

COD by Rami Tareef

The chairs are composed of only two materials; 500 meters of polypropylene cord are threaded around 10 meters of steel rod.

COD by Rami Tareef

Alternating colours of cord create a secondary pattern in the weave that accentuates the chair’s structure.

COD by Rami Tareef

Tareef is a recent graduate of Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design .

COD by Rami Tareef

See all our stories on chairs »

COD by Rami Tareef

Photographs are by Oded Antman.

Here’s some more information from the designer:


The COD (crafts oriented design) project 2011

By Rami Tareef

COD by Rami Tareef

What really happens in the encounter between craft and design, what fundamental differences in thought, planning and execution characterize the objects produced by the craftsman and the designer?

COD by Rami Tareef

This past year I have been preoccupied by a fascinating endeavor that is, essentially, a hybridization of traditional craftsmanship and contemporary design. The project was born of my desire to create by embracing the truth of the material. A designer’s desire to explore, to engage in trial and error, to learn, to know and to produce something new − via the sole agency of his thinking hands.

COD by Rami Tareef

The project tries to illuminate the differences and similarities between craft and design; it tests and stretches the limits of their hybridization, and tries to end up with something identifiable from that past world. The COD project deals with wicker/woven furniture − a traditional craft product − and preserves its production values while incorporating innovative design features from the world of mass production.

COD by Rami Tareef

This One-Off stool try to make a new approach to the idea of “One of a kind” product by combination between traditional craft technique an high technology of cutting laser. It’s came to raise question about status of products with hand made values in our saturated mass production world. Is there any soul in these products?

COD by Rami Tareef

The rest (other 5 chairs) of the project deals in the hybridization between traditional craft technique and contemporary design attempt to create something new while keeping the truth of the old tradition.

COD by Rami Tareef

Some chairs examine the technique and stretching the boundaries of it. The angular structure of the chair came up to keep the technique possible to apply.

COD by Rami Tareef

On the other hand, part of the design trying to touch in textile design, it comes through the use of colors and multi-variable relationship between the cord and the chair structure that create many surfaces and three-dimensional spaces.

COD by Rami Tareef

Further, the project came from my faith, as a young designer, that we should preserve traditional crafts by upgrade them through design and place them in the contemporary context in our world and culture.

COD by Rami Tareef

I learned the basic technique from a wicker furniture craft man in the old city of Jerusalem and from there began a long development process that included dozens of models to upgrade technique.

Bezalel, Academy of art and design, Jerusalem – final project, B.Des of industrial design department
Furniture Craftsman: Abo Ahmad Nazir


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