Furniture that looks like giant sweets by Matthias Borowski

Design Academy Eindhoven graduate Matthias Borowski has created a range of furniture that resembles oversized confectionary (+ slideshow).

Importance of the Obvious furniture that looks like sweets by Matthias Borowski

Matthias Borowski, one half of studio Kollektiv Plus Zwei, designed the collection of candy-like objects that can be used as seats and tables for his thesis, titled The Importance of the Obvious.

Importance of the Obvious furniture that looks like sweets by Matthias Borowski

“I made objects looking like sweets to trigger all of our five senses,” Borowski told Dezeen.

Importance of the Obvious furniture that looks like sweets by Matthias Borowski

Borowski experimented with a range of materials before he achieved the sugary effect.

Importance of the Obvious furniture that looks like sweets by Matthias Borowski

He found that plastics could be manipulated and layered up to create the different patterns found in sweets. Also the artificial look of the material provided an apt analogy for the synthetic additives that go into confectionary.

Importance of the Obvious furniture that looks like sweets by Matthias Borowski

“When I researched candies I realised the material [they are made from] is often very artificial and plastic is in my opinion a good equivalent,” Borowski said.

Importance of the Obvious furniture that looks like sweets by Matthias Borowski

He also integrated other materials into the items to create the effects of nutty nougat and hard-boiled treats. “For the nougat object I used resin and wood, and for the layered candy I used transparent resin with colour pigments,” said the designer.

Importance of the Obvious furniture that looks like sweets by Matthias Borowski

One seat looks like an arctic roll, a stool is formed like a Liquorice Allsort and a bench resembles an ice cream finger covered in sugar sprinkles.

Importance of the Obvious furniture that looks like sweets by Matthias Borowski

Borowski completed the project for his Master thesis as part of the Contextual Design course at Design Academy Eindhoven.

Importance of the Obvious furniture that looks like sweets by Matthias Borowski

Although these items can’t be eaten, earlier this year we published a series of edible furniture that included a coffee table topped with a giant hard-boiled sweet and a white chocolate chair.

Furniture that looks like sweets The Importance of the Obvious by Matthias Borowski

The post Furniture that looks like giant sweets
by Matthias Borowski
appeared first on Dezeen.

Tatiana

It combines resumes codes styles of 50 years (feet and glass bell) but was able to
combine modernity thanks to the design of the tray that contains ..

Change to the furniture industry “will have to come from designers”

Young German designer Hanna Emelie Ernsting is producing her latest furniture collection herself following a “really tough” experience with a major brand, and has warned fellow designers to “watch out” for unfair contracts (+ interview).

Change to the furniture industry will have to come from designers

Ernsting has launched her range of Petstools under her own name, two years after signing a contract to manufacture her graduation projects with a brand that then failed to produce them. “I couldn’t get out of the contract,” she said. “So I couldn’t use my designs even though they would not produce them.”

Soon after graduation she was awarded second prize in the [D3] Contest for young designers at imm cologne 2013 for her Moody Couch, a sofa with a cover that’s much larger than the structure underneath so it can be scrunched around the user. A few months later she signed a deal to produce it along with a similar armchair called the Moody Next and a loose cover to create the same effect with a standard chair called the Moody Bag.

Change to the furniture industry will have to come from designers

“I thought that was the start so I was actually really excited about it, but I sort of realised I would be super relieved when it’s actually on the market,” she told Dezeen. However, after a year of developing the design the company changed its strategy and dropped Ernsting’s products.

“It was really tough and I was really angry as it was my diploma project – my beginning as a designer,” she said. “It actually said in the contract if they decide to not go on with the project then the contract would be terminated, but then they said we might produce it sometime. So they backed out of that, which was not really fair.”

Change to the furniture industry will have to come from designers

Speaking to Dezeen as the contract finally comes to a close, Ernsting cautioned new graduates to be careful what they sign up for in the excitement of beginning their careers. “Designers should really watch out for these contracts,” she warned. “I would be careful about giving away the rights, even for two years. That can still be a very important two years.”

She also recommended talking to other designers who have worked with companies to find out what experiences they had. “As long as you communicate with other designers, you know what to watch out for – I think that’s really important.”

Change to the furniture industry will have to come from designers

In addition, Ernsting noted that the royalty system where designers are paid according to how many of their products are sold “doesn’t seem modern any more”, echoing the sentiments of the #milanuncut debate that engaged dozens journalists and designers during Milan 2011 and exposed the poor royalties designers earn.

“It might have seemed a good idea 50 years ago, but a product will not be on the market for 50 years any more,” she explained. “Companies change their products every year so you’re not actually paid much for the work…. Right now some designers work for a producer for a year and are not paid anything.”

Change to the furniture industry will have to come from designers

However, she points out that there’s not much incentive for companies to change the way they remunerate designers for their work because there is so much competition amongst young graduates. “It’s kind of tough to make them see why they should choose you and not some other young designer who is perhaps willing to go further with the deal,” she explained. “I was willing at the beginning to go for that deal as I didn’t realise what risks there could be. There are always going to be other designers who are going to work like that.”

She therefore believes that in order for the situation to improve, “change would have to come from the designers.” She advocates designers working together to put pressure on companies for better deals, rather than undercutting each other. “I think it’s really important that designers talk to each other and that there’s not this competition so much. In a way everybody has a different chance at a producer.”

Change to the furniture industry will have to come from designers

For now, she’s taking production of the Petstools into her own hands. Like the three graduation projects, the footstools feature baggy covers for nestling into. In this case, each one is shaped like a different animal.

The base is MDF on metal legs, topped with the animal-shaped pillow containing expanded polystyrene beads. She has found a company to make them and is taking them to the market herself, having sold the initial batch quickly via her own website. “Designers who can’t afford to have a shop or don’t have [a retail] network yet pretty often do have a network with press,” she notes. “That’s definitely something you can use as a designer to bring your products out into the world.”

Change to the furniture industry will have to come from designers

Although frustrated by the way her first relationship with a manufacturer turned out, Ernsting acknowledges that her experiences with a range of manufacturers so far gave her the knowledge and confidence to be able to take this step. “I learned so much from working with these producers – they’re not all bad!” she said. “Coming straight from university, you don’t know anything about what production costs could look like, or how shops work. Things like that scared me in the beginning. Perhaps it was good that I had these experiences because I have learnt a lot about how to approach business as a designer.”

Meanwhile, the two-year contract for the Moody collection is now due to expire. Once she regains the rights, she will consider whether to produce those pieces under her own label as well or try to work out a new contract with a different company.

Change to the furniture industry will have to come from designers

Hanna Emelie Ernsting’s story is not unique and she’s one of a number of young designers who have decided to produce selected designs under their own label in parallel with work for major brands. Notably British industrial designer Benjamin Hubert branched out last autumn by manufacturing a tent-like lamp made of underwear fabric in-house, alongside his prolific work for international design companies.

Designers’ options for self-production are increasing further with the rise of crowdfunding platforms, like the recently launched Crowdyhouse, where designers are able to raise money upfront by inviting funding for products which investors eventually receive once they have been produced.

Here’s a transcript of the interview with Hanna Emelie Ernsting:


Rose Etherington: What made you decide to produce the Petstools yourself?

Hanna Emelie Ernsting: I had some difficult experiences with some bigger producers. It started off quite interesting and nice; after a while I realised that most of the energy had to come from me and I had to keep motivating the company. Then [my work] still might get taken out of the portfolio. There’s a lot of work to get the whole project going and a lot of things can go wrong.

Then I decided I could do it myself. I’ve learnt so much, [working with companies] is good training basically, and I decided perhaps I could give it a shot and try it myself. I’ve found a company to make them for me and I’m taking them to the market myself.

Rose Etherington: How do you get the products to the customers?

Hanna Emelie Ernsting: I think what’s quite exciting about that is the internet. The products aren’t even in the shops yet and I sold the first batch of them through my website. Designers who can’t afford to have a shop or don’t have [a retail] network yet pretty often do have a network with press. That’s definitely something you can use as a designer to bring your products out into the world. Also in terms of the production the world is so connected now – you can just email somebody and they can start sending the textiles over and everything goes faster.

Rose Etherington: Tell me what happened with the Moody Couch.

Hanna Emelie Ernsting: I signed a contract with a company for all three of my diploma projects – the Moody Couch, Moody Nest and Moody Bag. It seemed really exciting and good, then after about half a year of developing it further, it turned out that the company had to change their whole strategy. They had a new CEO and everything was put on hold. After that, development of my products stopped.

But I couldn’t get out of the contract, so I couldn’t use my designs even though they would not produce them. [The contract is] actually going to stop pretty soon, it terminates after two years, so now I’m getting out of it.

Rose Etherington: How did you get involved with the company?

Hanna Emelie Ernsting: They actually came through my textile producer. They were a very interesting company who are very involved with what is happening and they also helped me a lot by handing me out some materials that they couldn’t use any more so I could play around with it, then they helped me with the contact with the producers.

I thought that was the start so I was actually really excited about it. It was good of course, but I sort of realised I would be super relieved when it’s actually on the market. There are so many steps that still have to be done before you really know how it’s going to work out. I didn’t realise a lot of things still had to be achieved.

Moody Couch by Hanna Emelie Ernsting
Moody Couch by Hanna Emelie Ernsting

Rose Etherington: How do you feel about the fact that they decided not to use your piece but still wanted to stop you from going somewhere else?

Hanna Emelie Ernsting: It was really tough and I was really angry as it was my diploma project – my beginning as a designer. Also it actually said in the contract if they decide to not go on with the project then the contract would be terminated. But then we talked about it and they said we might produce it sometime. So they backed out of that, which was not really fair. So I was of course angry about that.

This contract is going to be over in November, so I am going to have a new chance of finding a new producer, or perhaps I will find out that it is just a difficult as couple of years ago!

Rose Etherington: Would you consider producing the Moody Couch yourself?

Hanna Emelie Ernsting: I am definitely going to consider it. I think it’s different with a big piece of furniture like the couch. For some bigger pieces of furniture, it would be good to put it in stores, because with a couch you want to sit on it [before you order it]. I am not quite sure about that but I am definitely going to think about it.

Rose Etherington: Are you able to say which company it is that you had the contract with?

Hanna Emelie Ernsting: I would rather not. I don’t want to give the impression that I don’t want to work with producers any more – it’s not an idea that I want to give up. If I say the name then producers may not want to work with me.

Rose Etherington: So you would get involved in that relationship again? What would you change about it?

Hanna Emelie Ernsting: I still would consider the way of being paid only once the product is on the market. It doesn’t seem modern any more, though. It might have seemed a good idea 50 years ago, but a product will not be on the market for 50 years any more. Companies change their products every year so you’re not actually paid much for the work. So I would probably try to change that. Also, I would be careful about giving away the rights, even for two years. That can still be a very important two years.

Rose Etherington: Have you found that companies are open to the idea of changing the royalties system?

Hanna Emelie Ernsting: I don’t think its that easy yet, because there are so many other designers, especially when you’re a young designer, it’s kind of tough to make them see why they should choose you and not some other young designer who is perhaps willing to go further with the deal.

I was willing at the beginning to go for that deal as I didn’t realise what risks there could be. There are always going to be other designers who are going to work like that. I can imagine that it would be hard to talk to the producers about changing this contract but I would try.

Designers should really watch out for these contracts and they should also try to communicate more with each other. I think the designers should agree on a certain way of payment then producers would slowly have to warm up to that idea. It would have to come from the designers. Right now some designers work for a producer for a year and are not paid anything.

Moody Nest by Hanna Emelie Ernsting
Moody Nest by Hanna Emelie Ernsting

Rose Etherington: What would your advice be to new graduates who have projects taken up by companies?

Hanna Emelie Ernsting: Talk to other designers about their experiences. If they know somebody who worked with this company, what experiences did they have? I think it’s really important that designers talk to each other and that there’s not this competition so much. In a way everybody has a different chance at a producer, so it could be that it doesn’t work out for one person and does for another. As long as you communicate with the designers, you know what to watch out for – I think that’s really important.

Rose Etherington: Would you advise graduate designers to start making their own products?

Hanna Emelie Ernsting: Coming straight from university, you don’t know anything about what production costs could look like, or how shops work. Things like that scared me in the beginning. Perhaps it was good that I had these experiences because I have learnt a lot about how to approach business as a designer.

I learned so much from working with these producers – they’re not all bad! I realised what to watch out for and how to approach producing something. I can’t really say that anyone once they come out of university should produce their own things. For me, I needed some time to understand how these things work and not to actually fear this scenario of producing your own product.

You have a big unknown territory in the beginning. But I decided that if I worked so much to get this product onto the market, perhaps I can even do this myself. It’s more than a design job that I’ve been doing with these producers. It’s also thinking about the price or what kind of people will use it, marketing knowledge flows into it, how to motivate the producers or the people you work with. You always have to be really encouraging and make them believe that the product you’ve designed is super special, then you have to convince the producers and they again have to use that to motivate shops and the buyer. I can use that knowledge for my own business.

The post Change to the furniture industry
“will have to come from designers”
appeared first on Dezeen.

TOWARD

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The only clip you’ll ever need!

The Gripstar pushes the concept of versatility to an entirely new level with its minimalistic yet remarkably multifunctional design! Easily mounted on any surface, users will find it handy for everything from hanging coats to organizing cables. Reusable for a number of applications, it’s the only clip you’ll ever need! Watch it come to life from concept to construction ->

Designer: Constructa Labs


Yanko Design
Timeless Designs – Explore wonderful concepts from around the world!
Shop CKIE – We are more than just concepts. See what’s hot at the CKIE store by Yanko Design!
(The only clip you’ll ever need! was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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I’d never get out of bed…

Hi-Can stands for High fidelity Canopy, suggesting a new and contemporary interpretation of the classic canopy bed that recreates our most intimate and protective space inside the bedroom. Inside Hi-Can users will be so immersed in the sound and imagery of everything from their favorite TV shows to video games.

Technological features: blinds, pressure-balance bedding system, a state-of-the-art sound system, reading lights, a built-in PC and full multimedia with game & entertainment console connected to a projector to enjoy high definition movies and images on the home theatre screen sliding down at the foot of the bed. Hi-Can is also equipped with a complete home automation system that has been specifically customized to manage trough a touch-screen remote control the whole system, from lighting to blinds and screen automation, bedding system movements and the entertainment hardware.

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Yanko Design
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(I’d never get out of bed… was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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