Colored-pencil table by Nendo

Japanese design studio Nendo covered this series of tables in paper and applied colour using crayons.

Colored-pencil table by Nendo

The Colored-pencil tables were prepared using a technique called udukuri, where softer parts of cypress wood were worn away to leave the harder lines of the grain standing proud.

Colored-pencil table by Nendo

Paper was then laid over the top and coloured in to create delicate rubbings of the texture underneath.

Colored-pencil table by Nendo

“This created a tantalising juxtaposition between the familiar proportions of wood and the finish of the paper, and an inviting fusion of the subtle shades and blur of the coloured pencils with the raised wood grain,” say Nendo.

Colored-pencil table by Nendo

“Ultimately, the project gave us a glimpse of the future of furniture, through the manipulation of surface texture.”

Colored-pencil table by Nendo

The project will be on show at the Saint-Etienne Design Biennial in France from 14 to 31 March.

Colored-pencil table by Nendo

We recently featured a bench made of thin wire that had been coloured in with crayons.

Colored-pencil table by Nendo

Japanese designer Jo Nagasaka of Schemata Architecture Office has previously used the udukuri process to expose wood grain before coating it in fluorescent resin.

Colored-pencil table by Nendo

Other projects by Nendo on Dezeen include bowls so thin that the quiver in the wind and chairs coated in fishing line rather than varnish.

Colored-pencil table by Nendo

See more design by Nendo »

Colored-pencil table by Nendo

See more table designs »

Colored-pencil table by Nendo

Photos are by Hiroshi Iwasaki.

Colored-pencil table by Nendo

The post Colored-pencil table
by Nendo
appeared first on Dezeen.

TEMPTATION

The Temptation console explodes with exoticism & verve with its untamed gold curves playing side note to a four drawer top impeccably wrapped in a..

Control desktop clutter with the Homework Desk

For the last two months, I’ve challenged myself with the goal of walking every day. I’ve been spending more time with my treadmill and, as a result, I’ve also been doing quite a bit more reading on my iPad while I walk. I’m thrilled that I now have scheduled reading time and that I actually find interesting articles that help make the time pass relatively quickly. During one of my walking and reading sessions, I came across a blog post that asked if having a messy desk is such a terrible thing. My first thought, even before I read the post, was that I wouldn’t be as productive as I am if my desk were cluttered. In fact, I would probably feel compelled to organize it before I started working.

But, I also know that sometimes while I’m working, things can get a little, er, out of control. I like keeping my favorite pen, sticky notes, and notebook on my desk. And, I also have my water bottle and iPad. If there’s something that I don’t want to forget to do, it will probably be on my desk, too. The problem is that when there are too many things strewn about, it affects how well I can get things accomplished. But, if I had the Homework Desk, I might be able to have the best of both worlds — a clear desk and needed items within reach.

Have a look:

Image credit: Tomas Kral

This simple desk (aluminum placed between two slabs of wood) designed by Tomas Kral has no bells and whistles and no drawers. Instead, it has trench-like storage around it’s perimeter (Kral refers to it as a toolbox) to hold papers, pens, books, or documents that you need to have on hand. This leaves you with the entire expanse of the desk to do your work. The photo below shows a cable coming from the back of the desk, so it seems there may be built-in grommets.

Image credit: Thomas Kral

If you like this style but prefer having drawers, here’s a similar model, called my writing desk, designed by Inesa Malafej. It also has open slots on two corners for cables to run through.

Image credit: Design Boom

The drawers are slim but big enough to hold some essentials (like business cards, pens).

Image credit: Design Boom

This desk also has removable legs which would make moving it to a different location relatively easy. Of course, with both models, you’ll need to make sure you don’t clutter your table gutters with rubbish and items you don’t use.

Image credit: Design Boom

Need help getting organized? Buy the DRM-free audiobook version of Erin Rooney Doland’s Unclutter Your Life in One Week today for only $8.99.

Tram Chair by Thomas Feichtner for TON

Tram Chair by Thomas Feichtner for TON

Product news: Austrian designer Thomas Feichtner has steam-bent and laminated wood to create a chair for Czech furniture brand TON.

The legs and back rest are steam-bent into shape by clamping cylindrical wooden poles in metal moulds at the same factory that Thonet‘s iconic bent-wood chairs were made.

Tram Chair by Thomas Feichtner for TON

The laminated-wood seat shells are supported underneath by two braces, which also connect the legs.

Tram Chair by Thomas Feichtner for TON

Three bent poles form the legs and back support for the seat, with the option of adding a fourth rod with six kinks that wraps round the chair to form armrests.

Tram Chair by Thomas Feichtner for TON

Feichtner‘s chairs were named for their likeness to the plastic seats on the trams in Prague.

Tram Chair by Thomas Feichtner for TON

Colours available include dark, natural or white in a range of woods, with potential to add cloth or leather upholstery.

Tram Chair by Thomas Feichtner for TON

TON will present the chairs in Milan this April, where Zaha Hadid will debut auditorium seats and Werner Aisslinger’s gradated chairs will also be on show.

Tram Chair by Thomas Feichtner for TON

Thomas Feichtner has also designed a chair with the seat suspended in a cubic oak frame and a chandelier with a single crystal, which he describes in this movie we filmed.

Tram Chair by Thomas Feichtner for TON

See all our stories about chair design »
See all our stories about designs by Thomas Feichtner »

Thomas Feichtner sent us the following information:


Tram Chair

Furniture producer TON is a piece of Czech-Austrian industrial and design history—as well as one of the world’s oldest furniture producers. It was back in 1861 that the Viennese entrepreneur Michael Thonet established a factory to produce his synonymous bentwood furniture in Bistritz am Hostein (today’s Bystřice pod Hostýnem), in what is now the Czech Republic. This was to be Thonet’s largest furniture production site. The company was nationalized one year after the conclusion of the Second World War. During the socialist era that ensued, it was called “Továrna ohýbaného nábytku.” The initials of this name, which translates as “Factory for Bentwood Furniture,” still appear today in the brand’s logo. TON was established as a design brand as part of the company’s restructuring after the fall of the Iron Curtain. Despite having numerous political upheavals and changing ownership structures, bentwood furniture production has continued right up to the present day—without interruption and even still using some of the original machines and molds. Except for felling the trees, the entire production process—from raw timber to finished product—takes place in-house.

TON today is producing contemporary (and frequently award-winning) furniture in collaboration with established Czech and foreign designers. This way TON is giving the place of 150 years of bentwood production its honour back.

The Tram Chair arose from the TON’s most recent collaboration with the established Vienna-based product designer Prof. Thomas Feichtner. Feichtner’s concept is strongly inspired by the company’s time-honored production processes: first by the company’s own plant for the production of seat shells from moulded wood, and second by its longstanding factory for the production of classic bentwood. The intention was to unite the methods used to produce bentwood and moulded wood for the first time in a single product, thus building a bridge between traditional and contemporary furniture design. Even just the way in which the bentwood braces are connected indicates the finished product’s origin. On the other hand, the Tram Chair also features a few constructional innovations. The support for the seat shell, for instance, does double-duty as a connection between the legs. The chair thus needs no further bracing, in contrast to classic bentwood models. Though this chair’s design is quite deliberate, its name came about as more of an accident. Employees of TON were quick to jokingly dub this model the “tram chair” due to its similarity to the plastic seats on the trams in Prague. Feichtner then decided to keep this charming working title as the product’s name.

The Tram Chair will see its first public presentation at the 2013 Milan Furniture Fair. It will be offered for sale with and without armrests, with cloth or leather upholstery, and in various colors and types of wood.

The post Tram Chair by Thomas Feichtner
for TON
appeared first on Dezeen.

Carbon Fiber Stone

Applied perfectly to this ultra-contemporary garden setting, Peter Donders’ creative seating designs, the C Bench and Stone, instantly command a strong visual attraction. Each uses a single strand of carbon fiber twisted around a mold. When the mold is removed the resulting structure is organic and airy in aesthetic yet incredibly strong. They’re a surprising solution for both indoor/outdoor seating and exceptional for defining a variety of modern spaces.

Designer: Peter Donders


Yanko Design
Timeless Designs – Explore wonderful concepts from around the world!
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(Carbon Fiber Stone was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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Bikini Island collection by Werner Aisslinger for Moroso

Product news: Berlin-based designer Werner Aisslinger will unveil brightly coloured chairs and a set of modular furniture for Italian brand Moroso in Milan next month (+ slideshow).

Bikini Wood by Werner Aisslinger for Moroso

Werner Aisslinger’s Bikini Wood dining chair and swivel chair for Moroso come in a variety of bold colour gradients. The backs of the wooden chairs are covered by a slim piece of leather or fabric.

Bikini Wood by Werner Aisslinger for Moroso

The Bikini Island collection comprises a range of modular units, including tables, poufs, cabinets and sofas in various fabrics.

Bikini Wood by Werner Aisslinger for Moroso

The angular sofas can also be matched with round tables, bookshelves, clothes rails and plant pots.

Bikini Island by Werner Aisslinger for Moroso

The furniture will be presented at Salone Internazionale del Mobile in Milan between from 9 to 14 April.

Bikini Island by Werner Aisslinger for Moroso

Aisslinger recently presented a storage system for German brand Flötotto that’s held together by plastic clips as well as a swinging sofa for the office – see all design by Werner Aisslinger.

Bikini Island by Werner Aisslinger for Moroso

Other products created for the brand include a Le Corbusier-inspired armchair and sofa by London designers Doshi Levien and Tord Boontje’s plywood furniture held together by thread – see all design from Moroso.

Bikini Island by Werner Aisslinger for Moroso

See all chairs »
See all furniture »

The post Bikini Island collection by Werner Aisslinger
for Moroso
appeared first on Dezeen.

Feel

FEEL is based in functional, ergonomic and aesthetic criteria. It is a table with its own character, inspired both in nature and the avant-garde archi..

Seefelder

Feelings of happiness and harmony are being spread by the latest garden and rocking chair by Tom Strala which already has what it needs to be a classi..

Scouring the Globe: A Brillo Box Moment, at the Armory Show and Beyond

It is both surreal and disturbing to watch people–Very Important People, no less–stagger around an art fair carrying unwieldy cardboard boxes, but such was the scene at yesterday’s Armory Show preview, where a rapidly shrinking tower of the colorful crates made famous by Andy Warhol was there for the taking. And take they did. The flurry of grabbing, folding, and foreign accents was apropos, as this was “Babel (Brillo Stockholm Type)” (2013) by Charles Lutz. The work was commissioned for the fair by Eric Shiner, director of the Andy Warhol Museum. He also curated the special “Armory Focus: USA” section of the fair, which includes Gagosian Gallery, making its Armory debut with a booth wallpapered in Warhol–the man, the myth, the camouflage.

This outbreak of Brillo Box fever is not an isolated incident. Belgian furniture brand Quinze & Milan has inked the appropriate licensing paperwork with the Andy Warhol Foundation to produce the Andy Warhol Brillo Box pouf (at left), a cushy foam cube screen-printed with the Brillo logo. The stool-sculptures will be unveiled next month at MOST in Milan, but the online retailer Fab is now taking pre-orders at $425 a pop.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Literally Rocking Minimal

Designer Jeppe Worsøe Andersen’s rocking horse transforms an iconic, familiar fragment into a sleek, modern design with a minimalist aesthetic. Inspired by Danish designer Poul Kjaerholm’s famed PK-0 chair, this rocker is both radical in aesthetic and thoughtful in construction. The result is a striking blend of materials including dark, form-bent cherry wood and polished steel that make it a solid, functional toy as well as a sculptural accent for the modern home.

Designer: Jeppe Worsøe Andersen


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!
(Literally Rocking Minimal was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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