Industrial materials furnish Hostem’s womenswear floor by JamesPlumb

Garments are suspended in front of draped fabric above a steel parquet floor in the new womenswear floor that design studio JamesPlumb has created for east London fashion boutique Hostem (+ slideshow).

Industrial materials used to furnish Hostem womenswear interior by JamesPlumb

James Russell and Hannah Plumb of London-based JamesPlumb were influenced by the grainy textural appearance of old photographic plates, which they interpreted in the Hostem store’s palette of textured industrial materials.

Industrial materials used to furnish Hostem womenswear interior by JamesPlumb

“There is a strong emphasis on an honesty and truth to materials, which are predominantly used in their natural state, with subtle embellishments,” explained the designers.

Industrial materials used to furnish Hostem womenswear interior by JamesPlumb

A steel parquet floor used throughout the space comprises over 4500 individual tiles that were laid by hand in a herringbone pattern.

Industrial materials used to furnish Hostem womenswear interior by JamesPlumb

“The natural beauty of the steel, with its colour variations and imperfections, is accentuated by the herringbone pattern that highlights the uniqueness of each tile,” the designers added.

Industrial materials used to furnish Hostem womenswear interior by JamesPlumb

Free-standing steel display units create robust yet transparent vitrines and are inlaid with natural felt to add a textural dimension.

Industrial materials used to furnish Hostem womenswear interior by JamesPlumb

Steel is also used for a runner on the staircase that ascends to the second floor space and mezzanine level above.

Industrial materials used to furnish Hostem womenswear interior by JamesPlumb

Fabric panels suspended from the five-metre-high ceiling act as a backdrop for individual garments, which are displayed on custom-made clothes hangers.

Industrial materials used to furnish Hostem womenswear interior by JamesPlumb

Concrete shelves are supported by round steel pegs, while heavy concrete planks lean against the walls providing a counterbalance for the clothes rails that project from their surfaces.

Industrial materials used to furnish Hostem womenswear interior by JamesPlumb

The concrete was cast in timber moulds so it takes on the unique knots and grain of the wood.

Industrial materials used to furnish Hostem womenswear interior by JamesPlumb

Floor lamps shrouded with crumbled lead sheets focus the light and evoke the appearance of the aluminium cinquefoil that is used to mask photographers’ lights.

Industrial materials used to furnish Hostem womenswear interior by JamesPlumb

Russell and Plumb first started working with Hostem in 2010, creating the brand’s first space. They have also created a basement showroom filled with antique furniture at the store.

Industrial materials used to furnish Hostem womenswear interior by JamesPlumb

Photography is by Rachel Smith.

The designers sent us the following press release:


Hostem Womenswear

The collaboration that has seen JamesPlumb produce award winning designs for Hostem menswear, and bespoke service ‘The Chalk Room’ has continued and expanded. A brand new upper floor welcomes the arrival of a dedicated womenswear level – and a new environment to host it.

Industrial materials used to furnish Hostem womenswear interior by JamesPlumb

Connected, whilst fundamentally distinct from the store below, the new interior has an evolution that matches the store’s development. It has been led by a sense of privacy and remoteness from street level that required a feeling of calm and elevation to match. The space is informed and inspired by the warm monochromatic graininess and ‘noise’ found in old photographic plates. There is a strong emphasis on an honesty and truth to materials, which are predominantly used in their natural state, with subtle embellishments. Every element has been custom designed, and the majority made in house, by hand, in JamesPlumb’s studio.

The artistic duo have again demonstrated their ability to innovate materials with a lightness of touch that is timeless, whilst being full of surprising details. A unique steel parquet floor has been designed and developed, with over 4500 individual tiles laid by hand. The natural beauty of the steel, with its colour variations and imperfections are accentuated by the herringbone pattern that highlights the uniqueness of each tile. The white plastered walls have simply been sealed and polished with wax, and both surfaces offer a balance of unfinished rawness with a jewel like reflective surface.

Industrial materials used to furnish Hostem womenswear interior by JamesPlumb

Tranquility and simplicity pervades, but with depth and richness derived from texture and detail. A warmth has skillfully been created despite the connotations of materials commonly associated with an industrial look. Steel displays are inlaid with natural felt. Concrete shelves and planks support refined clothes rails. They have been cast in individual wooden moulds carefully chosen for their imperfections – the unique knots and deep wood grain of each are the antithesis of a manufactured finish. There is a playful contrast between these simple forms that reference basic building techniques and the precision steel works of the floor. The ungainly heaviness of concrete is avoided by both cheating gravity and embracing it. The shelves float on steel pegs in the wall, whilst the planks press themselves against the walls – effortlessly counterbalancing their rails full of product.

The stairs have a simple yet beautiful steel runner to guide you to the second floor and the mezzanine of the double height space. Fabric panels drape dramatically five metres from ceiling to floor, each framing an individual piece as if being captured for posterity in front of an infinity wall. There is an unusual and indulgent amount of space afforded to one garment. It is as if the items have fast tracked to a museum – a feeling of archival preciousness – and yet they are accessible and very much to be touched, explored, and worn. The lighting too, references the photographer’s studio. Custom designed lights inspired by cine-foil are in fact beautifully patinated lead sheets – crumpled, shaped and formed to direct the light.

Industrial materials used to furnish Hostem womenswear interior by JamesPlumb

This veneration to the clothing and attention to detail extends to the clothes hangers themselves that are entirely bespoke, each having been hand-formed from four pieces of steel. They are a line drawing made physical – the essence of a clothes hanger. The result – as with the store itself – is a beautiful tension between simple elegance, and raw materiality.

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Patterned brickwork surrounds Atelier ChanChan’s Herringbone House

Pale bricks are arranged in a herringbone pattern on the outer walls of this compact house in north-east London that local architect Zoe Chan designed and built for herself (+ slideshow).

Herringbone House by Atelier ChanChan

The Atelier ChanChan principal wanted the house to relate to the Victorian terraces that characterise London’s housing stock but to also have its own character, so she chose a steel frame infilled with a non-load-bearing herringbone brickwork, instead of the typical English and Flemish brick bonds.

Herringbone House by Atelier ChanChan

“The choice to use brick creates a visual reference to the masonry construction of this particular street,” Chan told Dezeen. “However this isn’t a terrace, it’s quite different in character, so I chose to create my own personal expression using brickwork as the basis.”

Herringbone House by Atelier ChanChan

Named Herringbone House, the two-storey structure slots into a non-linear plot that previously accommodated a series of derelict buildings, all of which had to be demolished beforehand. “It was in such bad repair, so everything needed to come down,” said Chan.

Herringbone House by Atelier ChanChan

One of the biggest challenges was ensuring that light would be able to reach all parts of the 30-metre-long plot. As such, the house takes on an L-shaped plan that wraps around private courtyards at the front and back to allow light to permeate both floors.

Herringbone House by Atelier ChanChan

Two skylights puncture the gabled roof to draw extra light in from above. One sits directly above the stairwell, where Chan has added a steel staircase with open risers to allow more light through.

Herringbone House by Atelier ChanChan

For the interior, white-washed timber floors and surfaces are complemented by Scandinavian furniture, and a variety of soft grey and pinkish hues.

Herringbone House by Atelier ChanChan

“I wanted to use materials that are very natural but also warm,” said Chan. “The idea was to maximise light, but I didn’t want it to be sterile, so I drew inspiration from Scandinavian architecture and its light natural palettes.”

Herringbone House by Atelier ChanChan

An open-plan layout on the ground floor brings the living room and kitchen alongside one another, while a small study sits to one side and opens out to the front courtyard through a wall of glazing.

Herringbone House by Atelier ChanChan

Three bedrooms are located beneath the sloping ceilings of the top floor and feature built-in storage units designed to add to the thickness of the walls.

Herringbone House by Atelier ChanChan

Photography is by Mike Tsang.

Here’s a short description from  Zoe Chan:


Herringbone House

The house aims to relate to its context by taking the syntax of the local vernacular: namely gable ended roofs and the brick material of the Victorian terraces. However, the open plan interiors with ceiling to floor windows, skylights and courtyards are supported by a modern steel structure.

Herringbone House by Atelier ChanChan

The combination making for a modern vernacular house inspired by the old to create something new. The ornamental herringbone brickwork was used to create personal expression and to articulate the picture windows and volumes by using framing, pattern and variety in the laying of the bricks.

Herringbone House by Atelier ChanChan

Practice name: Atelier ChanChan
Team: Zoe Chan (lead designer), Bob Chan and Joao Neves
Location: Islington, London

Herringbone House by Atelier ChanChan
Ground floor plan
Herringbone House by Atelier ChanChan
First floor plan
Herringbone House by Atelier ChanChan
Long section – click for larger image

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Viktor & Rolf Autumn Winter 2013 scenography by Studio Job

Artists Studio Job created a backdrop of wilting flowers for Viktor & Rolf’s Autumn Winter 2013 show at Paris Fashion Week (+ slideshow).

Viktor & Rolf Autumn Winter 2013 scenography by Studio Job

Giant floral prints in various shades of grey were repeated across the partitions at the bottom of the catwalk to compliment the monochrome collection, titled Rebellious Sophistication.

Viktor & Rolf Autumn Winter 2013 scenography by Studio Job

The pattern was inspired by the work of 19th Century English textile designer William Morris.

Viktor & Rolf Autumn Winter 2013 scenography by Studio Job

Models walked down a runway covered in a printed herringbone arrangement of grey and white wooden planks.

Viktor & Rolf Autumn Winter 2013 scenography by Studio Job

The graphics stood out against the ceiling and tiered seating that were painted black for the show, which took place earlier this week.

Viktor & Rolf Autumn Winter 2013 scenography by Studio Job

Studio Job also designed the scenography for the Dutch fashion house’s Spring Summer 2010 and Autumn Winter 2010 collections.

Viktor and Rolf Autumn Winter 2013 scenography by Studio Job

They presented an Eiffel Tower lamp and Taj Mahal table  at Design Miami last December and designed a lounge for the Groninger Museum in the Netherlands.

More stories from Paris Fashion Week on Dezeen include two-in-one transforming dresses by Hussein Chalayan and Gareth Pugh’s outfits made from bin liners.

Photography is by Peter Stigter.

See all our stories about designs by Studio Job »
See all our stories about projects by Viktor & Rolf »
See all our stories from the Autumn Winter 2013 season »

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Ciné 32 by Encore Heureux

This timber-clad cinema in the south of France was designed by architects Encore Heureux to evoke both the arched facades of art deco picture houses and the herringbone walls of local tobacco-drying sheds (+ slideshow).

Cine 32 by Encore Heureux

Located beside a former military camp in Auch, Ciné 32 is a five-screen cinema contained inside a staggered row of numbered wooden sheds.

Cine 32 by Encore Heureux

“Rather than a large infrastructure-type multiplex, we wanted to create the image of a collection of small neighbourhood cinemas together,” explains Encore Heureux.

Cine 32 by Encore Heureux

Zig-zagging wooden slats dress the arched gables of each structure, while numbers one to five are hand-painted over the surfaces using a traditional decorative font.

Cine 32 by Encore Heureux

One screen is contained inside each of the sheds and every one is furnished with different coloured seating.

Cine 32 by Encore Heureux

Above: photograph is by Nicola Delon

The architects comment: “Cinema has this unique opportunity to gather different people for a common but yet unusual journey. We wish to offer remarkable conditions for such a trip.”

Cine 32 by Encore Heureux

A sixth shed gives the cinema a double-height reception and is contrastingly clad with translucent polycarbonate.

Cine 32 by Encore Heureux

Activity workshops are contained in this part of the building, alongside offices, an exhibition space, a cafe and a terrace.

Cine 32 by Encore Heureux

Other recently designed cinemas include one in a former slaughterhouse and one under a motorway flyover. See more cinemas on Dezeen.

Cine 32 by Encore Heureux

Above: photograph is by Adélaide Maisonabe

Photography is by Sébastien Normand, apart from where otherwise indicated.

Cine 32 by Encore Heureux

Above: photograph is by Adélaide Maisonabe

Here’s a short project description from Encore Heureux:


Cinema at Auch

Concept

To built a five rooms cinema for CINE 32 association has to answer some challenges. What else than a shoe box as you find in suburban territory? What kind of identity would suit to a meeting point, place of discoveries, debates and diversity? What presence for a brand new building right downtown, in place of an old military camp? How could we propose a place and an identity that fit to Cine 32 and its actions towards an always broader and mixed public?

Cine 32 by Encore Heureux

We came up with images of old cinemas’ pediment and tobacco dryer from the south-west of France, with their openwork natural wood façade. We also care for an assumed double life image, an adequate day and night use.

Cine 32 by Encore Heureux

Cinema has this unique opportunity to gather different people for a common but yet unusual journey. We wish to offer remarkable conditions for such a trip.

Cine 32 by Encore Heureux

A strong relationship

To carry this adventure out we’ve looked preciously to the relationship between architect and client. Every step of conception has produced multiple studies. For instance, projection rooms were subject to a narrative outline and climatic environments ; bases leading us to built atmospheres. Thus, we go through starry night (first room) to sunrise (second room).

Cine 32 by Encore Heureux

Interior and façade lights were developed specifically to this project with an effort of economy, consistency and precision. As were the custom-made administration’s furnitures.

Cine 32 by Encore Heureux

Artist Bonnefrite has lead building’s signage with a delicate touch. The main sign, on avenue de l’Yser side, is a powerful and joyful gesture toward the city. Hand-painted numbers on pediments reveal the diversity of both spaces and styles in cinema.

Cine 32 by Encore Heureux

Strong involvement from local construction firms allowed us to respect lead time and expected budget equally with a common requirement for the result. The adventure proved to be forceful and appealing.

Cine 32 by Encore Heureux

Above: site plan – click above for larger image

Cine 32 by Encore Heureux

Above: ground floor plan – click above for larger image

Cine 32 by Encore Heureux

Above: first floor plan – click above for larger image

Cine 32 by Encore Heureux

Above: front elevation – click above for larger image

Cine 32 by Encore Heureux

Above: long section one – click above for larger image

Cine 32 by Encore Heureux

Above: long section two – click above for larger image

Cine 32 by Encore Heureux

Above: cinema section one – click above for larger image

Cine 32 by Encore Heureux

Above: cinema section two – click above for larger image

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Royal College of Art Student Union Cafe by Weston Surman & Deane

Three Royal College of Art architecture graduates have used stripped scaffolding boards and reclaimed parquet flooring to create a wooden cafe at the school’s Battersea campus in south London (+ slideshow).

Tom Surman, Joseph Deane and Percy Weston were approached shortly after graduating to upgrade the tuck shop at one of the RCA’s old buildings, which was too small to accommodate the extra students brought by the recent opening of the Dyson Building for photography and print-making.

They instead moved the cafe to a former seminar room, where they tore down the existing suspended ceiling and constructed a wooden framework around the walls.

“The cafe is conceived as a playful timber box inside a large concrete and steel shell,” Surman told Dezeen. ”We made the entire structure from ripped-down scaffolding boards and we refined them until they were almost unrecognisable.”

The designers laid the reclaimed parquet flooring by hand and sanded it down to remove most but not all of the leftover markings. “The nice thing about having an incredibly tight budget was we learnt to do stuff with our hands,” said Surman.

The cafe counter is separated behind another wall of wood, while the dining area is furnished with mismatched classroom chairs and wooden tables.

“It’s a very playful project, intended to reflect the slightly obscure nature of the sculpture department next door,” added Surman. “In this building, anything too precious starts to look terrible after a couple of weeks.”

The team designed and installed the entire project in just three months and have since launched their own studio named Weston Surman & Deane.

The Royal College of Art‘s main building is located in South Kensington, but the school has been gradually expanding its Battersea campus in recent years with the opening of the Dyson Building and the Sackler Building that houses the painting department.

See more stories about the RCA »

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Dezeen archive: herringbone

 
Dezeen archive: after publishing a photography studio with herringbone parquet walls and flooring this morning, we’ve decided to compile all of our stories that feature herringbone patterns. See all all the stories »

See all the archive stories »

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Touch Digital by Post-Office

Touch Digital by Post-Office

Herringbone parquet covers the walls and floor of this photography studio in east London by local design practice Post-Office.

Touch Digital by Post-Office

Partitions around retouching booths contain vertical slats covered in grey felt to provide a colour-neutral background for viewing images on a computer screen and dampen the noise from the open workspaces.

Touch Digital by Post-Office

The slats are finished in light wood on the side facing the communal areas and can be swivelled to control the levels of light in the booths.

Touch Digital by Post-Office

Dark furniture in the reception and communal areas stands out against the wood.

Touch Digital by Post-Office

We’ve also featured herringbone parquet on the floor of a Parisian boutiquethe walls and ceiling of a personal shopping suite in London and seats in a Zurich cafe.

Touch Digital by Post-Office

Post-Office is lead by designer Philippe Malouin and you can see more of his work plus interviews we’ve filmed with him here.

Touch Digital by Post-Office

Photographs are by David Giles.

Touch Digital by Post-Office

Here’s some text from the designers:


Touch Digital offices, Shoreditch, London.

Post-Office was commissioned to design the new offices of Touch, London’s leading fashion photographic service. Digital retouching agencies need a minimal amount of light in order to correctly visualise the computer screens. This constraint usually makes retouching studios a dark environment. We took this challenge to heart as we wanted communal areas of the new Touch offices to be bright and airy while providing low-light environments to facilitate the retouchers’ work.

Touch Digital by Post-Office

The new touch offices maximise the already generous amounts of space and light the warehouse had to offer. The space owes its aesthetic and choice of materials to Scandinavian classic modernism as well as 60s corporate American grandeur and the minimal art movement. The central retouching booths appear as minimal sculptures in a grand setting rather than individual work spaces. All of the retouching environments are lined in grey felt in order to offer a colour-neutral background for the retouchers while helping to noise-proof the open workspaces.

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Tweed Run, London January 24th 2009

The first Tweed Run took place in London recently with about 150 cyclists wearing tweeds and the like. A veritable Gentleman’s Whiskey and Chat on two wheels. We need to bring this stateside. Any takers?


Tweed Run



Tweed Run, Saville Row

More images can be found at Yorgo Tloupas’ blog and through this Flickr member.