Prohibition Kit by Francesco Morackini

This liquor-distilling kit by Vienna designer Francesco Morackini breaks down into four perfectly innocent household objects.

Prohibition Kit by Francesco Morackini

The Prohibition Kit comprises a fully-functioning cooking pot, fondue stove, fruit bowl and watering can that can be combined to brew alcohol at home.

Prohibition Kit by Francesco Morackini

“Producing schnapps, liquor or alcohol is very restricted by the law in most countries,” says Morackini. “The separated elements are legal but put together the objects become illegal. I wanted to explore the limit of legislation.”

Prohibition Kit by Francesco Morackini

The set is primarily made of copper. “This material has always been used for the construction of stills since ancient times,” explains the designer.

Prohibition Kit by Francesco Morackini

“With the evolution of time and technologies, new materials have been introduced such as stainless steel, but old Europe will by no means exchange their copper stills.”

Prohibition Kit by Francesco Morackini

His design won first prize in the professional category of the Copper and the Home 2012 contest organised by the Italian Copper Institute.

Prohibition Kit by Francesco Morackini

Francesco Morackini studied industrial design and management then worked in Brazil, the United States and France before establishing his studio in Vienna.

Prohibition Kit by Francesco Morackini

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Prohibition Kit by Francesco Morackini

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Angolo hooks by Sébastien Cordoléoni for Moustache

Angolo hooks by Sébastien Cordoléoni for Moustache

Product news: French designer Sébastien Cordoléoni has created a range of wall-mounted containers and hooks for Parisian brand Moustache.

Angolo hooks by Sébastien Cordoléoni for Moustache

Called Angolo, the set comprises three metal pockets for stashing small items, like keys and sunglasses in the hallway, while larger things like coats or umbrellas can be hooked over their tops.

Angolo hooks by Sébastien Cordoléoni for Moustache

Moustache launched the designs at Maison&Objet in Paris last month alongside a series of vases with tops that loop over the flowers and new pieces in the Balcon range by Inga Sempé. Sébastien Cordoléoni has a studio in Aix en Provence.

Angolo hooks by Sébastien Cordoléoni for Moustache

See all our stories about design at Maison&Objet here, including cutlery based on chopsticks by Toyo Ito and a chair draped in a wooden mat by Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance.

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Angolo hooks by Sébastien Cordoleani for Moustache

Angolo hooks by Sébastien Cordoléoni for Moustache

Product news: French designer Sébastien Cordoleani has created a range of wall-mounted containers and hooks for Parisian brand Moustache.

Angolo hooks by Sébastien Cordoléoni for Moustache

Called Angolo, the set comprises three metal pockets for stashing small items, like keys and sunglasses in the hallway, while larger things like coats or umbrellas can be hooked over their tops.

Angolo hooks by Sébastien Cordoléoni for Moustache

Moustache launched the designs at Maison&Objet in Paris last month alongside a series of vases with tops that loop over the flowers and new pieces in the Balcon range by Inga Sempé. Sébastien Cordoleani has a studio in Aix en Provence.

Angolo hooks by Sébastien Cordoléoni for Moustache

See all our stories about design at Maison&Objet here, including cutlery based on chopsticks by Toyo Ito and a chair draped in a wooden mat by Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance.

More designs for coat hooks »
More products from Moustache »

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Frost by Front for Stelton

Stockholm 2013: Swedish studio Front has designed a collection of glassware with frosted bottoms for Danish brand Stelton.

Frost by Front for Shelton

Inspired by ice forming on the outside of a window, Front has created an ice bucket, two glasses and a carafe with a rounded cork stopper.

Frost by Front for Shelton

The simple vessels have curved translucent bases that gradate into clear glass halfway up.

Frost by Front for Shelton

We’ve previously featured a coffee pot designed by Paul Smith for Stelton‘s 50th anniversary.

Frost by Front for Shelton

Other stories from Stockholm Design Week include blown-glass sculptures that look like trees and an installation of glass objects and robotic arms.

Frost by Front for Shelton

See all our stories about glassware design »
See all our stories about designs by Front »
See all our coverage of Stockholm Design Week »

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Brassware by Skultuna

Stockholm 2013: Swedish designers Claesson Koivisto Rune, Monica Förster and Folkform have collaborated with 400-year-old fine metals company Skultuna to produce this collection of brass objects.

Brassware by Skultuna

For Stockholm Design WeekSkultuna’s brassworks teamed up with Stockholm studio Claesson Koivisto Rune to produce Face, three coat hooks made of solid brass (above and below).

Brassware by Skultuna

Stockholm-based designer Monica Förster came up with a series of spun brass flower pots in three sizes (top), while design duo Folkform created a bookend based on geometric shapes (bottom).

Brassware by Skultuna

Skultuna was founded in the Swedish town of the same name in 1607, and remains under royal warrant to produce fine metal objects such as chandeliers, candlesticks and cufflinks. In 2011, Venetian designer Luca Nichetto presented a series of brass bowls for the brand.

Brassware by Skultuna

Other products launching in Stockholm this week include a collection of porcelain and wood pendant lamps and a chair that can be dressed up in an assortment of garments – see more products from Stockholm Design Week 2013.

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Here’s some more information from Skultuna:


Face wall hangers by Claesson Koivisto Rune

Face is a series of three wall hangers designed by Claesson Koivisto Rune for Skultuna. The wall hangers are cast in solid brass and highly polished to create an almost mirror like surface. The wall hangers are in the last stages of development and will be released during the spring of 2013. Skultuna is one of the oldest companies in the world, founded in the year 1607 as a brass foundry by King Karl IX.

Flower Pots by Monica Förster

Some time ago the Swedish design icon Monica Förster met up with Viktor Blomqvist, managing director of Skultuna and discusses a possible design cooperation. Skultuna is one of the oldest companies in the world, founded in the year 1607 as a brass foundry by King Karl IX. Staying true to the historic production methods of Skultuna, Monica Förster and her design studio came up with a series of three Flower Pots made in the very old method of metal spinning. Metal spinning is a production method that has been in constant use during the last centuries in Skultuna and makes it possible to make large round three dimensional objects out of sheet metal. The Flower Pots resemble classical pots made of terracotta with a small inclination in the lower part. The Flower Pots comes in three sizes and are made of highly polished brass plate.

Bookend by Folkform

The Bookend is the latest product from the red hot Swedish designer duo called Folkform. With its geometrical sharp shapes and the highly polished surface, the Bookend is a striking composition. The Bookend is in the last stage of development and will be released during the spring of 2013. Folkform consists of designers Anna Holmquist and Chandra Ahlsell that began their partnership in 2005. The Stockholm-based studio is already represented in the Swedish National Art collection and the National Museum of Art, Architecture and Design in Oslo. Folkform has previously designed the popular candlestick Collage for Skultuna.

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Glassware by Peter Zumthor for Alessi

Peter Zumthor for Alessi

Product news: Swiss architect Peter Zumthor has designed a collection of glass condiment containers for Italian design brand Alessi.

The five-piece set comprises a tall cruet for oils and vinegars and four smaller shakers for salt, pepper, sugar and spices. Each one has a frosted glass body and a stainless steel head.

Zumthor describes how he came up with the concept years earlier, when he made a drawing of a salt dispenser while having breakfast in a hotel. “I made a quick sketch of thin lines suggesting an object which could hold grains or liquids.”

Peter Zumthor for Alessi

He explains that the sketch hung on the wall of his studio for many years until he could no longer remember what is was, and even mistook it for a skyscraper. “One day, the memory of my morning in the hotel came back to me and I recalled why I made the sketch,” he said. “At once, I took the sketch down to my model workshop and asked Iris to produce a series of glycerine soap models according to the sketch, which should look like brothers and sisters, small and big but all members of the same family. She shaped a beautiful menagerie of glycerine soap objects resembling frosted glass.”

Peter Zumthor is being awarded the Royal Gold Medal for architecture in a ceremony today at the Royal Institute of British Architects in London. In a lecture last night, he told an audience that his architecture is not about form-making. Past projects by Zumthor include the Steilneset Memorial in Norway and the 2011 Serpentine Gallery Pavilion.

Alessi was founded outside Milan as a metal tableware producer the 1920s, became synonymous with designer kettles in the 1980s and now works with a host of international designers including the Campana Brothers, Karim Rashid and David Chipperfield. A selection of Alessi watches is available from Dezeen Watch Store.

See all our stories about Peter Zumthor »
See all our stories about Alessi »

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Flip mirror by Javier Moreno Studio for Normann Copenhagen

Danish brand Normann Copenhagen has launched a table-top mirror with a dish in the base to hold small items, created by Spanish designer Javier Moreno.

Flip mirror by Javier Moreno Studio for Normann Copenhagen

The Flip mirror can be turned up, down and rotated 360 degrees. It is available in either black, white or a sand colour.

Flip mirror by Javier Moreno Studio for Normann Copenhagen

Javier Moreno says: “The tray design on the base means that flip is both a traditional mirror and an easy and simple storage utility for small items.”

Flip mirror by Javier Moreno Studio for Normann Copenhagen

Javier Moreno set up his own studio in Alicante in 2010.

Flip mirror by Javier Moreno Studio for Normann Copenhagen

We’ve featured products from Normann Copenhagen before, including a colourful modular storage system by Henriette W. Leth and circular kitchen knifes by Italian designers LucidiPevere Studio.

Flip mirror by Javier Moreno Studio for Normann Copenhagen

Maison&Objet took place in Paris last month. See all our stories about design at Maison&Objet here, including cutlery based on chopsticks by Toyo Ito and a chair draped in a wooden mat by Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance.

See all our stories about mirrors »
See all our stories including Normann Copenhagen »

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Between Two Rivers by Siba Sahabi

Amsterdam-based designer Siba Sahabi made these carafes and cups by coiling strips of felt on a potter’s wheel (+ movie).

Between Two Rivers by Siba Sahabi

Between Two Rivers refers to the translation of the ancient Greek word Mesopotamia, an area of the Middle East where the earliest civilisations are thought to have developed and where the potter’s wheel was first used.

Between Two Rivers by Siba Sahabi

Inspired by the development of ceramics after this invention, Siba Sahabi used a potter’s wheel to wind strips of felt into ten sculptural vessels.

Between Two Rivers by Siba Sahabi

The carafes and cups are made from strips coated with a layer of paint on both sides, so that the original colour contrasts with the paint on the inside and outside.

Between Two Rivers by Siba Sahabi

Sahabi also collaborated with Lisa Klappe and Niels van den Top on a movie (top) that shows the process of making the vessels.

Between Two Rivers by Siba Sahabi

The collection is on show at Museum Ons’ Lieve Heer op Solder in Amsterdam as part of Winter Salon 2013 until 17 February.

Between Two Rivers by Siba Sahabi

Sahabi has previously produced vessels from coils of black wallpaper and candle holders from rings of felt.

Between Two Rivers by Siba Sahabi

Other felt objects we’ve featured include felt lights with switches shaped like nipples and jewellery made from computer parts mounted in felt – see all designs made from felt.

See all vessels »
See all homeware »

Photographs are by Lisa Klappe.

Here’s some more information from Sahabi:


Siba Sahabi’s new collection of felt vessels entitled Between Two Rivers launched during WinterSALON/ 2013 in Amsterdam.

Between Two Rivers is the ancient Greek translation of the term Mesopotamia, the cradle of Western civilisation, birthplace of the pottery turntable and primary inspiration of designer Siba Sahabi for her new collection. Through ten new sculptural felt vessels Siba makes the connection between this ancient land – located between the rivers – with its pottery innovations and Western ceramics culture which developed through these new technologies.

The turntable, that aided potters to design circular objects more accurately and faster, was invented in 3500 BC in Ur, an ancient Mesopotamian city-state located in modern Iraq. Around 2200 BC this invention was introduced in Greece and thus sparked a new style of Greek ceramics called Minyan pottery which Siba has reinterpreted in her felt sculptures.

A circular, ribbed finish is one of the distinguishing characteristics of Minyan ware which reflects its production process on a potter’s turntable. Although the turntable no longer plays a significant role in the production of modern large-scale pottery today, the appearance of hand-turned ceramics is often imitated by producing circular shapes with fine ridges.

The objects from the collection, that comprise a series of carafes and cups, are made from coiled coloured felt strips (3mm thick) coated with a layer of paint on both sides. In this way, each object shows three colours: the original colour of the felt (surface of the ridges), the inside, and outside of the objects. The dense felt material beautifully translates the heavy appearance of the Minyan ware and exaggerates the appearance of the oversized objects, some of which are up to 50cm high.

A specially-commissioned film is screened alongside the exhibition. Made by Siba Sahabi in collaboration with Lisa Klappe and Niels van den Top, the short film entitled ‘Pallas Athena’ juxtaposes the setting of a Greek pre-antique pottery workshop with the modern techniques of the felt coiling used in Siba’s objects. The short film is dedicated to the wise but short-tempered Greek goddess of inspiration, crafts, art and war. According to myth Pallas Athena taught textile classes to, among others, a talented but troubled student called Arachne who denied that she was taking lessons if ever asked. To punish Arachne for not acknowledging her teacher, Pallas Athena turned her into a spider.

The collection was realised with the support of the Amsterdams Fonds voor de Kunst.

Between Two Rivers is exhibited during WinterSALON/ 2013 at Museum Ons’ Lieve Heer op Solder, Amsterdam from 19 January – 17 February 2013.

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The Woods by StokkeAustad and Andreas Engesvik

Stockholm 2013: Oslo designers StokkeAustad and Andreas Engesvik will present blown-glass trees as part of Stockholm Design Week, which begins on Monday.

The Woods by StokkeAustad and Andreas Engesvik

The Woods comprises clusters of glass bubbles with differing proportions and coloured tints, supported on solid glass stems.

The Woods by StokkeAustad and Andreas Engesvik

“The inspiration was found in the forests and the lights of the North,” says Engesvik. “A tree changing colours and transparency through the seasons is a fascinating process which was captured in this glass object.”

The Woods by StokkeAustad and Andreas Engesvik

Each set comprises seven trees in two clusters. One represents spring with a mixture of greens and the other represents autumn with a combination of pinks, oranges and greys.

The Woods by StokkeAustad and Andreas Engesvik

They’ll be on show at Designgalleriet, Odengatan 21, 114 24 Stockholm, from 5 to 9 February.

The Woods by StokkeAustad and Andreas Engesvik

Andreas Engesvik was co-founder of Norway Says and founded his own studio in Oslo in 2009. His previous work includes coloured screens in collaboration with Norwegian designer Daniel Rybakken and Bunad Blankets inspired by the textiles of Norwegian folk costumes.

The Woods by StokkeAustad and Andreas Engesvik

We’ve also previously featured a range of basic kitchen utensils by StokkeAustad and their cantilevered bench with a concrete base.

Stockholm Design Week takes place from 4 to 10 February and you can see all our stories about the event here.

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Tyvek Vase by Jiwon Choi

Tyvek Vases by Jiwon Choi

This vase by Rhode Island School of Design graduate Jiwon Choi is made from a thin curl of synthetic paper.

The vase is made of Tyvek, a lightweight and tear-resistant material produced from plastic fibres.

Tyvek Vases by Jiwon Choi

Jiwon Choi intended to create a package for a bunch of flowers that would be simple and light but strong enough to stand upright.

She is currently looking for a manufacturer to produce the vase.

Tyvek Vases by Jiwon Choi

We’ve featured a few other Tyvek objects, including a crumpled pendant lamp and a clock that creates changing 3D shapes as the minutes tick by – see all products made from Tyvek.

Other vases we’ve published lately include vessels that loop over the flowers to frame them and jewel-like vases assembled from flat sheets of cardboard – see all vases on Dezeen.

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