New Basics by Alain Berteau for Objekten

New Basics by Alain Berteau for Objekten

Paris 2012: Brussels designer Alain Berteau presents a series of oak products including this simple iPad dock at Maison & Objet in Paris this week.

New Basics by Alain Berteau for Objekten

Called New Basics, the range for his own brand Objekten also includes an iPad stand that’s just a double-walled oak tray and Twist task lamp with separate batons joined by magnets.

New Basics by Alain Berteau for Objekten

A reversible tray with adjustable handles plus salt and pepper grinders in plain and blackened oak complete the collection.

New Basics by Alain Berteau for Objekten

Maison & Objet takes place from 20 to 24 January.

New Basics by Alain Berteau for Objekten

Here are some more details from Alain Berteau:


Beautiful tools with essential shapes and timeless functionality. Accessories versatile enough to fight the planned obsolescence of digital devices.

New Basics by Alain Berteau for Objekten

Dock box

Pen case with convenient docking possiblities for digital devices. Compatible with iPhones, iPads, and many other devices.

New Basics by Alain Berteau for Objekten

Manufactured in Germany.
Materials : Oiled oak coming from harvested forests.

New Basics by Alain Berteau for Objekten
Dimensions : 28,2 x 10,5 x 4,8 cm
Designed by Alain Berteau

New Basics by Alain Berteau for Objekten

Dock tray

Elegant tray with numerous docking possiblities for digital devices. Compatible with iPads, iPad 2 and many other devices.

New Basics by Alain Berteau for Objekten

Manufactured in Germany.
Materials : Oiled oak coming from harvested forests.
Dimensions : 28,2 x 10,5 x 4,8 cm

New Basics by Alain Berteau for Objekten

Service tray

Serving tray with comfortable self-adjustable handles.

New Basics by Alain Berteau for Objekten

Plain, natural light or dark oak

New Basics by Alain Berteau for Objekten

Manufactured in Germany

New Basics by Alain Berteau for Objekten

Twist lamp

Playful, sculptural, the Twist lamp system is made of beautifully crafted oak parts coming from harvested forests, combined with lasting leds components and stainless steel connectors. The system allows numerous configurations : bedside table lamp, floor lamp or fully adjustable desk lamp.

New Basics by Alain Berteau for Objekten

Manufactured in Germany
Assembled in Belgium
Materials : Oiled oak (harvested forest), high-quality Osram less components

New Basics by Alain Berteau for Objekten

Spheres

The original “spheres” peppermill now available in wood. Iconic and convenient, it is so good-looking it can stay on the table forever.

New Basics by Alain Berteau for Objekten

High-quality ceramic grinder made in Denmark.
Wood parts (plain natural varnished oak) produced in Germany.

New Basics by Alain Berteau for Objekten
Assembled in Brussels by Tamawa workshops.

Fresh "Fruit Bowls" by Rogier Martens

RogierMartens-FruitBowls-1.jpg

Dutch designer Rogier Martens is pleased to present a new series of hand-blown glass fruit bowls that take their final form based on (what else?) bowls of fruit. He notes that Leerdam, “the Glass City of the Netherlands,” is also a major producer of fruit:

The idea of the ‘Fruit Bowls’ arose during one of the many trips made ​​through the blooming orchards between Utrecht and Leerdam. Mold-blowing has two major disadvantages. each product is identical what takes away the exclusivity and it is a costly affair. I developed many interesting shapes by experimenting with glass and using fruit as a stamp or mold. After several experiments with different types of fruit, it proved to work best with the ‘normal’ Jonagold apple. This apple grown less than 100 meters from the glass furnace.

RogierMartens-FruitBowls-2.jpg

Where Athansios Babalis & Christina Skouloudi’s fruit bowls took the shape of abstracted fruit, Martens’ version is at once more and less idealized: the concept of a bowl that is ‘fitted’ to its precious cargo speaks to the notion of design for a specific purpose, yet reality dictates that each and every instance of a fruit will vary from the archetype.

RogierMartens-FruitBowls-3.jpg

Thus, the fruit bowls capture a unique amalgam of the general and the specific, both the idea of a fruit and the infinite variation of its real-world manifestation—in other words, how natural objects are perfect for their imperfections.

The production video, set to the dulcet tones of Radiohead, is also pretty badass:

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Dezeen Screen: Shan Valla at Interiors UK

Dezeen Screen: Shan Valla at Interiors UK

Dezeen Watch Store and friends: Dezeen Watch Store will be at Interiors UK in Birmingham from 22 January, along with a selection of the most successful designers and brands from our pop-up shop The Temporium. In this first of four interviews with some of the designers, Londoner Shan Valla talks about her new collection of porcelain vessels cast from cut-glass decanters and her bottles cast from found, industrially produced milk bottles. Watch the movie »

Dezeen at Home

Dezeen at Home

For the past couple of days Dezeen have been at domestic interiors show Home in London to present a range of products by upcoming designers and brands.

Dezeen at Home

The three-day fair at Earls Court exhibits accessories, lighting and furniture from hundreds of design companies across Europe.

Dezeen at Home

The Dezeen at Home stand is located right by the entrance to the show, illuminated by Diamond Lights from Copenhagen brand Frama.

Dezeen at Home

Other designers and brands exhibiting include porcelain company Choemon, designer Alexa Lixfeld and bicycle accessory brand Bookman.

Dezeen at Home

Dutch brand De Vorm present a large privacy chair designed by Benjamin Hubert, while homeware company Matilda show Australian products that include bone china butterflies made from old saucers.

Dezeen at Home

Click here to see the full list of designers and brands at Dezeen at Home.

Dezeen at Home

We’re also showcasing the latest watches by VOIDZiiiro and British designer Michael Young in our latest Dezeen Watch Store pop-up.

Dezeen at Home

Home is open until 5pm today – thanks to everyone who’s come by. If you didn’t make it we hope to see you at Interiors UK in Birmingham this weekend!

Dezeen at Home

Photographs are by Luke Hayes.

Dezeen at Home

Above: bicycle lights by Bookman

Dezeen at Home

Above: British kitchenware by Falcon Enamelware

Dezeen at Home

Above: Geo cushions by Mika Barr, from Talents Design

Dezeen at Home

Above: porcelain cups, bowls and vases by Alexa Lixfeld

Dezeen at Home

Above: handwoven dolls by Alexa Lixfeld

Dezeen at Home

Above: blankets and throws by Teixidors

Dezeen at Home

Above: Outline furniture by Milton & Mees

Dezeen at Home

Hybrid Collection by CTRLZAK studio for Seletti

Hybrid Collection by CTRLZAK studio for Seletti

Art and design studio CTRLZAK have launched a collection of tableware where half of each piece resembles traditional Chinese porcelain and the other side features a European design.

Hybrid Collection by CTRLZAK studio for Seletti

Based on an earlier collection of one-off pieces, the new commercial range for Italian brand Seletti is intended to highlight the mixing of aesthetics between Western and Eastern production.

Hybrid Collection by CTRLZAK studio for Seletti

Unlike the earlier CermamiX range, the plates, bowls and cups in the new Hybrid collection are cast as single objects in bone china.

Hybrid Collection by CTRLZAK studio for Seletti

The two halves of each object are then decorated with different colours and motifs.

Hybrid Collection by CTRLZAK studio for Seletti

You can see more stories about ceramics here and more stories about tableware here.

Hybrid Collection by CTRLZAK studio for Seletti

Here’s some more information from CTRLZAK:


SELETTI & CTRLZAK present: Hybrid

Seletti presents the Hybrid collection designed by CTRLZAK studio.

Hybrid Collection by CTRLZAK studio for Seletti

A line of tableware reflecting on the historical production of Chinese and European porcelain and its’ centuries of cross-fertilisation between Western and Eastern aesthetics.

Hybrid Collection by CTRLZAK studio for Seletti

The pieces in the collection are graphically divided between east and west with a coloured line marking the boundary between the two styles and, paradoxically, strengthening at the same time the union.

Hybrid Collection by CTRLZAK studio for Seletti

The Hybrid collection looks at the present while reflecting on the irony of history proposing consequently an evocative contemporary interpretation.

Theo at The Temporium

Theo at The Temporium

The Temporium: there are just two more days to visit our Christmas shop The Temporium, where you can snap up gifts by over 20 designers and brands including this toy cable car from Theo.

Theo at The Temporium

The vintage style wind-up cable car is made in the Czech Republic from printed sheet metal and comes with five metres of string to zip along.

Theo at The Temporium

It has a mechanical spring engine and a start/stop switch.

Theo at The Temporium

Theo also presents textiles from Donna Wilson, plant pots by Nick Fraser (see our earlier story), Clocks by David Weatherhead and more.

Theo at The Temporium

Here are some more details from Theo:


Hello, I’m Theo. Nice to meet you!

Although it looks like I’m the new kid on the block, I mean in certain ways I am, I’ve been doing this for quite a while now.

Theo at The Temporium

I am a bit like the little brother/alter ego of Thorsten van Elten (in fact Theo is Thorsten’s middle name).

Theo at The Temporium

Since Thorsten closed his actual brick and mortar shop back in 2008, his online shop stayed on. Unfortunately it got a little bit neglected as Thorsten was very busy working on his production & distribution side with his products being sold in many fantastic shops all around the world.

Theo at The Temporium

Theo has most definitely got his own identity and ideas! Some you can see already, some are still to come.

The Temporium 2011

Dezeen presents The Temporium

65 Monmouth Street
Seven Dials, Covent Garden
London WC2H 9DG

Map

Telephone:
020 7503 7319

Dates:
1-24 December 2011

Opening times:
Monday – Saturday: 11:00 – 19:00
Late-night shopping Thursday until 20:00
Sunday: 12:00 – 17:00

More info: www.thetemporium.com

All Lovely Stuff at The Temporium

All Lovely Stuff at The Temporium

The Temporium: behind the fourteenth window of our Advent calendar of products on sale at The Temporium are quirky homewares by British design brand All Lovely Stuff, including these salad servers shaped like smiling dinosaurs.

All Lovely Stuff at The Temporium

Top: Dinosaladservers
Above: Moose on the Loose

The company, founded by London designers Carl Clerkin and Ed Ward, is showing ten of its best-selling products at the shop until 24 December.

All Lovely Stuff at The Temporium

Above: Beesnees

Five of the items on sale come from their new range, which include moose-shaped coat hooks and hives for solitary bees, as well as the salad servers.

All Lovely Stuff at The Temporium

Above: Cheesy Pete

Also available is a cheeseboard with a face and some traditional Chinese scissors.

All Lovely Stuff at The Temporium

Above: Traditional Chinese Scissors

See more stories about homeware on Dezeen here and more stories about The Temporium here.

All Lovely Stuff at The Temporium

Above: Door Mouse

Here’s some more information from All Lovely Stuff:


There’s something about things that make you smile or that you know work well.

All Lovely Stuff at The Temporium

Above: Animals Of Whittling Wood

Since last year we’ve been developing a collection of objects that offer this in an affordable way; designing mostly, but also finding things is part of what we do.

All Lovely Stuff at The Temporium

Above: Bear Face Mirror

We’re working hard to bring you something really lovely.

All Lovely Stuff at The Temporium

Above: Christ That’s Hot!

There’ll be products for all parts of the home, but we are obsessed about the lovely bit.

All Lovely Stuff at The Temporium

Above: Mmm Doughnuts

If something is truly all lovely stuff then you are going to keep hold of it – and that’s much better for all of us.

The Temporium 2011

Dezeen presents The Temporium

65 Monmouth Street
Seven Dials, Covent Garden
London WC2H 9DG

Map

Telephone:
020 7503 7319

Dates:
1-24 December 2011

Opening times:
Monday – Saturday: 11:00 – 19:00
Late-night shopping Thursday until 20:00
Sunday: 12:00 – 17:00

More info: www.thetemporium.com

Established & Sons at The Temporium

The Temporium: design brand Established & Sons present a collection products from their Estd. range at our Christmas shop The Temporium in London, including these storage jars inspired by the shape of space capsules.

Established & Sons at The Temporium

The Store jars have cork tops and a matte glaze on the base to stop them sliding around.

Established & Sons at The Temporium

Other Established & Sons products on sale include the pewter Pour jugs (above), Hang coat stand and Butt stool (below).

Established & Sons at The Temporium

The Fold lamp by Alexander Taylor was one of the company’s first products and is made of a folded sheet of metal.

Established & Sons at The Temporium

The Torch Light by Sylvain Willenz has a soft silicon case and references hand-held torches or car headlights.

Established & Sons at The Temporium

See all our stories about Established & Sons here and watch design director of the brand Sebastian Wrong give a tour of their current collection in our movie on Dezeen Screen.

The Temporium 2011

Dezeen presents The Temporium

65 Monmouth Street
Seven Dials, Covent Garden
London WC2H 9DG

Map

Telephone:
020 7503 7319

Dates:
1-24 December 2011

Opening times:
Monday – Saturday: 11:00 – 19:00
Late-night shopping Thursday until 20:00
Sunday: 12:00 – 17:00

More info: www.thetemporium.com

Blue D1653 by Arian Brekveld, Chris Koens and Damian O’Sullivan for Royal Delft

Traditional Dutch porcelain company Royal Delft have launched a new contemporary brand, Blue D1653, including this set by Arian Brekveld that looks as though the blue emblems have slipped down the rim of each dish.

The first collection also features Brekveld’s white bottles with decorative collars, plus tiles for serving tapas or sushi divided into sections that play with Royal Delft motifs and vases that split into two smaller containers by Damian O’Sullivan.

Chris Koens contributed a rounded tea pot with a pebble-like lid and a set of rings decorated with Royal Delft patterns.

See more stories about ceramics here.

Here are some more details from the designers:


Royal Delft

Call it contemporary nostalgia, new originality or the purest form of Dutch Design; Blue D1653 brings together the best design of two eras in one collection.

With the Blue D1653 collection Royal Delft combines the time-honoured trade of the Master Painters with the powerful design of modern Dutch Designers.

Interaction between the present day and history, expressed in a unique collection of decorative objects and consumer products for food, mood & lifestyle.

Royal Delft, The original Blue

Royal Delft was established in 1653 and since then has been the largest and most important producer of Delft Blue.

Today it is the only remaining producer in Delft from the 17th century.

The assortment varies from classic to modern design and tradition is the binding factor.

Through the introduction of Blue D1653, Royal Delft shows that, in addition to tradition, innovation also comes from Delft.

A new idea that feels like a plausible further elaboration of the Delft tradition.

Blue D1653 gives Delft Blue meaning in the lives of a new group of people.

Contemporary Masters

The Blue D1653 products are designed by the (Dutch) guild masters of the 21st century; modern, known Dutch Designers.

They invent and develop new products, taking their inspiration from the Royal Delft Master Painters.

These painters paint the refined guild artwork of the earthenware and have learned through tradition and strict selection.

The cooperation between the Designers and Royal Delft Master Painters results in products which have a distinct character; Delft Blue meets Dutch Design.

Soulful Design

The connection between history and the present day gives Blue D1653 a unique character; design with a real soul.

Reference is also made to that in the name: ‘Blue D’ is a light-hearted reference to Delft Blue which, by adding the year 1653, places its roots in history.

Blue D1653 gives the ancient craft of Delft Blue a contemporary stage for a new audience.

Interaction between the present day and history, expressed in a unique collection of decorative objects and consumer products for food, mood & lifestyle.

Designers: Damian O’Sullivan, Arian Brekveld & Chris Koens
Master Painters: Caroline Hartman, Simon van Oosten & Paul Bartels

Infrasons by Matali Crasset

Infrasons by Matali Crasset

French designer Matali Crasset presents a series of vessels shaped like horns, speaker components and loudhailers at Mica Gallery near Rennes in France.

Infrasons by Matali Crasset

Each is made of sycamore finished in lacquer and gold leaf.

Infrasons by Matali Crasset

A performance by sound artist Damien Marchal will accompany the silent objects of the Infrasons collection, which are on show until 25 February 2012.

Infrasons by Matali Crasset

See all our stories about Matali Crasset here.

Infrasons by Matali Crasset

Here are some more details from Mica Gallery:


From 18 November 2011 to 25 February 2012, the Mica Gallery is exhibiting a series of objects by Matali CRASSET which have never been seen before. The combination of artisan-designer on which the Mica Gallery is staking as a future promise is therefore continuing with the invitation from this major design centre whose awareness of know-how has already been expressed in a number of collaborative projects.

Bowls, vases, tidies? Shaped like a loudspeaker, loudhailer or a foghorn, these objects mischievously shy away from their status, juggling between use and representation, compelling whoever takes it up to think about what he will do with it, and this is already an invitation to reinvent the world.

Infrasons by Matali Crasset

Unidentified objects, they play at maintaining a doubt about their function and their origins. They may be the descendants of old musical instruments where we don’t know where the sound comes from, as well as the prototypes for high-tech sound equipment that nobody yet knows how to work. This silence is too mysterious not to prick up one’s ears and to feel a palpable tension in this silence, generated by the attempt to synthesise what cannot be reconciled: the fossilisation of the future, the image of the sound, the materialisation of the wave, the objectification of the movement (the one which guides the body when spinning a piece of wood).

Without any noise, the sound spreads out. It cannot yet be heard, but it means paying attention as if one must be wary of sleeping water: the spirals may indeed follow the momentum started in the wood, the unique objects give rise to series. Then, the scenarios are borne out, the utopias prove their viability!

Infrasons by Matali Crasset

Damien MARCHAL has seen them… these objects being made. He has heard the sounds which filled the artisan’s workshops. The invitation he received in the form of a white card is the opportunity for the artist with sound to imagine a remarkable dialogue with these finished objects some of whose secrets he knows. Still in search of experiments, his taste for risk leads him this time to use his voice exclusively for this new performance.

Infrasons by Matali Crasset

Matali CRASSET

Matali CRASSET is by training an industrial designer, a graduate of the Ateliers – E.N.S.C.I. (Workshops – National Higher School of Industrial Design). At the beginning of 2000, after her initial experience with Denis Santachiara Italy and with Philippe Starck in France, she set up her own studio in Paris called “matali crasset productions” in a renovated former printing firm in the heart of Belleville. It is there, with the coming and going of children and neighbours that she dreams up her projects.

She considers design to be research, working from an off-centred position allowing to both serve daily routines and trace future scenarios. With both a knowledgeable and naive view of the world, she questions the obviousness of codes so as to facilitate her breaking these bonds. Like her symbolic work, focused on hospitality, “Quand Jim monte à Paris” (When Jim goes up to Paris), is based on a mere visual and conscious perception which she invents another relation to the everyday space and objects. Her proposals are never towards a simple improvement of what already exists but, without rushing things, to develop typologies structured around principles such as modularity, the principle of an interlacing network, etc. Her work revolves around searching for new coordination processes and formulating new logics in life. She defines this search as an accompaniment towards the contemporary.

Infrasons by Matali Crasset

Matali CRASSET works with a variety of actors, just as easily with the curious craftsman as with an individual in search of a new life scenario, with the industrialist ready to experiment as with the hotelier who wants to develop a new concept (Hi Hotel in Nice or Dar Hi in Nefta), with a small rural commune which wants to develop its cultural and social dynamism or the museum which wants to be transformed (SM’s in s’Hertogenbosch in the Netherlands). Always in search of new territories to explore, she collaborates with eclectic worlds, from Crafts to Contemporary Art, from the textiles industry to fair trade, realising projects in set design, furniture, architecture, graphics, collaborations with artists, and so on such as with artists (Peter Halley), with young furniture-making companies, as well as with municipalities and communes …

This experienced acquired over the years has led her to currently work on more participative projects, on a local and global level, both in rural and urban settings. From her meetings, creative workshops, discussion and common desires, she works with different project leaders who nevertheless all have the same conviction that these collective processes result in plausible social bonding scenarios.

It’s ultimately the core question of living together which defines her imaginative designs, writings and the sense of Matali’s work

Infrasons by Matali Crasset

Damien MARCHAL

Born in 1977. Lives and works in Rennes. Teaches in the Breton Higher National School of Architecture in the field of sound within the context of the visual arts. Founder member of the VIVARIUM artist’s workshop in Rennes, 2007.

For several years, he has been working on various problems linked to sound and the influence it can have. Damien MARCHAL uses sound like a material to create pieces and artistic environments. This approach to the many ramifications comes into play in the form of performances, devices or installations as well as in researches and collaborations with other artists. The artist endeavours to implement the devices or the sound is the basic element in the project. His work today questions the concept of going into violent action. He shapes the transducer as a sculpture, applying himself to give a visual meaning to the loudspeaker. In the “Garbage truck bomb” project, the sound produces a shock wave, this is generated by a series of speakers using terrorism’s visual codes. The sound depends on the visual field, the object then catalyses attention and focuses hearing on the project and what it has to say. This approach is similar to all his current projects, enabling the study of the properties of this material and its phenomena which can be observed.

Infrasons by Matali Crasset

Artisans

Alain LARCHER: Tournerie du Plat d’Or
Xaviert BONSERGENT: Prototype Concept
Olivier GUILBAUD: Atelier du Doreur

MICA Gallery
“La Brosse” Route du Meuble,
35760 St Grégoire-Rennes

Matali CRASSET
Guest artist Damien MARCHAL, Visual artist with sound
Commissioners: Michael CHÉNEAU and Julie PORTIER From 18 November 2011 – 25 February 2012
Graphics: Vincent MENU / “Le jardin Graphique”
Publisher: MICAGallery Edition limited to 8 copies Prices on request