Please by Jasper Morrison at Dezeen Watch Store

Dezeen Watch Store: the new Please watch by British industrial designer Jasper Morrison for fashion brand Issey Miyake is now available at Dezeen Watch Store.

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Jasper Morrison’s Please watch celebrates the twentieth anniversary of Issey Miyake’s seminal Pleats Please fashion collection.

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The timepiece pays homage to Miyake’s designs with a ridged polyurethane strap and stripes on the face that catch the light in different directions.

Black-JasperMorrison

Hours are marked with subtly alternating brushed and polished segments round the rim of the stainless-steel case.

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It’s fastened with a brushed stainless-steel buckle and is suitable as either a man’s watch or a woman’s watch.

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When designing the watch, Morrison used Irving Penn’s iconic 1994 photographs of Miyake’s collection as a starting point. “I visited the 21-21 Design Site Exhibition of Penn’s photos for Miyake and was overwhelmed by how Penn managed to capture the spirit of Miyake’s clothes in his photos,” said Morrison. “I decided to do my best to capture some of that spirit for this new watch.”

Dezeen Watch Store also stocks the W watch by Satoshi Wada for Issey Miyake, inspired by automotive design. See all watches from Issey Miyake »

Issey Miyake by Irving Penn
Pleats Please by Issey Miyake, photographed by Irving Penn 

Based close to Dezeen’s offices in east London, Jasper Morrison is one of the most celebrated British designers. He’s famed for his “Super Normal” approach to product design, sensitively paring back objects to their essentials.

You can buy all of our watches online and you can also visit our watch shop in Stoke Newington, north London – contact us to book an appointment.

www.dezeenwatchstore.com

The post Please by Jasper Morrison
at Dezeen Watch Store
appeared first on Dezeen.

W by Satoshi Wada for Issey Miyake at Dezeen Watch Store

W by Satoshi Wada for Issey Miyake

Dezeen Watch Store: the latest watch in our collection is by Japanese designer Satoshi Wada for Issey Miyake and features details inspired by car design.

W by Satoshi Wada for Issey Miyake

The solid watch case makes reference to the wheel of a car, with the hour markers slotted between the case and an inner stainless-steel ring to resemble a tyre.

W by Satoshi Wada for Issey Miyake

The face features gauge-like details with three chronograph dials and long slim hands that replicate speed dials found in cars. The watch also has a date function at the three o’clock position that adds to the mechanical look, along with the three crowns set on the right hand side of the watch case.

W by Satoshi Wada for Issey Miyake

The W watch is available in three colourways, each with a leather strap. See them all here.

www.dezeenwatchstore.com

The post W by Satoshi Wada for Issey Miyake
at Dezeen Watch Store
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Dezeen Watch Store summer sale: save £100 on GO by Naoto Fukasawa

Visit Dezeen Watch Store’s summer sale to save £100 on the square-faced GO watch by Naoto Fukasawa for Issey Miyake. Designed to mimic stones used in the Japanese board game of the same name, GO is available in four colour combinations, including the silver and black leather, above, now only £170 (UK and EU) or £141.67 (rest of the world). Get one here »

Don’t forget you can get 10% off any product at Dezeen Super Store at 38 Monmouth Street, London WC2 with this flyer.

The post Dezeen Watch Store summer sale:
save £100 on GO by Naoto Fukasawa
appeared first on Dezeen.

Dezeen Watch Store: GO by Naoto Fukasawa for Issey Miyake

Dezeen Watch Store: GO by Naoto Fukasawa for Issey Miyake

Dezeen Watch Store: GO is the latest watch by Japanese industrial designer Naoto Fukasawa for fashion brand Issey Miyake and it’s now available at Dezeen Watch Store.

Dezeen Watch Store: GO by Naoto Fukasawa for Issey Miyake

The watch features a square face with distinctly rounded edges to mimic the stones used to play GO, a traditional Japanese board game where players pick up the stones and move them around a chequered board.

Dezeen Watch Store: GO by Naoto Fukasawa for Issey Miyake

Fukasawa aimed to translate the tactile sense of the stones into the face of the watch so that the wearer can feel the smooth edges of the watch on their wrist.

Dezeen Watch Store: GO by Naoto Fukasawa for Issey Miyake

It’s available with a stainless steel or leather strap and you can order online or over the phone on +44 20 7503 7319

Fukasawa also designed Trapezoid AL for Issey Miyake – check it out here.

Dezeen Watch Store: GO by Naoto Fukasawa for Issey Miyake

Dezeen Watch Store is a carefully curated online store specialising in watches by named designers and boutique brands.

www.dezeenwatchstore.com

O by Tokujin Yoshioka at Dezeen Watch Store

O by Tokujin Yoshioka at Dezeen Watch Store

Dezeen Watch Store: O, a watch by Japanese designer Tokujin Yoshioka for fashion band Issey Miyake, is now available at Dezeen Watch Store and at our Dezeen Space pop-up from tomorrow. 

O by Tokujin Yoshioka at Dezeen Watch Store

O consists of a mirrored watch face embedded in a transparent grey plastic bangle.

O by Tokujin Yoshioka at Dezeen Watch Store

Yoshioka designed the watch to appear as though sculpted from water.

O by Tokujin Yoshioka at Dezeen Watch Store

The clear plastic bracelet reveals the wearer’s wrist as well as reflecting their surroundings, like the play of light on liquid.

O by Tokujin Yoshioka at Dezeen Watch Store

The name of the watch comes from the French word ‘eau,’ meaning ‘water’ and pronounced “O”.

O by Tokujin Yoshioka at Dezeen Watch Store

Other Issey Miyake watches on Dezeen Watch Store include VUE by Yves Behar, Trapezoid AL by Naoto Fukasawa and Hu by Ross Lovegrove.

O by Tokujin Yoshioka at Dezeen Watch Store

Dezeen Watch Store is a carefully curated online store specialising in watches by named designers and boutique brands.

O by Tokujin Yoshioka at Dezeen Watch Store

Go to Dezeen Watch Store »

Here are some more details from manufacturers Seiko Instruments:


O by Tokujin Yoshioka at Dezeen Watch Store

“O”, produced by ISSEY MIYAKE and developed by Seiko Instruments Inc., was launched at the Basel World in Switzerland in March of 2011 in celebration of the 10th anniversary of the ISSEY MIYAKE watch project.

O by Tokujin Yoshioka at Dezeen Watch Store

“O” is designed, aiming to go back to the origin of the watch.

O by Tokujin Yoshioka at Dezeen Watch Store

It is as if sculpted from water, and creates the scenery which only the time itself embraces the wrist of the wearer.

O by Tokujin Yoshioka at Dezeen Watch Store

The smooth curvature of the transparent bangle leads our eyes to the mirror finish body, which reflects the scenes of the surroundings, and gradually blends into the environment as if disappearing the form of itself.

Using the transparent special plastic material, “O” opens up a new direction in watch design with non-definitive form like water, which is as if freed from the concept of the materialism.

www.dezeenwatchstore.com


See also:

.

Hu by
Ross Lovegrove
Vue by
Yves Behar
Trapezoid AL
by Naoto Fukasawa

2D/3D Chairs by Yoichi Yamamoto for Issey Miyake

3D Chairs by Yoichi Yamamoto for Issey Miyake

When viewed from outside an Issey Miyake store in Tokyo, these chairs backs by Japanese architect Yoichi Yamamoto appear to have legs and seats.

3D Chairs by Yoichi Yamamoto for Issey Miyake

Although the wooden backs of the blue chairs are fixed directly to the floor, the legs are painted onto the ground so that from a fixed angle they appear in the correct perspective.

3D Chairs by Yoichi Yamamoto for Issey Miyake

The installation, named 2D/3D Chairs, displays a selection of hats by milliner Akio Hirata.

3D Chairs by Yoichi Yamamoto for Issey Miyake

More stories about Issey Miyake on Dezeen »

3D Chairs by Yoichi Yamamoto for Issey Miyake

Here is some text from the architect:


2D/3D Chairs Installation by Yoichi Yamamoto Architects

The back of the chairs stand up from the stage, while the legs of the chairs are drawings on the floor of the stage.

3D Chairs by Yoichi Yamamoto for Issey Miyake

If you look at the installation from one point in front of the shop window, the back of the chairs, which are three-dimensional objects, and the legs of the chairs, which are two-dimensional drawings, meet and create a single figure.

3D Chairs by Yoichi Yamamoto for Issey Miyake

We expressed Issey Miyake’s “from 2D cloth to 3D dress” philosophy in our installation.

3D Chairs by Yoichi Yamamoto for Issey Miyake

stage area: 11.25m2
floor: printing on removable media

3D Chairs by Yoichi Yamamoto for Issey Miyake

chair: cuttted readymade chair painted by 2066-40 rocky mountain sky (Benjamin Moore)

3D Chairs by Yoichi Yamamoto for Issey Miyake

Click above for larger image

3D Chairs by Yoichi Yamamoto for Issey Miyake

Click above for larger image

3D Chairs by Yoichi Yamamoto for Issey Miyake

Click above for larger image


See also:

.

24 Issey Miyake Shop at
Shibuya Parco by Nendo
Sticks for Issey Miyake by
Emmanuelle Moureaux
Pleats Please by
Tokujin Yoshioka

Issey Miyake appoint new designer for women’s collection


Dezeen Wire:
fashion brand Issey Miyake have appointed Yoshiyuki Miyamae as designer of their womenswear collection, following the departure of creative director Dai Fujiwara in February (see our earlier Dezeen Wire).

See all our stories about Issey Miyake »

Here are some more details from Masakatsu Nagatani, president of Issey Miyake Inc:


I am very pleased to inform you that we have appointed Yoshiyuki Miyamae as our new designer for the ISSEY MIYAKE women’s collection commencing with immediate effect for the SPRING SUMMER 2012 Collection.

Miyamae joined Miyake Design Studio in 2001, as part of the team working on the A-POC Project that Issey Miyake had been developing with Dai Fujiwara. This background gave Miyamae a thorough grounding in the concepts at the roots of clothing design and manufacturing. Since 2006, he has been a member of ISSEY MIYAKE design team under Dai Fujiwara. As he now takes up the baton from Fujiwara, Miyamae will pursue the creation of clothing that meets the needs of the new era and the new generation, while all the time focusing on the further development of the brand. In collaboration with the design, technical and production teams at ISSEY MIYAKE, Miyamae will unveil his first collection in Paris in October 2011.

With regard to our men’s brand, I am pleased to announce that we are changing the brand name to ISSEY MIYAKE MEN from the SPRING SUMMER 2012 season. A team combining both young talents and experienced designers and technicians will work together in each section from design and manufacturing to sales. In this endeavor, the entire staff is currently proceeding with final preparations for the presentation at the Paris Men’s Collections to be held in June 2011.

We would greatly appreciate your continued support of ISSEY MIYAKE and ISSEY MIYAKE MEN under our new system and we look forward to working with you in future.

Dezeenwire

Back to Dezeen Wire »
Back to Dezeen »

132 5. Issey Miyake by Tokujin Yoshioka

132 5. Issey Miyake by Tokujin Yoshioka

Japanese designer Tokujin Yoshioka designed this boutique to display fashion designer Issey Miyake’s 132 5. collection of garments, which fold from two-dimensional geometric shapes into structured clothes (see our earlier story).

132 5. Issey Miyake by Tokujin Yoshioka

Taking the same name as the collection, the shop displays each garment on a transparent mannequin suspended from the ceiling, with folded versions laid alongside and an iPad to explain the construction process.

132 5. Issey Miyake by Tokujin Yoshioka

Photographs are © Yoshinaga Yasuaki.

132 5. Issey Miyake by Tokujin Yoshioka

See all our stories about Tokujin Yoshioka »
See all our stories about Issey Miyake »

132 5. Issey Miyake by Tokujin Yoshioka

The information below is from Yoshioka:


Tokujin Yoshioka x 132 5. ISSEY MIYAKE

The first store for “132 5. ISSEY MIYAKE” designed by Tokujin Yoshioka has been launched.

132 5. Issey Miyake by Tokujin Yoshioka

“132 5. ISSEY MIYAKE” is a new label and a new evolution of “A piece of Cloth” by Issey Miyake, based on the ideas of “Regeneration and Re-creation.”

132 5. Issey Miyake by Tokujin Yoshioka

“Way of selling” is the concept of this space rather than the superficial interior design.

132 5. Issey Miyake by Tokujin Yoshioka

The clothes are displayed on five transparent torsos, which are strung down from the ceiling.

132 5. Issey Miyake by Tokujin Yoshioka

Customers can access freely to the computer graphic images of the complicated process on the iPad installed in the store.

132 5. Issey Miyake by Tokujin Yoshioka

The display of the process from 2D to 3D is as if it is of the Japanese Kimono store.

132 5. Issey Miyake by Tokujin Yoshioka


See also:

.

More about 132 5.
by Issey Miyake
24 ISSEY MIYAKE Shop
by Nendo
Pleats Please Issey Miyake
by Tokujin Yoshioka

Future Beauty: 30 Years of Japanese Fashion at the Barbican

Future Beauty at the Barbican

Here are some photographs from the exhibition Future Beauty: 30 Years of Japanese Fashion, designed by Japanese architect Sou Fujimoto and currently on show at the Barbican gallery in London.

Future Beauty at the Barbican

The show presents work by fashion designers including Issey Miyake, Rei Kawakubo and Yohji Yamamoto alongside pieces from a new generation of designers that includes Tao Kurihara and Mintdesigns.

Future Beauty at the Barbican

The lower gallery space is divided into four themed sections: In Praise of Shadows, Flatness, Tradition and Innovation, and Cool Japan, while the upper level houses dedicated spaces for each designer.

Future Beauty at the Barbican

The exhibition continues until 6 February 2011.

Future Beauty at the Barbican

Photographs are by Lyndon Douglas.

Future Beauty at the Barbican

More stories about fashion »
More stories about Sou Fujimoto »

The following information is from the Barbican:


Future Beauty
30 Years of Japanese Fashion
15 October 2010 – 6 February 2011

Future Beauty: 30 Years of Japanese Fashion is the first exhibition in Europe to comprehensively survey avant-garde Japanese fashion, from the early 1980s to now. Japanese designers made an enormous impact on world couture in the late 20th century. Visionaries such as Issey Miyake, Rei Kawakubo and Yohji Yamamoto redefined the very basis of fashion, challenged established Western notions of beauty, and turned fashion very firmly into art. Kawakubo’s protégé, the techno- couturier Junya Watanabe also features in the exhibition, together with the acclaimed Jun Takahashi, and the new generation of radical designers including Tao Kurihara, Matohu and Mintdesigns. Future Beauty opens at Barbican Art Gallery on 15 October 2010.

Future Beauty at the Barbican

Kate Bush, Head of Art Galleries, Barbican Centre, said: The great Japanese designers – Rei Kawakubo, Issey Miyake and Yohji Yamamoto – changed fashion forever in the 1980s. The tight silhouettes of Western couture were jettisoned for new fluid shapes. Out went the magnificent ornament and extravagant techniques of the post-war tradition and in came a stark, monochrome palette and an entirely new decorative language – holes, rips, frays and tears – emerging from the stuff of fabric itself. I am delighted that Barbican Art Gallery is the first gallery in Europe to chart this fascinating and influential period in design history, as well as the first gallery in Britain to present the Kyoto Costume Institute’s legendary collection.

Future Beauty at the Barbican

Curated by the eminent Japanese fashion historian Akiko Fukai, Director, the Kyoto Costume Institute (KCI), and designed by acclaimed architect Sou Fujimoto, with sound installation by Janek Schaefer, the exhibition explores the distinctive sensibility of Japanese design and its sense of beauty embodied in clothing. Bringing together over 100 garments from the last three decades – many rarely lent by KCI, some never seen before in the UK – the exhibition also includes films of notable catwalk shows and documentaries.

Future Beauty at the Barbican

Future Beauty explores the work of these designers in relation to Japanese art, culture and costume history. The lower galleries are arranged into four sections: In Praise of Shadows; Flatness; Tradition and Innovation and Cool Japan. Each area focuses on a different characteristic that pervades the work of the featured designers.

Future Beauty at the Barbican

The first section, In Praise of Shadows, takes inspiration from the seminal text of the same name written by acclaimed Japanese author Juni’chirō Tanizaki in 1933. In Praise of Shadows reveals the enduring interest in a monochromatic palette, and nuanced textures and forms prevalent in contemporary Japanese fashion which – Fukai argues – arise from a cultural sensibility attuned to light and shade and the power of black. It features pieces by Rei Kawakubo and Yohji Yamamoto from their revered collections of the early eighties to their work from recent seasons, alongside garments by Junya Watanabe, Jun Takahashi and Matohu.

Future Beauty at the Barbican

Flatness explores the simple geometries and interplay of flatness and volume in the work of Issey Miyake and Rei Kawakubo. This section includes a series of specially commissioned striking photographs by Japanese artist and photographer Naoya Hatakeyama.

Future Beauty at the Barbican

In the next section the relationship between Tradition and Innovation is considered – from the radical reinvention of traditional Japanese garments and techniques, such as kimono and origami, to the technological advances in textile fabrication and treatment. It includes a series of paper garments by TAO, OhYa and Mintdesigns; Watanabe’s seminal autumn / winter 2000 collection Techno Couture; examples of Kawakubo’s deconstructionist work; as well as modern takes on traditional Japanese techniques and garments by Yamamoto, Kenzo and Matohu.

Future Beauty at the Barbican

The final section in the lower galleries focuses on the phenomenon that is Cool Japan. Featuring works by TAO, Jun Takahashi for Undercover and Naoki Takizawa, for Issey Miyake, among others. Cool Japan examines the symbiotic relationship between street style, popular culture and high fashion. There are also a series of rooms showing catwalk collection films, interviews and Wim Wenders’ classic documentary on Yamamoto Notebook of Cities and Clothes.

Future Beauty at the Barbican

The upper galleries of Future Beauty are dedicated to focused presentations on each of the principle designers in the show featuring a range of archive and recent works: Rei Kawakubo, Yohji Yamamoto, Issey Miyake, Junya Watanabe, Jun Takahashi and Tao Kurihara, as well as Mintdesigns and a number of emerging designers such as Akira Naka, Anrealage, Né-Net, Sacai, Somarta, Mikio Sakabe, and Taro Horiuchi.

Future Beauty at the Barbican

Also included in the upper galleries are catwalk collection films, and a wealth of rare books, catalogues and magazines, which highlight Yamamoto, Miyake and Kawakubo’s collaborations with artists, photographers and designers.

Future Beauty at the Barbican

Future Beauty: 30 years of Japanese Fashion, 15 October 2010 – 6 February 2011 is co-organised by Barbican Art Gallery and the Kyoto Costume Institute. It is curated by Akiko Fukai, Director/Chief Curator of the Kyoto Costume Institute and Kate Bush, Head of Art Galleries.

Future Beauty at the Barbican

The exhibition is supported by Wacoal Corp and Sumitomo Corporation Europe Ltd. Additional support for the KCI and Barbican exhibition is provided Shiseido Co.,Ltd. Media Partners: The Daily Telegraph and Dazed & Confused. The exhibition travels to Haus der Kunst, Munich, 4 March – 18 June 2011.


See also:

.

The Surreal House at
the Barbican
Ron Arad: Restless
at the Barbican
The House of Viktor & Rolf
at the Barbican

Vue Watch

Voici ce concept original de montre, baptisé Vue Watch, où l’heure n’apparaît que lorsque l’aiguille en rotation est proche. Une collaboration entre le studio FuseProject du suisse Yves Béhar et le designer japonais Issey Miyake. Plus d’images et d’explications en vidéo dans la suite.



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Previously on Fubiz