Simple Convenience iron by Laura Nelson

British product designer and recent graduate Laura Nelson has come up with a hinged iron based on a set of hair straighteners.

Simple Convenience by Laura Nelson

The slimline iron has two hot surfaces that clamp the fabric to iron it flat, just as hair straighteners smooth down strands of hair.

Simple Convenience by Laura Nelson

“I’m acknowledging behavioural habits by focusing on panels and sections of garments, such as collars and sleeves,” says Nelson. The angular shape of the iron makes it easy to use on small areas and narrow spaces between buttons.

Simple Convenience by Laura Nelson

Nelson recently graduated from the Product and Furniture Design course at Kingston University in London.

Simple Convenience by Laura Nelson

She will be showcasing her work during London Design Festival at Variant, an exhibition in the Gallery on Redchurch Street, E2 7DP, between 18 – 23 September.

Simple Convenience by Laura Nelson

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Here’s some more text from the designer:


Simple Convenience

An iron that accommodates a busy lifestyle, eliminating the need for an ironing board.

Features include three heat settings in accordance with universal ironing symbols. Two aluminium plates apply pressure to both sides of the fabric through a hinging mechanism. A heat resistant sleeve allows the iron to be stored away neatly immediately after use.

The post Simple Convenience iron
by Laura Nelson
appeared first on Dezeen.

DIY Series by Andre Pereira

DIY Series by Andre Pereira

New Designers 2011: Kingston University graduate Andre Pereira has created a series of products to help with tricky DIY tasks, including these paint brushes that clip onto the edge of a tin of paint.

DIY Series by Andre Pereira

The DIY series also includes a brush guard that holds bristles together for neater corners and edges.

DIY Series by Andre Pereira

In addition, Pereira presented colour-coded wire strippers to help with wiring a plug and proposes that a plug’s prongs could be insulated with colour-coded plastic.

DIY Series by Andre Pereira

A heat-sensitive sticker attached to radiators would indicate when they need bleeding.

DIY Series by Andre Pereira

Pereira presented the project at graduate show New Designers 2011, which took place 6-9 July in London.

DIY Series by Andre Pereira

See all our coverage of the event here.

DIY Series by Andre Pereira

Here are some more details from Andre Pereira:


DIY Series: Painting

Brush Guard, Overhang Paint Can, Hanging Brush

The painting series promotes a clean working environment, through permitted conveniences, and reducing the amount of skill needed to carry out a professional job.

The ‘Brush Guard’ restricts the brushes bristles from spanning out when pressure is applied, giving the user greater control when painting straight lines. It also promotes tool longevity to often throw away tools keeping the brushes shape when not in use. Both the ‘Overhang paint can’ and the ‘Hanging Brush’ permit the user to rest wet paint brushes providing the user with a clean working environment. The Overhang paint can’s handle rests on the stopper permitting the user to rest their paint brush on the groove. The ‘Hanging Brush’ has notch which hooks onto paint can edges allowing the paint to drip into the can rather than down its side and the floor.

DIY Series: Maintenance

Plug Strippers, Coloured plug, Radiator Sticker

The maintenance series has been designed to simplify often overlooked tricky household tasks.

The Plug Strippers are designed to cut and strip the wires of a cable to the required lengths making the fiddly task of wiring a UK plug easier. The order the wires are stripped relates to the order in which they are attached to the plug. The strippers would consist of three blades 2 stripping blades and one cutting blade with the housing being compression moulded.

The Coloured plug is simple, by colouring the existing insulated pins with the according colours of the wires that would attach to them, assures the user they are wiring the plug correctly preventing the plug from being accidentally mixed up.

The Radiator sticker is thermochromic, meaning it reacts to a specified temperature; indicating to the user when to bleed their radiator. Air is a poor conductor of heat so when it builds up at the top of radiators it greatly reduces the heating systems efficiency increasing the amount of energy needed to heat a room. This means the bottom half of the radiator would be hot and the top half colder. By putting the sticker at the top of the radiator you are able to tell whether there is air trapped: When the heating system is on a red ring should appear showing that the system is working. When the system is on and the sticker remains completely yellow,then there may be air trapped.


See also:

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Ben Fursdon
at New Designers
Hannah Niskanen-Benady
at New Designers
Oscar Medley-Whitfield
at New Designers

Broo-ver by Ben Fursdon

Broo-ver by Ben Fursdon

New Designers 2011: product design graduate Ben Fursdon has created the Broo-ver, a broom converted into a vacuum cleaner.

Broo-ver by Ben Fursdon

Fursdon reduced the ubiquitous household machine to the minimum number of components to make it easier to clean and repair.

Broo-ver by Ben Fursdon

A clear plastic jug collects the dirt and unclips to reveal removable filters. Components are arranged in a straight line along the handle, eliminating bends in the pipe to reduce blockages.

Broo-ver by Ben Fursdon

Fursdon designed the prototype while studying at Kingston University and presented it at graduate show New Designers in London last week.

New Designers took place 6-9 July. See more stories about the work on show »

Here are some more details from Ben Fursdon:


Broo-ver

Less plastic, less parts, less hassle: a new approach to the humble vacuum cleaner.

Vacuum cleaners are a household essential, used often, abused more often and thrown away in vast numbers. Due to the complicated assembly and myriad of components, many vacuum cleaners end up at landfill when they could be repaired. Broo-ver is designed to empower the owner. Stripped down to the minimum amount of parts possible, Broo-ver promotes easy maintenance, increased level of ownership and understanding  and longer product life span.

The main concept for Broo-ver came about after a trip to the local land-fill site. After seeing the mass amount of vacuum cleaners that were being thrown away, and learning that around 8 out of 10 of them could be repaired quite simply, I decided to design a vacuum cleaner with simplicity and minimal components. My in-depth research included deconstructing numerous vacuum cleaners (modern and old), spending time with the owner of the UK’s only vacuum cleaner museum (James Brown) and generally trying to learn everything and anything about vacuum cleaners. After creating various working models which were then tested on users, the final Broo-ver shape and components developed.

The end result is an elegantly simple and user-focused vacuum cleaner, which affords the owner a better understanding of how it works and increased level of ownership.


See also:

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The Toaster Project
by Thomas Thwaites
Ultra Lead by
Georges Moanack
Folding Plug by
Min-Kyu Choi

Safety Vase by Hannah Niskanen-Benady

Safety Vase by Hannah Niskanen-Benady

Kingston University graduate Hannah Niskanen-Benady presented this series of side tables that incorporate knitted containers at graduate show New Designers in London over the weekend.

Safety Vase by Hannah Niskanen-Benady

Niskanen-Benady designed the hallway or bedside tables for stashing small items like keys, coins and jewellery.

Safety Vase by Hannah Niskanen-Benady

A hole in the walnut surface of each Safety Vase table holds the cashmere and merino wool vases, hanging below the table top.

Safety Vase by Hannah Niskanen-Benady

New Designers Part 2 took place from 6 to 9 July.

See more stories about this year’s graduate shows »

Here’s some more information from Hannah Niskanen-Benady:


Hallway and Bedside Tables, Cashmere and merino hand knit framed by a solid walnut top and hand turned legs.

Experimenting with hard and soft materials and textures has been the muse for the Safety Vase series. The Safety Vase series empathises with wood and wool’s emotional and physical qualities to create a safe hideaway for one’s treasures. Knit holds connotations of safety, warmth and softness. Wood is a traditional furniture material that represents strength and longevity. The Safety Vase series explores and celebrates these qualities. It questions current furniture typologies and asks whether the emotional warmth of knit can be introduced to the hard world of wooden furniture.

A safe hideaway for those treasures that have a tendency to be misplaced has been created. The vase like form invites the user to touch and feel the softness of the wool whilst playfully hiding objects away, this furniture series is about experiencing the knit. It poses the question of why cant the first thing you touch when you wake up in the morning or come in from work be soft and comforting.

The knit is framed and contrasted by the hardness of the wood, both the minimal legs and the table top create a frame around the vase without distracting from it.


See also:

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1.3 Chair by
Ki Hyun Kim
Hose Clip Shelving
by Max Frommeld
From Here For Here
by Ariane Prin

Heat Shrink Series by Daniel Rawlings

heat-shrink-series-by-daniel-rawlings-4.jpg

Graduate designer Daniel Rawlings has created a series of vases by heat-shrinking plastic tubing around broken crockery. (more…)