Dark Noon by Nendo at Dezeen Watch Store

Dezeen Watch Store: new in at Dezeen Watch Store this week is Dark Noon by Japanese designers Nendo for Danish brand Noon. Each watch in the collection tells time in its own unique way. Gear (above), tells time using a collection of gears that rotate around each other as time passes.

Times (above) features a set of 12 smaller clock faces which replace the traditional numbers on the face. The time is displayed via a traditional minute hand and a floating, truncated hour hand that moves around the smaller clock faces.

Line uses two dotted lines to represent the hands of the timepiece, one marking the hour and the other the minutes. Every hour when the hands align, the dots line up to make one complete straight line.

The Dark Noon collection is available to buy online or over the phone. The collection is also available at our Dezeen Super Store pop-up shop at 38 Monmouth St, Seven Dials, London, WC2H 9EP. Get 10% discount in store and enter our competition to win a designer watch worth £150 by downloading this flyer and presenting it at the shop.

www.dezeenwatchstore.com

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Bird-apartment by Nendo

Japanese designers Nendo have built an enormous woodland nesting box with 78 entrances for birds on one side and one big door for humans on the other (+ slideshow).

Bird-apartment by Nendo

The treehouse was built for observing birds at the Momofuku Ando nature centre in Komoro, in Japan’s Nagano Prefecture.

People can reach the Bird-apartment by climbing up a ladder and through a circular hole.

Bird-apartment by Nendo

Spy holes across the back wall of the apartment allow a discreet view into the 78 bird boxes on the other side.

Bird-apartment by Nendo

We’ve featured lots of treehouses on Dezeen, including a giant weaver bird’s nest in Dartmoor, UK, and a tree-top hotel in northern Sweden.

Bird-apartment by Nendo

Other designs by Nendo we’ve featured include a tote bag with a pop-out hand puppet and a set of unstable furniture that has to be balanced by books and cups.

Bird-apartment by Nendo

See all our stories about Nendo »

Bird-apartment by Nendo

See all our stories about treehouses »

Bird-apartment by Nendo

The post Bird-apartment
by Nendo
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Cupnoodle Forms by Nendo

Cup Noodle Forms by Nendo

These souvenirs by Japanese studio Nendo for the Nissin Cupnoodles Museum in Yokohama look like warped reflections in funhouse mirrors.

Cup Noodle Forms by Nendo

The brand’s standard packaging has been distorted by stretching, squashing and melting the forms.

Cup Noodle Forms by Nendo

The museum celebrates the life and work of the late Momofuku Ando, credited with inventing instant noodles in 1958.

Cup Noodle Forms by Nendo

Cupnoodles followed in 1971 after a trip to the US where he noticed customers breaking the packs into a cup then adding hot water for convenience.

Cup Noodle Forms by Nendo

See all our stories about Nendo here and watch an interview with Oki Sato of Nendo on Dezeen Screen.

Cup Noodle Forms by Nendo

See more stories about packaging here.

Cup Noodle Forms by Nendo

Photographs are by Hiroshi Iwasaki.

Cup Noodle Forms by Nendo

Here’s some more information from Nendo:


Cupnoodle Forms: a specialty souvenir for the Nissin Cup Noodles Museum in Yokohama.

Cup Noodle Forms by Nendo

Even minute changes to the form of the Cup Noodle container give it a very different impression.

Cup Noodle Forms by Nendo

A collection of ceramic vessels whose forms remind us that the line between the ordinary and the extraordinary is infinitely fine, and help us to rediscover the ‘small incidents’ that exist submerged in the most familiar things.

Cup Noodle Forms by Nendo

1% products by Nendo

1% products by Nendo

Japanese designers Nendo will present new additions to their 1% products in Milan this April, including this tea set where the lids double as spinning tops.

1% products by Nendo

New pieces also include stacking vases, a coffee-filter holder that mimics the matching cup it stacks with and a stacking set of saki cups that can be combined to make a tumbler, large cup or jug.

1% products by Nendo

100 of each design will be produced and sold.

1% products by Nendo

Critic Alice Rawsthorn’s spoke to Oki Sato of Nendo about the collection in her interview with him here and you can watch our interview with him on Dezeen Screen here.

1% products by Nendo

The collection will be on show as part of Nendo’s solo show at Palazzo Visconti, Via Cino del Duca 8, Milan from 17-22 April.

1% products by Nendo

Photographs are by Hiroshi Iwasaki.

1% products by Nendo

Here’s some more information from Nendo:


new collection of 1% products will be shown
during the Milano Salone at nendo’s solo exhibition

100 is the perfect amount: they’re neither one-off “works of art” nor mass-produced products made in the millions. Whether its the skill of the artisans or new technologies, we want to make things that are only possible because there are 100 of them. Not more, not less. To give owners the chance to experience the joy of owing 1%.

1% products by Nendo

Win-tea cup

This three-piece set consists of a cup, saucer and coffee filter holder whose form mimics that of the cup and saucer.

1% products by Nendo

With its stabilizing form when placed on top of the cup to pour coffee, and a volume of precisely one cup of coffee, the filter holder provides maximum function with minimal fuss.

1% products by Nendo

The saucer doubles as a tray for the filter holder after coffee has been brewed, and the entire set can be stacked for storage at half its height by placing the filter holder between the saucer and cup.

1% products by Nendo

Top-tea set

A teapot and cup set.

1% products by Nendo

The thick wooden lid provides good insulation to keep the tea warm, and its pointed center condenses steam into liquid and directs it back into the teapot, rather dripping down the sides.

1% products by Nendo

The lid becomes a top, and can be spun on the tabletop for amusement while drinking tea.

1% products by Nendo

Block-vase

A set of small bud vases that can be stacked together like building blocks.

1% products by Nendo

The vase comes in four different sizes, carefully measured to fit together without disturbing the vase on the bottom.

1% products by Nendo

With careful stacking, the cases can accommodate a tall flower by running it through the vase on the top.

1% products by Nendo

Stack-sake set

A sake set consisting of pitcher and cups, in the form of stacks of cups. The different sizes correspond to different types of drinks: one cup is a choko small glass, two cups stacked a slightly larger one, and four cups stacked a tumbler. The stack of five cups is actually a pitcher for sake.

1% products by Nendo

Because all of the cups have the same shape, they can be stacked together when not in use, and the one-cup choko doubles as a lid for the pitcher.

1% products by Nendo

When the pitcher is heated, for drinking warm sake, the cups can be warmed simultaneously, too.

1% products by Nendo

Shrink-plate

A design that takes advantage of porcelain’s characteristics. When ceramics are fired, extreme differences in the thickness of the clay make the other side of the clay shrink away. Potters usually try to prevent this through a variety of techniques such as controlling the thickness of the clay and using curved rather than flat surfaces.

1% products by Nendo

The shrink-plate, on the other hand, makes what’s usually seen as a problem into a design feature.

1% products by Nendo
By increasing the thickness of the decorative elements and making the slab of the plate particularly flat and thin, the plate’s decoration stands out in relief.

1% products by Nendo

Place: Palazzo Visconti
Address: Via Cino del Duca 8, Milan
Transportation: San Babila
Date: April 17- 22, 2012
Opening Hours: 11:00 – 20:00

Halsuit by Nendo

Halsuit by Nendo

Japanese designers Nendo have a furnished a suit store in Okayama like an office, with conference tables, bookshelves and desk lamps.

Halsuit by Nendo

Suits at the Halsuit concept store for menswear retailer Haruyama hang beneath the wooden tables, while accessories are arranged on the wall-mounted shelves.

Halsuit by Nendo

Circular mannequin stands conceal a set of fitting rooms in the centre of the store.

Halsuit by Nendo

Elsewhere, the floor and ceiling surfaces change in colour and material to highlight an area where shirts are displayed.

Halsuit by Nendo

Other boutiques designed by Nendo include one filled with fake doors and another where shoes are showcased on timber staircasessee all our stories about Nendo here.

Halsuit by Nendo

Photography is by Masaya Yoshimura.

Here’s some more text from Nendo:


“HALSUIT” design concept

A concept shop for high-volume mens suit retailer Haruyama.

Halsuit by Nendo

Haruyama offers its customers a dizzying number of options for suits, shirts and ties. Variety of choice is one of Haruyama’s strengths, but customers can also be overwhelmed by the number of options, and find it difficult to choose the best matches for their suit.

Halsuit by Nendo

Families can get bored, and the overall atmosphere isn’t always as conducive to relaxed, pleasant shopping as Haruyama would like. Our first decision was to move the fitting rooms from the edge of the shop floor to its centre. We used the front exterior walls of the fitting rooms as showcases for different ways of coordinating the suits, and installed a counter with magazines and television for friends and families. Matchable accessories are arrayed around the area, making it into a focal point where shoppers can develop an image of the suit they’d like to have.

Halsuit by Nendo

Most suits are worn to the office, so we used lighting reminiscent of desk lamps, and shelving in the style of office storage units to create the right scene. We replaced posters with LCD screens, and transformed the sales area for shirts into a server room.

Halsuit by Nendo

Shoppers make their purchases at a ‘reception desk’, and lounge and conference room-type spaces help shoppers to imagine their own work styles as they select their suit. The space reflects Haruyama’s brand concept, that men should define and enjoy their personal working style.

Halsuit by Nendo

We used louvers that change colour depending on the angle from which they’re viewed for the shop exterior, so that the image of the shop varies, depending on the direction from which drivers approach.

“Nendo hones its unusual charm” – New York Times


Dezeen Wire:
design critic Alice Rawsthorn interviews Japanese designer Oki Sato of Nendo about how the company got its name, the humour and stories behind their work and his current preoccupation with glass-blowing – New York Times

Nendo presented two exhibitions of their work in Paris last week: furniture that’s only stable when objects are placed on it and another  collection at Carpernters Workshop Gallery that includes containers made of agricultural netting, tables with glass tops that have been allowed to flow outside their frames and huge blown-glass bubbles trapped in steel coffee tables.

See all our stories about Nendo here and watch our interview with Oki Sato on Dezeen Screen.

Object Dependencies Collection by Nendo for Specimen Editions

Object Dependencies Collection by Nendo for Specimen Editions

Paris 2012: this collection of furniture by Japanese designers Nendo is stable only when objects are placed on it.

Object Dependencies Collection by Nendo for Specimen Editions

The table top can be cantilevered by adding sufficient objects to weigh it down.

Object Dependencies Collection by Nendo for Specimen Editions

The dependence of the furniture on its objects allows various methods of assembly.

Object-Dependencies-Collection-by-Nendo-for-Specimen-Editions

The bookshelf can be expanded by changing the position of the top section, as long as it’s stabilised by blocks in the atached box.

Dependencies Collection by Nendo for Specimen Editions

The doors of the cabinets can only be closed by placing objects in front, while the quality of a lamp’s light is affected by pulling back its shade and keeping it in place with more blocks.

Object Dependencies Collection by Nendo for Specimen Editions

The Dependencies Collection will be presented at the Galerie Pierre-Alain Challier & Specimen Edition during MAISON&OBJET between 21.1.2012 – 3.3.2012.

Object Dependencies Collection by Nendo for Specimen Editions

The collection is on show with Specimen Editions until 3 March at Pierre Alain Chalier gallery, 8, rue Debelleyme 75003 Paris.

Object Dependencies Collection by Nendo for Specimen Editions

See all our stories about shows in Paris this week here.

Object Dependencies Collection by Nendo for Specimen Editions

Photographs are by Hiroshi Iwasaki.

Here are some more details from Nendo:


Originally, furniture was structurally complete, and served to hold books, cups and other objects placed upon it. We can say that this function was one of the most important factors in determining the form of a piece of furniture.

This collection presents pieces of ‘weak furniture’ that cannot stand independently until they are made structurally sound through the addition of an object. In addition to increasing stability, the accumulation of objects has other effects as well.

It can change the angle of light emitted from a lamp, or expand a bookshelf. Object dependencies is an exploration into new forms created by resetting the once-unquestioned relationship between furniture and objects.

50 projects_25 objects + 25 spaces by Nendo

Nendo's solo exhibition at AXIS Gallery

Dezeen Screen: In this movie filmed at the AXIS Gallery in Tokyo, Japanese studio Nendo exhibit a selection of their projects through a wall of stacked polycarbonate sheets. Viewed through this transparent facade, Nendo’s designs become pixelated abstractions which vary as visitors move around the exhibit. Watch the movie »

Catalog by Nendo

Catalog by Nendo

The window frame of this Beijing boutique by Japanese studio Nendo is repeated into the depths of the store.

Catalog by Nendo

Nendo designed the repetitive display system to recreated the experience of flicking through images on the pages of a catalogue.

Catalog by Nendo

See all our stories about Nendo here.

Catalog by Nendo

Photographs are by Daici Ano.

Here’s some more information from Nendo:


nendo’s a new shop design project in Beijing
“CATALOG” flagship store at Sanlitun Village

“CATALOG” store in Beijing

CATALOG is a Hong Kong-based sports fashion wear select shop with an emphasis on sneakers.

Catalog by Nendo

The Beijing store is their first foray into China.

Catalog by Nendo

The company’s name, CATALOG, reflects its philosophy:
treating brands with different outlooks equally, and actively suggesting ways of coordinating items from
different brands to its customers.

Catalog by Nendo

We wanted to recreate the specificity and attraction of a catalogue in our store design.

Catalog by Nendo

A store’s ‘face’ is its windows. We ‘copy-pasted’ the store window over and over again, creating a spatial experience similar to flicking through the pages of a catalogue.

Catalog by Nendo

The entire store becomes a series of show windows, and every item is in the spotlight.

Indulgi by Nendo

Indulgi by Nendo

This boutique by Japanese designers Nendo is full of fake doors.

Indulgi by Nendo

The extra doors break up sight lines in the long narrow Indulgi clothes store in Kyoto, meaning customers must explore the interior if they want to see all the merchandise.

Indulgi by Nendo

Each door forms part of the shop’s display system, sporting rails, hooks, shelving and mirrors.

Indulgi by Nendo

Back in 2009, architects Ninkipen! created a similarly surreal but more sinister shop lined with eleven fake doors and only one real exit, while Nendo themselves caused controversy among our readers last year with their mental health clinic where none of the doors open so patients and staff must open sections of the walls to move around – see what all the fuss is about in our earlier story or read more about it in the Dezeen Book of Ideas.

Indulgi by Nendo

You can also watch Oki Sato of Nendo talking about his work in our interview on Dezeen Screen and see all our stories about Nendo here.

Indulgi by Nendo

Photographs are by Daici Ano.

Indulgi by Nendo

Here are some more details from Nendo:


Indulgi

A new shop “INDULGI” designed by nendo opened in Kyoto, Japan. A small clothing shop in Kyoto’s Nakakyo district.

The deep, narrow space has good sightlines, but this can be dangerous, too: a shop can look messy and the interior space simply uninteresting if visitors can see all its products in one glance.

Indulgi by Nendo

We decided to add shielding elements to create a space that could never be seen in its entirety, one in which different elements appear and disappear from view, changing customers’ experience of the shop as they move about it.

Indulgi by Nendo

Walls create an over-strong sense of pressure, and the space already contained a number of doors, so we added even more doors to it. We set the doors open and closed at different angles to control the degree of visibility, and the mix of ‘real’ and ‘fake’ doors gives the space a slight sense of surreality.

Indulgi by Nendo

We added functionality to the ‘fake’ doors, using them for hangers, shelving and mirrors, and furnished them with fixtures that spill out from inside in different colours and textures to create even more variation in the space.

Opening one door brings not only surprise but the desire to open the next, creating a space that evokes curiosity in all its visitors.

53-1 Takakura Higashi-hairu,
Nakagyo-ku Sanjo-Street,
Kyoto 604-8111