Eiko Ojala
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Product news: Dutch designer Pepe Heykoop has created a paper cover to turn any glass jar or bottle into a faceted vase, sold to help impoverished women in Mumbai make a living.
Each Paper Vase is handmade by the women of the Pardeshi community in Mumbai’s red light district. The workshop was founded by Pepe Heykoop and the Tiny Miracles Foundation, which was set up by his cousin. “The ultimate goal is to pull this 700-person community out of poverty by providing healthcare, education and jobs within eight years,” says Heykoop.
The vase is made of coated paper and comes in white or graduated green colour blocks. It’s transported in an envelope and can be rolled down to fit different sizes of bottle.
Heykoop is known for his philanthropic design work and previous projects with the Tiny Miracles Foundation include lamp shades made from a patchwork of lambskin and traditional water carriers covered in leather. See all our stories about design by Pepe Heykoop.
Other similar vases on Dezeen include one made from a thin curl of synthetic paper and another folded from a flat sheet of cardboard. See all our stories about vase designs and all our stories about paper designs.
Photos are by Annemarijne Bax
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Pepe Heykoop appeared first on Dezeen.
Focuss sur le directeur artistique et photographe allemand Sebastian Schramm qui a eu l’excellente idée de composer des clichés jouant sur toutes les formes du papier. Uns série de 10 images drôles et inspirantes « Playful Portraits » travaillant sur les matières et les couleurs. A découvrir dans la suite de l’article.
Stockholm 2013: talks at last week’s Stockholm Furniture Fair were held beneath an installation of 11,000 patterned paper sheets by Swedish architect Gert Wingårdh and Finnish artist Kustaa Saksi.
Wingårdh and Saksi staggered the pieces of paper up from the corners of the rectangular area to create a dome accessed by an arch on each side.
Saksi’s illustrations covered the underside of the A3 sheets so the patterns could only be appreciated from underneath. At each corner the paper was threaded onto lengths of string, which were hung closer together than the length of the sheets so each piece of paper buckled into a wave.
Towards the centre of the dome, multiple layers were printed with the same illustration to create a 3D visual effect when viewed from directly underneath. Around the periphery, columns of white sheets extended up to the ceiling to create translucent walls.
Inside, mirrored table tops balanced on a total of 700,000 sheets of A4 paper in rows facing a larger, higher table at one end for a panel to sit at.
Dezeen editor-in-chief Marcus Fairs discussed topics from a new book he contributed to at the space last week.
Several installations were unveiled during Stockholm Design Week including robotic arms that danced around glass objects, plus Nendo’s foamboard mountains and modular lamps – see all our coverage of the event here.
Photos are by Tord-Rikard Söderström.
Read on for more information:
Swedish architect Gert Wingårdh and Finnish illustrator Kustaa Saksi have joined creative forces to design the installation that will set the stage for talks on design and architecture at the fair. They have each started out from their own perspective while adhering to a shared vision.
“From the very beginning, the idea has been to create a spatiality for communication in which furniture and design have a presence in words and images, as well as a physical presence. To explain the concept behind an item of furniture, what you were thinking and how you arrived at the design, gives a deeper dimension to the object. This is something we’ve wanted to focus on more this year and so we’re giving furniture companies a chance to introduce themselves, their products and designers by communicating through a new program item we call Show ‘n Tell,” explains Sanna Gebeyehu, the producer of the project.
The design suggests a church interior, with rows of high tables in front of an ‘altar’ where panels hold sway. The table tops are made of a mirror laminate and balance on stacks of A4 paper sheets – 700,000 in total.
The entire dome-like structure consists of stacks of paper sheets that hang from the roof in a Venetian blind-like construction. The lowest sheet in each stack carries part of a gigantic illustration that forms the dome-shaped ceiling.
Preparations for construction have been going on for months and the actual raising of the dome is something of a never-ending task.
“Precision in all the preliminary work is crucial. 1,120 stacks consisting of a total of 11,000 A3 sheets in 44,000 points of attachment are being installed across an area of 200 sqm and are then gradually hoisted up,” reports Sanna Gebeyehu.
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by Gert Wingårdh and Kustaa Saksi appeared first on Dezeen.
If you were snoozing when we launched our guide on ways to woo your Valentine this year, time is unfortunately no longer on your side. Sure, you still can easily scoop up an edible arrangement or a set of sexy lingerie on your way home from work come this…
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Even in our digital age, there are still a handful of people, including architects & engineers, who use paper on the daily. The Duo paper storage solution aims to make transporting & storing sheets a direct, safe, & quick process opposed to the existing cylindrical tubes which often damage the paper during use. The design divides the inner hollow of the cylinder in two parts, utilizing the center with an additional cylinder for storing unused sheets while preserving drafts & documents in the outer cylinder.
Designer: Hrishikesh Kogje
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(A New Way to Store and Carry Paper was originally posted on Yanko Design)
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Focus sur le créatif Eric Standley, un artiste américain qui multiplie les projets autour de ce concept « Laser Cut Paper ». Avec ces séries d’œuvres de papier découpées au laser, ce dernier nous offre des images de compositions splendides. Le tout est à découvrir en images dans la suite de l’article.
Maison&Objet 2013: Italian designer Valentina Carretta made these hanging lamps for Italian brand Seletti with coarse paper like the kind used in egg boxes.
Valentina Carretta’s Egg of Columbus lamps come in three sizes and combine a shade made of moisture-resistant recycled paper with a ceramic lamp holder and a red fabric cord.
The lamp’s name refers to the story of how explorer Christopher Columbus challenged his detractors to make an egg stand on its tip. When they gave up, he did it himself by tapping the egg on a table to flatten its tip, demonstrating how a brilliant idea can seem easy once you know how it’s done.
Made for Italian design brand Seletti, the lamp was shown at Maison&Objet design fair in Paris last week, where we also reported on a family of terracotta pots with rubber lids and cutlery with slim handles like chopsticks – see all products from Maison&Objet 2013.
We previously published a lamp with a paper pulp shade that doubles as packaging for the product’s components.
Lots of products made of paper have featured on Dezeen, including a crumpled paper stage set for an opera and bowls made from shredded banknotes – see all designs made from paper.
Other lamps we’ve featured lately include architect Frank Gehry’s scaly fish lamps and a lamp made from two pieces of ceramic joined by a silicone band – see all lamps on Dezeen.
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for Seletti appeared first on Dezeen.
L’artiste mexicain Carlos Amorales nous dévoile cette superbe installation appelée Black Cloud. Aidé d’une équipe, l’artiste a posé plus de 30 000 papillons de papier noir. Une création très originale proposée récemment dans une ancienne église baroque en Espagne, à découvrir dans la suite de l’article.