WaterDog

An automated fountain for parched pets
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Jonathan Kirschner readily admits that the idea for the initial prototype of WaterDog was born mostly out of laziness. Romeo, Kirschner’s Great Dane, would often beg his owner for a drink during their daily walks. While he was happy to oblige and open a few spigots, Kirschner couldn’t help but feel there was an easier way. A mechanical engineer, Kirschner rigged an automatic fountain that connected with his outdoor spigot, and the WaterDog was born.

The refined design has come a long way from Kirschner’s first attempt, adding features like adjustable height, chew-resistant materials and a low battery warning light. As a dog approaches, the water begins to flow, curtailing its own current as soon as the pet steps away. The design allows users to split the stream for a hose attachment and erect a remote station through an extended hose. Best of all, because the water is running from a fresh water source, it’s tastier than bowl water, which can grow stale under the elements.

WaterDog is available from their online shop for $70.


A Dog Your Cat Will Love

Cats can finally get claws in their natural enemy without any repercussions! Lumpi is a clever scratching post design cast in polyester resin wrapped with tough sisal cord, protecting your furniture and keeping other belongings safe from scratch marks. Paws crossed that kitty doesn’t confuse Lumpi with Bruiser!

Designer: Erik Stehmann


Yanko Design
Timeless Designs – Explore wonderful concepts from around the world!
Yanko Design Store – We are about more than just concepts. See what’s hot at the YD Store!
(A Dog Your Cat Will Love was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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  2. Love it or Hate it? You tell us!
  3. Big Open Love Bus

Poo Disposal Through a Curve

When the local government of Hungary was looking for a motivational campaign to get dog owners to dispose off the dog poo from the streets, little did they know that the prize-winning entry Curve would garner so much support and enthusiasm. The trashcan designed by Kőrös Benedek – Ben Koros has a fun and intriguing way of dumping the waste. Read on to know more.

Ben explains, “The biggest problem with dog waste disposal cans is, that they fill up on domestic rubbish way before time – thus even responsible dog owners can’t dispose their pet’s waste. I’ve tried to design a can, which doesn’t allow bottles, bags full of trash, empty boxes etc. to be dropped inside. The user must pick up the poo, place it in a plastic bag (biologically degradable plastic bags included on the Curve), and lead it through a curvy gap on the top, to be able to dump it.”

Absolutely brilliant!

Designer: Kőrös Benedek – Ben Koros


Yanko Design
Timeless Designs – Explore wonderful concepts from around the world!
Yanko Design Store – We are about more than just concepts. See what’s hot at the YD Store!
(Poo Disposal Through a Curve was originally posted on Yanko Design)

Related posts:

  1. Gum Disposal Done Right
  2. Flexible Disposal!
  3. Skateboard On A Curve

Cool pets

Gatefeeder

The first patented controlled-feeding solution for cats

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Besides their quiet companionship, cats offer a relatively low level of demand as a pet. Owners and their feline friends will enjoy the freedom of cat lover Philip Eu’s cleverly named invention, the Gatefeeder. The minimally designed controlled-access home feeding system works with a collar-mounted Smart ID tag to limit proper servings to the proper pet.

The Gatefeeder helps organize meals in multiple-cat homes, especially when one of the crew may need medication. Those who live on open farms can rely on the set-up to protect their cat’s food from pesky intruders, while outdoor cats wearing their tags can rest safe knowing strays won’t steal their rations.

Eu’s odyssey to create the Gatefeeder began when his cat, Mikey, got cancer. A new dietary regimen prevented Mikey from sharing with his housemate, Sparky. We talked to Eu to learn the story behind the decade-long labor of love to create the controlled-feeding system.

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Tell us the story behind your decision to invent a feeding system for your two cats.

Plato is credited as having said, “Necessity is the Mother of Invention”. In 1999 I had a day job with long and irregular working hours, and two cherished cats, Mikey and Sparky. Then came the news, that Mikey had life threatening health issues, and I got strict Veterinarian instructions to only feed him a special medicated diet for the rest of his life. His special diet could not be shared with his brother Sparky, so I could no longer leave food out if I was going to be working late, and most nights I had to work late. After a few months of twice daily supervised meals, and with the help of friends and family for the night time feeding, I thought that there had to be a better way! I sketched out some ideas, and I now knew what our babies at home needed; now I just needed to figure out how to make the thing work. Plato was right!

What were some of the challenges that you faced in the 10-year process?

Like many inventors, this started as a weekend project for me, but each time I thought I had created the perfect solution, my cats showed me how smart they were, and sent me back to the proverbial drawing board.

I actually got stuck for over one year because the technology available didn’t allow me to make the machine I wanted. I had to wait until RFID technology became widely available and secondly, was reasonably priced before I could make the feeder I had envisioned in my mind. And still we had to overcome some very tough technical hurdles which we succeeded at because we didn’t know experts thought it was not possible.

What did you learn from the experience?

The amount of detail and minutia required is staggering and overwhelming. I never considered that one day I would need to write a manual detailing the millimeters tolerance for how two pieces of plastic fit together or how many scratches are allowed and how to define a scratch; Mind boggling.

What are some of the special features you held out for to make sure they were incorporated into the final product?

There are points designed in that allow users to drill bolts into the ground for situations (placement outside) where the feeder needs to be securely anchored, and the unit can allow up to five animals to use the feeder at the same time to allow users like animal shelters who might need such an option. We use more expensive stainless steel food bowls instead of various plastics because we believe they are the healthiest and most durable material for the cats, and a more expensive polycarbonate plastic for the clear parts because they are more resistant to scratching and clouding. The viewing window is not placed directly over the food bowl but angled so that an average person can stand in front of the feeder and see the condition of the dish without the need to bend over.

The Gatefeeder controlled feeding system is now available directly online from the inventor, designer and founder for $250.


Bocce’s Bakery

Hand cut, organic, human-grade dog treats baked in NYC’s West Village

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Keeping Cool Hunting mascots Otis and Logan well rewarded in recent weeks has been NYC’s very own Bocce’s Bakery. Driven by wellness and sustainability, the small batch dog treatery uses only “human-grade” ingredients—antibiotic-free beef, hormone-free white meat chicken, wheat free flour—for their all-natural dog biscuits. What started as a humble project for a beloved pet has evolved into a professional business, although the hands on, oven baked cooking process has yet to change.

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Otis and Logan devour the treats in seconds, delightfully licking the hard wood floors for every last savory taste. Hit flavors included chicken cordon bleu, beef bourguinon, fish and chips and PB’n’J, which is made with a short and simple list of just three organic ingredients—oat flour, blueberries, peanut butter. These few items, along with all others used by Bocce’s Bakery are locally sourced from upstate NY and the tri-state area whenever seasonably possible.

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Bocce’s Bakery biscuits are offered in seven distinct flavors, each with heaps of healthy ingredients your four-legged friends will love. Available through Bocce’s Bakery online and a long list of loyal stockists for $9.50 a bag.

photos by Josh Rubin


Eco-Me

All-natural cleanliness with 100% chemical-free products for home and pets
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Nearly every brand in the cleaning business offers an “eco-friendly” alternative to the harsh chemicals found in conventional disinfectants, but few can make this their main premise and even fewer do it with the discerning standards found at Eco-Me. Robin Kay Levine and Jennifer Mihajlov—childhood friends and the duo behind the line—pack each effective cleaning product with nothing more than food-grade ingredients and essential oils.

The contents are so simple, you could actually make many of the solutions at home. Eco-Me not only understands this, but began by selling DIY kits containing vinegar, baking soda and olive oil. When numerous customers asked for a ready-made product, the Pasadena, CA-based company began packaging the formulas in PET-1 plastic, and soon in PCR (post-consumer recycled) bottles. Both women are as personally passionate about decreasing the amount of toxins polluting the air as they are professionally invested in the business. Sitting on the board of the Natural Products Association, they proudly push for stronger regulations that would require brands like Seventh Generation, Mrs. Meyers and Method to become 100% chemical-free.

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Eco-Me’s range of preservative-free products spans toilet-bowl cleaners to dish soap, as well as a line of pet products. We’ve tried out several—including the concentrated laundry soap ($13), foaming hand soap ($5) and all-purpose spray ($6)—and found that they really do stand up to the classic cleaning products found under most sinks. For the denim-obsessed, the detergent cleans without fading jeans, much like a Woolite powder.

The EPA confirms that impurities in the air indoors can be more harmful on your health than those occurring outside, so Eco-Me cleaners are an easy way to eliminate some common pollutants in the home. The full family of products sells online and at most Whole Foods or health stores.


And we do dogs too!

Mollymutt2

I can't decide if this is kind of an odd post for Bloesem, but I am an animal lover. I have plans to spend my retirement opening up a sanctuary for abused bulldog's, my husband isn't aware of these plans so let's just keep it between us.

Bulldogs

And though I love all animals, I am one bulldog obsessed lady and if you own a bulldog – you know it's like having a hippo sleep in your house. I am also a "neat freak" which is basically the opposite term for bulldog, so I have spent many years cringing at the ugly messy dog bed sitting in the corner of the rooms I have worked so hard to make nice.                                                       Read More >>>

I was going through a lot of dog bed's until I found Molly Mutt and my dog bed war made peace with her lovely and eco-friendly approach to dog beds…and for cat owner's, cat beds

Mollymutt

..Molly Mutt..

Carli Davidson Photography

Artful portraits capturing the personality of man’s best friend and other animals

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National Geographic-style exotic animals poised in their natural habitat these are not. Carli Davidson aims her lens at domesticated pets and zoo animals, capturing personalities rather than wild, untamed animal behavior. Based in Portland, Oregon, she’s internationally recognized for her work as a fine art pet photographer with her often humorous and consistently honest portraits.

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Davidson’s portfolio is every animal-lover’s dream with both editorial and studio series ranging from the colorful “Dogs and Cats” collection to charming photos from the “Oregon Zoo.” These include a triumphant pic of Conrad the polar bear licking a cream cheese cake off a window on his 25th birthday and a recently-hatched tiny turtle posed on top of a hundred dollar bill for scale.

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Another “aw”-inducing series, the “Handicapped Pet project” proves with levity that “your pet is beautiful no matter how many limbs it has”—like Ramen Noodle, an adorable pup who lost both his arms in two separate accidents. In his case, Davidson demonstrates Ramen Noodle’s resilience with images of him standing tall on his remaining hind legs, as well as carefree action shots of him running around in his wheelchair. (Also on Cool Hunting: I Heart Tripods)

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Apart from capturing humorous quirks in the off-moments when pets’ eyes go cross or tongues flop lazily from snouts, Davidson depicts their owners in “People & Pets.” Through artful posing, Davidson’s photographs—like a yawning puppy cupped in gentle, tattooed hands and a white-feathered parrot perched so it’s profile blends with its owner’s bright blue eyes —reflect the character of both individuals, as well as the bond between them.

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While Davidson’s work is generally lighthearted, she shows the dark side of animal life too. Her graphic series, “Bison Butchering,” follows the process of meat trading from pasture to slaughterhouse. She also sheds light on veterinary work with her visual photos of “Animal Surgery.” This includes the philanthropic work performed by the Oregon Zoo veterinarians who invite blind students for a hands-on experience of their operating rooms.

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Visit Davidson’s website to peruse her various photographic studies—including the irresistible series “Shake,” which features stills of various wide-eyed pooches shaking it out with flappy cheeks, windblown tufts of fur and airborne wads of drool. Contact her directly to snag exclusive prints.

via Zeutch.

All photography by Carli Davidson


The Cat House by Key Operation

The Cat House by KOP

This Tokyo house by Japanese architects Key Operation has been designed around the movements of the client’s pet cat, writes Yuki Sumner.

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Stepping-stone shelves allow a cat to move between rooms in The Cat House through high level openings, without using the landing and stairs.

The Cat House by KOP

With integrated book shelves, the landing doubles up as a library and study.

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Above photograph is by Keizo Shibasaki.

More Japanese houses on Dezeen »

The Cat House by KOP

Photography is by Key Operation, apart from where otherwise stated.

The Cat House by Key Operation

The following is from the architects:


Neko no Ie (The Cat House)

A century ago, the famous Japanese novelist Sosuke Natsume wrote a novel called “I Am a Cat (Wagahai Wa Neko De Aru).” It is written from the point of view of a cat.

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The cat, who remains nameless during the novel’s first chapter, lives in a house with a teacher and his family. He is angry that he is not regarded as an equal member of the family in this household. “I will never catch mice,” the cat announces haughtily, not wishing to make himself useful.

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What if, however, there was a house, which has been designed specifically with a cat in mind? What would it look like? The Japanese architect Akira Koyama of Key Operation Inc. has recently designed a house for a young family, which included a pet cat, in the densely populated Taishido district, west of Tokyo. Undoubtedly, this house would have made Natsume’s cat green with envy.

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Neko no Ie (The Cat House) stands on a typically compact, rectilinear site (7 meters wide, 12 meters deep) along a narrow residential street, just big enough for a single car to pass through.

The Cat House by KOP

Above photograph is by Keizo Shibasaki.

Although the plot is small, the client (including the cat) did not specify the need for an outdoor garden space, and so the architect decided to set the house back by 3 meters from the street, thereby creating a void, synonymous in Japan with a sense of luxury.

The Cat House by KOP

The upper section of the house is further set back from the ground level, generating a balcony. It is generally perceived that the Japanese architects have a greater freedom of expression than the Western counterparts but we forget that there are a number of restrictions that the Japanese architects face when designing buildings in Japan, and this is no exception.

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There is a law, for example, restricting the owning of a car to those who can ensure its parking space. Neko no Ie, like many houses on the street, accommodates a garage within the house.

The Cat House by KOP

Above photograph is by Keizo Shibasaki.

The architect faced yet another restriction imposed in this area. It forbade the use of bright colours on exterior facades so that the ‘scenery’ of the area is conserved. Neko no Ie’s grey stucco façade complies with this regulation.

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Undeterred, however, Koyama subtly managed to subvert both of these restrictions by painting the inside of the garage bright pink, therefore making a feature out of what is usually a dark and dingy space and injecting much-needed playfulness in this otherwise boring grey neighbourhood.

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The house’s asymmetrical roofline maximizes both its playfulness as well as its volume. The architect has created within a complex interior space consisting of rooms of varying sizes, which are stack on top of each other over three floors.

The Cat House by KOP

One would not be able to observe such a structure from outside of the house, but it reflects the layout of the area, which has a mixture of detached houses, both large and small.

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The biggest room in the house is the dining/living room, stretched horizontally to fit the whole width of the house. By also extending the room vertically, the architect has opened up this room to the rest of the house.

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What look like shelves jutting out of one wall of this room are actually steppingstones for the pet cat to enter into the adjacent rooms through the openings placed higher up on the wall.

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This arrangement leaves the ample staircase and landings, which double up as a library, undisturbed from the burst of activities of the feline member of the family, while the rest of the family uses them as a place of quietude.

The Cat House by KOP

Moreover, just as the garage became the visual focal point for the exterior of the house, the staircase, painted also brightly pink, signals a gathering of all the separate interior sections of Neko no Ie.

The Cat House by KOP

Above photograph is by Keizo Shibasaki.

By varying the sizes of the rooms and painting them in different colours, the architect has emphasized their uniqueness and separateness.

The Cat House by KOP

Above photograph is by Keizo Shibasaki.

At the same time, he has managed to link the rooms through small and large openings so that none of the rooms is completely isolated. Autonomy is respected but isolation is discouraged.

The Cat House by KOP

For instance, a large opening in the wall of the dining/living room, which looks into the kitchen, allows the person who is cooking to connect with the person who is being served.

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In the meantime, the cat can slip into the study located above the kitchen through yet another, this time smaller, opening.

The Cat House by KOP

The rooms’ co-dependence is thus implicitly emphasized.

The Cat House by KOP

Neko no Ie is a symbolic celebration of the emergence of the modern Japanese family, more democratic than the traditional one preceding it, allowing each member to flourish independently while nurturing a supportive environment.

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Ironically, a pet cat was an integral part of it.

Text by Yuki Sumner, 2011


See also:

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Yachiyo
by Atelier Tekuto
House by Yoshio Oono
Architect & Associates
House in Fukuyama
by Suppose Design Office