Tiny World Terrariums

Create your own miniature world full of beautiful flora and fake fauna with this step-by-step guide

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From their Victorian-era genesis to waves of popularity in the ’70s and in recent years, terrariums have taken on a variety of mossy forms. Leading their most recent charge was the uniquely charming, Brooklyn-based Twig Terrariums, whose uncanny ability to build miniature worlds complete with perfectly manicured landscapes and quirky characters breathed new life into the household standby. Twig creators Michelle Inciarrano and Katy Maslow have recently released Tiny World Terrariums, sharing step-by-step instructions on creating your own verdant paradise.

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With revealing photography of little dioramic worlds depicting every situation imaginable—from graffiti writers in Manhattan to backpacking adventures in the desert—the DIY manual teaches the average crafter how to transform their own glass jar from a simple dish to an enchanting landscape. The book is filled with dictionary-like descriptions and even suggestions of proper tools for harvesting moss from the wild, making this little book an ideal guide for the novice “terrarer”.

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Tiny World Terrariums is now available from Amazon for about $25. The book may also be purchased directly from Twig Terrariums, which also has more information, terrarium inspiration and a list of suggested NYC-based retailers for terrarium essentials.


Chair Farm by Werner Aisslingerat Ventura Lambrate

Chair Farm by Werner Aisslinger at Ventura Lambrate

Milan 2012: designer Werner Aisslinger of Berlin and Singapore will present a chair growing inside a greenhouse at Ventura Lambrate in Milan this week.

Chair Farm by Werner Aisslinger at Ventura Lambrate

Shown as part of an exhibition of design from Berlin called Instant Stories, the Chair Farm project envisages furniture that’s grown rather than produced and harvested locally rather than exported globally.

Chair Farm by Werner Aisslinger at Ventura Lambrate

The plant is trained inside a metal mould then released once it reaches maturity.

Chair Farm by Werner Aisslinger at Ventura Lambrate

In October we published a story about a building grown from cherry trees that won’t be completed for 100 yearstake a look here.

Chair Farm by Werner Aisslinger at Ventura Lambrate

The Ventura Lambrate design district is open from 17 to 22 April. Download the free map and guide here and see all our stories about Ventura Lambrate 2012 here.

Chair Farm by Werner Aisslinger at Ventura Lambrate

See all our stories about Werner Aisslinger here, including his Iconograph watch for Lorenz at Dezeen Watch Store.

Chair Farm by Werner Aisslinger at Ventura Lambrate

Photographs are by Nicolo Lanfranchi.

Here’s some more information from Aisslinger:


“Plant yourself a chair …”

Werner Aisslinger presents his plantation chair at the Milan Furniture Fair

Once again in April, the most recognised fair of the furniture industry opens its gates for design aficionados from all over the world. At the Milan Furniture Fair, visitors will witness a small sensation at “Instant Stories”, the special exhibition from Berlin at Lambrate: Amidst the platforms showing the latest in furniture design, a greenhouse is staged. Visitors are confronted with a gigantic box that gives the impression as if it has just fallen from heaven. This laboratory-like stage setup promises to be as spectacular as watching a dinosaur hatch from its egg: A chair is born from a steel corset! The only difference to the egg-comparison is the fact that the shell of the “chair farm” prototype is inside the chair’s structure instead of being outside.

Chair Farm by Werner Aisslinger at Ventura Lambrate

After the removal of the corset, a unique chair is revealed – truly singular, because nature cannot be programmed to deliver a certain result. The chair is no longer produced in the classical sense of the word. Instead, it grows of its own volition in a greenhouse or on a field. When it has reached maturity, the steel corset is opened and removed, revealing a naturally grown chair. The title of the project by this Berlin-based designer, who imagines huge “product plantations” in the future, reflects this utopian means of production: the “chair farm”.

Chair Farm by Werner Aisslinger at Ventura Lambrate

Urban Gardening

Strawberries in winter, pumpkins in spring – everything is possible. But since the early 80s, or since discounters have moved into urban environments instead of staying out of towns, we have been witnessing a contradictory movement: a wish to return to a more primary and genuine way of living. Global markets with their unpredictable mechanisms increasingly intimidate consumers. More and more people are discovering the advantages of buying and consuming regionally grown seasonal products – advantages such as eating healthier, saving resources and being environmentally friendly. People know and care about their CO2 footprint. They want to make their own decisions about which resources they tap to eat, live, travel, etc. This new and different state of mind centers on leaving the role of a passive consumer and becoming an active, mindful individual. Home-grown food is harvested and stored. A new activism is blossoming. At the same time, a re-orientation towards collective living and working spaces is taking place. A good example for this is urban gardening, where residents open and share their garden space instead of having small individual allotments. In Berlin and other cities, project teams have formed which trade different kinds of services – car sharing, sofa surfing and urban gardening are no longer mere fashion statements.

Chair Farm by Werner Aisslinger at Ventura Lambrate

Green Design

People are discovering that life in all its multitude is much too beautiful to wrap it up in sanitized and ready-to-eat packages according to EU and DIN regulations. A cheer to the unconventional and surprising things in life!

This structural change has also influenced the world of product design. Many designers have anticipated the change towards green design or eco-pluralistic design and have recognized it as a chance – one of the most prominent ones being Werner Aisslinger from Berlin. He has been experimenting with new materials and sustainable production methods for years.

Chair Farm by Werner Aisslingers at Ventura Lambrate

Design and Technology

Aisslinger’s first technological experiment with polyurethane foam used in the automotive industry was serialized in 1996 by Cappellini and was added to the permanent collection at the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York in 1998. This was the genesis of the “Juli chair”, an integral part in the world of modern design.

His first synthetic gel-furniture “soft cell” caused a sensation at the Salone del Mobile at the turn of the century. The “soft cell” lounge chairs found an enthusiastic audience with their mixture of medical technology, two-plane TechnoGel, and slightly transparent honey-combed upholstery in space-ship optics.

In the following years, Aisslinger turns to different design worlds: He designs the ideal work space for vitra, builds hotels which live up to their name, and with “loftcube” he creates the true 21st century dacha.

In 2011, Aisslinger achieves another major coup in regard to chair design: The “Hemp chair” is made of natural fibers that are turned into a high-tech composite by using an environmentally friendly water-based binder (Acrodur). The chair is hardened by strong heat and mechanical pressure without producing hazardous or toxic substances. The Hemp chair is lightweight and has a cardboard texture – masking its extreme resilience and durability. This chair received a great deal of attention at the Furniture Fair in Milan last year, clearly standing out with its curved, organic shape and its subtle color among all other designs in the colorful sea of novelties.

Chair Farm by Werner Aisslinger at Ventura Lambrate

Chair Farm Project

The development from “Hemp chair” to “chair farm” was merely a logical consequence in Aisslinger’s work. It is a further development in his three-component master-plan: sustainable production, new materials, and an outstanding simplicity in design.

One of Aisslinger’s main concerns is the cutting edge between aesthetics and everyday culture. He commutes between Berlin and Singapore, where he maintains a second studio. From a bird’s eye perspective, structural connections often seem clearer than on the ground: In an airplane with a view of the Indian Ocean, Aisslinger wondered if food and everyday products will still be decentrally produced and shipped around the globe in the future.

As a matter of fact, tendencies such as “urban farming” and “integrated farming” are not merely the eco-utopian dreams of urban Bohemianism. They are at this moment tested and tried on the rooftops of Paris or Berlin and surpass the output and efficiency of industrial agriculture by a factor of 15. So Aisslinger is convinced that food production in urban spaces – giving everyone the possibility of becoming a passionate producer of agricultural products – will be the future in regard to quality and sustainability. Therefore, he thought about a way to invert production in furniture design back from globalized serial manufacturing to resource-conserving local production. And he came up with the answer: Chair farm is as simple as it is radical. Aisslinger states his intention as wanting to offer design-users a chair that is made with as little resources and as reduced an amount of waste as possible.

Project: Chair Farm
Year: 2012
Designer: Werner Aisslinger
Exhibition: “Instant Stories”, Milano-Lambrate
Location: Ventura Lambrate: “Overlite,” Via Privata Oslavia 8, 20143 Milano
Press Preview: Monday April 16, 15:00 – 20:00
Opening Hours: Tuesday April 17 – Sunday April 22, 10:00 – 20:00
Opening Night: Wednesday April 18, 19:00 – 23:00

Cool Hunting Video Presents: California Carnivores

Follow our journey through a bizarre world of hungry plants at North America’s largest carnivorous plant nursery

In our latest video we trekked out into the beautiful farmland outside Sebastopol, California to visit California Carnivores, North America’s largest carnivorous plant nursery. We spoke with founder Peter D’Amato about his personal history with these hungry plants, their cultural significance and what it takes to raise up fantastical plants from seed. Taking in the active plant life, we watched Venus Flytraps chowing down and a got a peak inside the stomach of an American Pitcher Plant.


Laputa by Outofstock

Laputa by Outofstock

Singapore and Barcelona designers Outofstock presented floating islands made of crumpled copper and moss during the inaugural International Furniture Fair Singapore this month.

Laputa by Outofstock

Inspired by the fictional floating island of Laputa featured in Gulliver’s Travels by Jonathan Swift, the installation for their own showcase called The Workshop Gallery hung inside a Tyvek tent on a city-centre street.

Laputa by Outofstock

The moss was harvested from unnoticed nooks and crannies in the city like tree trunks and drains.”The intention was to let visitors view the moss up close, appreciating the nature that thrives unseen around us,” says Gabriel Tan from Outofstock.

Laputa by Outofstock

See more work by Outofstock on Dezeen here.

Laputa by Outofstock

Photographs are by Ng Xin Nie.

Laputa by Outofstock

Here are some more details from Outofstock:


A meditative space, an introspective journey. Imaginary landscapes we create to escape the banality of city life.

Laputa by Outofstock

The installation is inspired by Laputa, from Gulliver’s travels, a fictional flying island created by a small civilization of educated mathematicians, astronomers and musicians. Set in the heart of the city, Laputa is a juxtaposition of its context – the urban city. We live in a society full of products and information, flawed value systems, and endless material pursuits, noise and visual clutter. Perhaps, it is only in such a fictional landscape that we can finally make sense of our increasingly surreal realities.

Laputa by Outofstock

Every piece of the hanging installation was unique in its formation and the way it was crinkled, the more facets and ‘imperfections’ appeared, the more they bore the uncanny resemblance to miniature hills and valleys. The unfinished copper was allowed to weather with the natural elements and produce a changing patina, in this way both copper and moss were continually growing alongside each other.

Laputa by Outofstock

The Workshop Gallery is founded by Outofstock as a space dedicated to their passion for handcrafted objects.

Laputa by Outofstock

Bruno Munari once said, ”If what we use every day is made with art, and not thrown together by chance or caprice, then we shall have nothing to hide.” The Workshop Gallery too seeks to bring us objects that rekindle our long-lost contact with the art of making in our daily lives.

Laputa by Outofstock

On-iku by Earthscape

On-iku by Earthscape

Landscape designers Earthscape have opened up their studio in Beppu, Japan, to present their experiments with growing native plants in water from local hot springs.

On-iku by Earthscape

Earthscape hope the On-iku experiment will confirm their suspicions that water from the hot springs has some sort of power that helps plants and animals grow stronger.

On-iku by Earthscape

Their studio in an apartment block remains open to the public until 4 November.

On-iku by Earthscape

See all our stories about plants here.

On-iku by Earthscape Open Lab

All photographs are by Yusuke Komatsu/Earthscape.

On-iku by Earthscape

Here are some more details from Earthscape Open Lab:


EXHIBITION
Earthscape Open Lab
“On-iku”

On-iku by Earthscape Open Lab

Humanity, and the environment that surrounds it, face many contradictions, and the foundation that supports these things has become unstable. When thinking about the future of this planet, we need a deep understanding of the characteristics of both our natural environment and our communities. Earthscape has rented an old wooden apartment in Beppu since 2010, and has used this Earthscape Lab to study the relationship between people and the environment, through research on the vegetation, history, and origin of the 2.7 x 3.6 m space itself. Deepening our understanding of the environment around us provides a departure for addressing environmental problems of a global scale. Since when has Beppu had this landscape? Learning the answers to the secrets hidden here might help us discover a new way of relating to the natural world.

On-iku by Earthscape

At Earthscape Lab, we conduct research that will (possibly) help to improve the human imagination, through experiments on the environmental compatibility of plants and animals, researching of artifacts, and geological surveys. During Beppu Art Month, we make special arrangements to lift the veil and open Earthscape’s research and development workplace to the general public, as the Earthscape Open Lab.

On-iku by Earthscape

“On-iku” (‘Hot Spring Growing’)

Beppu has the largest number of onsen (hot springs) in Japan. People who live in the area and use onsen everyday claim that, “the water itself makes all the difference.” We use the largest collection of onsen water in Japan to grow plants native to Beppu. An environmental compatibility experiment conducted by growing plants collected from different parts of Beppu City in the onsen water occurring naturally in the region.

On-iku by Earthscape

Eiki Danzuka from Earthscape:

“Our original inspiration for the ‘on-iku’ project came relatively intuitively. I had always thought that the plants in Beppu seemed strong somehow. And I had a feeling it was either the power from Beppu’s geological treasure, the onsen, or the power from some unique ingredient found in the onsen water. I thought that by researching living creatures and people here, we could also research the ‘future beyond.’ This is how we arrived at this installation.

On-iku by Earthscape

I have a hunch that the research and experiments we’re doing will help us perceive information around us that is often easy to overlook. Who knows? A clue to help us understand the origin of our lives and the future of the world could be hidden in the stones we kick around on the street, or in the weeds on the roadside.

On-iku by Earthscape

We try to examine history and ecology in a manner similar to the quadrat method in a room in the Kiyoshima Apartments, specifically a small area 2.7 x 3.6 m separated from the city of Beppu. Studying the various aspects of the history of the city, ‘Beppu,’ that we live in, might provide us with glimpse of the future, or show us how we can forge better relationships between people, nature, and the city going forward.

On-iku by Earthscape

I feel that the only way to know the future is to first know the past, and then to know the present. It’s called kougengaku (‘the study of modern social phenomena’) in Japanese. I believe that carrying on our research in a small room in the Kiyoshima Apartments will lead us to answers about Beppu, Oita, and the world. This is why I believe in our continued research.”

On-iku by Earthscape

Earthscape’s concept in the Kiyoshima Apartments “Earthscape Lab” is to unravel the land and research the relationship between people, nature, and the city in a 2.7 x 3.6 m space. In Beppu Art Month in 2010, Earthscape conducted a project entitled “Dissecting Beppu,” where it performed an excavation survey to unravel the history and origin of the 2.7 x 3.6 m space, and presented its results as an installation. In Beppu Art Month 2011, it will present the actual process of its vegetation survey as an exhibit.

On-iku by Earthscape

Installation Information:

Beppu Art Month 2011Exhibition Program Earthscape Open Lab “On-iku”
1 November – 4 December, 2011 at Earthscape Lab/Kiyoshima Apartment#1 2-27 Suehirochou Beppu city, Oita, Japan

On-iku by Earthscape

About Earthscape

Landscape design studio founded by Eiki Danzuka. Considering the devices that create connections between humans and nature as design, Earthscape enact design works that become a platform for experience.

On-iku by Earthscape

“Earthscape” refers to the blue, round shape of the earth as seen from outer space. With landscape design as their primary axis, Earthscape is involved in a wide array of activities, including the MHCP(www.mhcp.jp), that seek to contribute to society through design. Their major works are landscapes of the huge complex, public facilities and residential.

Flowerbed Hotel by MVRDV

Flowerbed Hotel by MVRDV

Architects MVRDV have unveiled proposals for a giant greenhouse on the outskirts of Amsterdam with a flower-covered hotel inside.

Flowerbed Hotel by MVRDV

The Flowerbed Hotel will be located beside a theme park devoted to flowers in the town of Aalsmeer.

Flowerbed Hotel by MVRDV

The building comprise several stacked volumes housing 280 hotel rooms, a fitness suite and a business conference centre.

Flowerbed Hotel by MVRDV

Flowerbeds will fill the hotel lobby to create a large indoor garden, while more plants will grow over walls behind the glass.

Flowerbed Hotel by MVRDV

Sun collectors, windmills and underground thermal stores will provide energy and heating for the building.

Some other recent proposals from MVRDV include a museum shaped like balloons and offices with letters of the alphabet cut out of the facadesee more projects by MVRDV here.

Here’s a little more text from MVRDV:


MVRDV design Flowerbed Hotel, Aalsmeer, Netherlands

Project developer Kloos2 presents today the MVRDV design of the Flowerbed Hotel in Aalsmeer, Netherlands. The 19.500m2 Hotel and conference centre devoted entirely to flowers will be located next to the future Bloomin’ Holland theme park and business centre. The Hotel with 280 rooms will include 2.100m2 flowerbeds and host tourists and business travellers.

Flowerbed Hotel Aalsmeer: a series of flower crates stacked inside a green house

Flowerbed Hotel will be located next to the main entrance of the future Bloomin’ Holland theme park and business centre in Aalsmeer. The building is composed of a series of stacked volumes inside a greenhouse. The volumes hold the program of 280 rooms with a floral theme, 1.600m2 conference centre, 550m2 fitness centre and spa, 2.100m2 flower beds, 1.100m2 services and 140 parking spaces. The stacking of volumes underneath the greenhouse shell results in a diverse and spacious lobby with a public flower garden.

Inside the lobby 2100m2 of flowerbeds will be realised

The lobby is divided into three zones: a public zone for day visitors, a more private zone for hotel guests and a mixed zone. All areas are connected through a semi-public route. The hotel aims for business travellers as well as tourists and offers services from conference centre to souvenir shops and a spa and fitness centre.

Kloos2 presented the design to the director of the regional development corporation Green Park Aalsmeer, Mr. Gregor Heemskerk, who said “The Flowerbed Hotel is a special development which we support warmly. The hotel is in line with the ambitions of Bloomin’ Holland and will give a valuable impulse to the entire regional development. We are extremely happy with the result.”

Flowerbed Hotel, main entrance

The building will feature sun collectors, windmills and underground warm and cool storage resulting in an excellent energy performance despite the glass hood. MVRDV is currently realising the Spijkenisse Public Library with a similar energy concept. Kloos2 will use the design to find investors and tenants.

Biome by Samuel Wilkinson

Biome by Samuel Wilkinson

Product designer Samuel Wilkinson has created a miniature garden that works like a living Tamagotchi.

Biome by Samuel Wilkinson

An application on a smartphone or iPad remotely controls the water, climate and nutrients reaching the flowers inside the flora terrarium.

Biome by Samuel Wilkinson

Full spectrum LED lights replicate daylight inside the dome, which can be planted with different arrangements.

Biome by Samuel Wilkinson

Biome is a response to the speed of life in the digital age and encourages smartphone users to take time out to care for their plants.

Biome by Samuel Wilkinson

Samuel Wilkinson previously collaborated with Hulger on the design of the award-winning Plumen 001 light bulb (see our stories and videos here), which will be on sale at the Dezeen Temporium this Christmas.

Biome by Samuel Wilkinson

Here’s some more information from the designer:


London based designer Samuel Wilkinson has designed a flora terrarium that links to your Ipad.

Biome is a flora terrarium that’s works a little like a live tamagotchi – with a smartphone or Ipad as its key to controlling its climate, water level and nutrients. The idea promotes ‘digital downtime’ by finding an alternative use for smartphones and encouraging their owners to consider a slower life. The control and nurturing of a real mini eco-system takes patience and care, contrasting with the immediacy of messaging or tweeting that is so characteristic of the smartphone generation. This smart garden has low energy lighting that can replicate sunlight and contains sensors that link back to the device when connected. It is designed to incorporate different types of environment – tropical, desert, even herb garden – and can be easily controlled by even the least green-fingered of users.

The design was developed for an exhibition titled ‘Slow Tech – Designs for Digital Downtime’ at trend agency Protein’s exhibition space last month. The exhibition was curated by Henrietta Thompson (editor-at-large at Wallpaper*)

Samuel Wilkinson Design Studio:

Samuel Wilkinson set up his industrial studio at the end of 2007 and a year later, in 2008 Wilkinson completed his largest work, L’arbre de Flonville in Lausanne, Switzerland. The work consists of a contemporary town square featuring a 16m sculptural metal tree surrounded by sculpted racine benches. Samuel’s recent design of the Plumen 001 light bulb (collaboration with Hulger) and the Handblown glass lamps ‘Vessel Series’ for DecodeLondon have won international acclaim. Plumen collected the grand prize from the Design Museum of ‘2011 Design of the Year’ in the prestigious Brit Insurance International Design Awards and  Vessel was nominated for Best British Design. Samuel Wilkinson’s commitment and enthusiasm to designing interesting objects is apparent in his work, always looking to add a fresh dynamic approach in either form or function.


See also:

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Brit Insurance Design of the Year winners 2011Vessel Series 01-03 by Samuel Wilkinson
L’arbre de Flonville by Oloom & Samuel Wilkinson

Wilder Quarterly

A new print publication takes on nature with fresh eyes

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As the name implies, Wilder Quarterly examines the natural world with unconventional eyes. The newly launched print magazine is the brainchild of Celestine Maddy, a finicky 33-year-old who took up gardening four years ago when she moved into a ground-floor apartment in Brooklyn that came with an overgrown backyard. When the advertising strategist turned to the handful of publications focused on horticulture, she found them all to be too in-depth for a novice or too boring to hold anyone’s interest. Wilder Quarterly is the upshot of these frustrations—the first issue presents a 164-page spread art directed by Wieden + Kennedy’s Monica Nelson.

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While there is plenty of advice on growing, the quarterly is more concerned with the culture surrounding gardening—filmmaker Jonathan Caouette reveals his secret urban oasis, mycologist Paul Stamets discusses plant intelligence in the modern world, fermentation buffs stress pickling in autumn and seed bombing is taken back to its roots in 1970s NYC. Wilder editor Kate Sennert sheds light on urban farming with an investigative article on the socio-economic implications of community gardens in New Orleans instead of the typical story on farm-to-table freshness.

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Comparing her first successful batch of strawberries to the rush of nailing an ollie, Maddy’s fresh perspective on gardening gives hope to anyone lacking a green thumb. “I still kill stuff, part of the joy of gardening is to try and try again.” Like skateboarding, when gardening you’ve got to keep going no matter how many times you may fall.

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While Wilder is definitively a “young person’s growing and gardening magazine,” Maddy has made sure to include something for all experience levels, from novice to expert. With snippets of poetry, offbeat photos and mouthwatering recipes, the print-only publication is an enticing read for anyone who appreciates all that nature has to offer.

A sneak peek of the inaugural issue can be viewed online, where you can also purchase a copy of Wilder Quarterly for around $19. Buying a subscription ($60) helps support the Fresh Air Fund, a not-for-profit that provides free summer camp to children from disadvantaged communities. The first 100 CH readers to subscribe with the code WQ1011CH15 will receive a 15% discount.


Botanical Bakery

Unexpected herbs spice up a range of shortbread from the Napa Valley
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After numerous compliments and requests for her lavender shortbread, Sondra Wells decided to take her craft to the next level with Botanical Bakery. Soon, she’ll even add Thai chili and gluten-free varieties to the roster of flavors of unusual, buttery Garden Shortbread cookies filled with aromatic herbs, spices, fruits and cacao nibs.

Each cookie starts with three organic ingredients: hard red wheat flour (unbleached), fresh-churned, 85-percent-sweet-cream butter and pure cane sugar. From there, the Napa Valley, California-based baker adds exotic flavors we’ve certainly never seen in a simple shortbread.

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We tried the fennel pollen, which stands out for its delicate flavor. Filled with the tiny, hand-picked blossoms of the wild pollen, the golden shortbread tastes like honey and licorice. On every Botanical Bakery package, you’ll find suggested pairings with tea, coffee and wine—for fennel pollen, we went with a warm cup of Intelligentsia Le Perla de Oaxaca. The combination of the coffee’s milk chocolate and blackberry notes and the mild sweetness of the fennel pollen was spot-on.

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Currently, Botanical Bakery makes Garden Shortbread in seven unexpected, sweet-meets-savory varieties. (Cinnamon Basil also disappeared quickly from the CH office.) Pick up a box online for $7.


Today at Dezeen Platform: JAILmake Studio

Today at Dezeen Platform: JAILmake Studio

Dezeen Space: JAILmake Studio will pack seeds and soil into bricks using their one meter by one metre factory at Dezeen Platform at Dezeen Space today

Today at Dezeen Platform: JAILmake Studio

The Brick Replacement Service produces bricks from the seeds of wildflowers, trees, grasses and herbs packed into clay and soil.

The bricks fit into holes in existing walls, or can be used to build new structures. As the seeds grow, an array of plant life sprouts from each block.

Today at Dezeen Platform: JAILmake Studio

The bricks are available to buy from Dezeen space until 16 October.

Today at Dezeen Platform: JAILmake Studio

Each day, for 30 days, a different designer will use a one metre by one metre space to exhibit their work at Dezeen Space. See the full lineup for Dezeen Platform here. There’s more about Dezeen Space here.

Today at Dezeen Platform: JAILmake Studio

Photography is by Zahra Shahabi.

Dezeen Space

17 September – 16 October
Monday-Saturday 11am-7pm
Sunday 11am-5pm

54 Rivington Street,
London EC2A 3QN


See also:

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Today at Dezeen Platform: Stewy Today at Dezeen Platform: Roger Arquer Today at Dezeen Platform: C.A.N