Else vases by Michal Fargo moulded from torn foam blocks

Israeli ceramicist Michal Fargo produces these vases by ripping blocks of spongy foam into rough shapes before dipping them in porcelain and firing them (+ slideshow).

Else vases by Michal Fargo moulded from torn foam blocks
Vase from the original Else collection

Michal Fargo developed the unusual technique used to make her Else collection as a way of avoiding parting lines and pouring points that determine the conventional ceramic casting process.

Else vases by Michal Fargo moulded from torn foam blocks
Vase from the original Else collection

“The idea was to create different surfaces in ceramics, to find something interesting and diverse and in some ways more authentic,” said Fargo in a video about the project.

Else vases by Michal Fargo moulded from torn foam blocks
Detail of vase from the original Else collection

The Rock vases, which form part of the Naturelike collection developed for Spanish limited edition brand PCM, are made by tearing chunks from foam blocks until they take on the shape of vessels with a random natural appearance on their internal and external surfaces.

Else vases by Michal Fargo moulded from torn foam blocks
Else Rock Vases from the Naturelike collection

After dipping them in liquid porcelain with a coloured stain, the vases are fired in an outdoor kiln to harden the material while retaining the porous surface detail of the foam.

Else vases by Michal Fargo moulded from torn foam blocks
Foam shapes used to create the Else collection. Photograph by Sasha Flit.

“I was really bored with mould-making and having all these clear, smooth surfaces so I started sculpting in sponge and then just dipping it and firing it,” explained Fargo. “Afterwards I started trying to do some other things like casting into sponge blocks.”

Else vases by Michal Fargo moulded from torn foam blocks
Else Moss Vases from the Naturelike collection

Other pieces in the Naturelike collection are produced using rubber moulds cast inside rough foam shapes. Resin poured into the moulds preserves the bubbly texture of the foam as it sets.

Else vases by Michal Fargo moulded from torn foam blocks
Else Coral Vases from the Naturelike collection

The resin is coloured to give the Coral vases their distinct bright-red hue, and the Moss pieces their subtle green shade.

Else vases by Michal Fargo moulded from torn foam blocks
Vase from the original Else collection

As well as her hands, Fargo uses a small saw and a Japanese knife to carve out organic shapes with different textural surfaces.

Else vases by Michal Fargo moulded from torn foam blocks
Vase from the original Else collection

The Rock vases and centrepiece bowl have been produced as one-offs as the foam shapes used to create them are destroyed during the firing process, while the Coral and Moss designs are made in limited editions.

Else vases by Michal Fargo moulded from torn foam blocks
Vase from the original Else collection

Fargo originally created the Else series while studying ceramics at the Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design in Jerusalem.

Else vases by Michal Fargo moulded from torn foam blocks
Soaking foam in porcelain to create an Else vase. Photograph by Hadas Shalem

The vases were presented by PCM at the Maison&Objet design fair near Paris last month.

Else vases by Michal Fargo moulded from torn foam blocks
The porcelain takes on the rough surface texture of the foam. Photograph by Hadas Shalem

Photography is by Mel Bergman, except where stated otherwise.

Else vases by Michal Fargo moulded from torn foam blocks
Vases are left to drip dry before being fired. Photograph by Hadas Shalem

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moulded from torn foam blocks
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Porcellane e formiche

L’artista tedesco Evelyn Bracklow ha recuperato questo set di porcellane antiche decorandole con gruppi di formiche dipinte a mano. La cosa è piuttosto insolita, il contrasto inevitabile. Le trovate in pezzi unici su Etsy.

Porcellane e formiche

Porcellane e formiche

Porcellane e formiche

Porcellane e formiche

Porcellane e formiche

immerLit: Elegant, handcrafted porcelain light fixtures that play on translucency

immerLit


The natural ceramic elements within porcelain clay inspire the organic designs that make immerLit unique. Almost flowering downward from the base of each hanging fixture, these handmade and customizable lights are art pieces, as well as…

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100 000 Miniature Porcelain Skulls

Cherchant à questionner ce que l’humain laisse à la fin de sa vie, l’artiste Nino Sarabutra a recouvert la Ardel Gallery à Bangkok de plus de 100 000 crânes de porcelaine miniatures. Cette installation impressionnante invite les visiteurs à marcher sur ces crânes qui ont nécessité de longues heures de préparation.

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100 000 Miniature Porcelain Skull
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100 000 Miniature Porcelain Skull9

Snow Vases by Maxim Velčovský

Czech designer Maxim Velčovský presents a series of porcelain vases cast from snow at the London Design Festival, which starts today.

Snow Vase by Maxim Velčovský

Velčovský produced the Snow Vases by moulding snow into vase forms and then casting them in plaster – a technique he describes as “lost-snow casting”.

Snow Vase by Maxim Velčovský

The vases were created over three winters, from 2010 to 2012, using different types of snow collected at different locations.

Snow Vase by Maxim Velčovský

Velčovský, founder of Prague design studio Qubus, describes making vases out of snow as “a casting of water that we perpetually try to close into containers”.

Snow Vase by Maxim Velčovský

“I took snow and modelled the vases,” Velčovský explained to Dezeen. “Then you pour plaster on the snow. Plaster gets warm when hardening, so the snow melts and you get the mould. Into the mould I poured porcelain slip, so by slip casting I got the shape of the snow.”

Snow Vase by Maxim Velčovský

“This technique can be called ‘lost-snow casting’,” he adds. “It is limited edition as the mould breaks after several casts.”

Velčovský made one vase each winter and produced a limited edition of fifteen vases from each mould.

The vases, created for Prague gallery Křehký, will be shown at west London design store Mint from today until 30 September as part of the London Design Festival.

Mint, part of the Brompton Design District, is exhibiting work by many designers as part of its Cabinets of Curiosity exhibition during the festival. You can find the exhibition plus other key shows in the Brompton district on our online map of the London Design Festival.

Here’s some more info about the vases from Velčovský:


Snow Vase for Křehký Gallery

Maxim Velčovský molded vases from snow and casted their shape in plaster for three consecutive years (2010, 2011, 2012). Thus, various types of snow from various locations gave birth to a unique collection of vases.

Their molds are imprinted with time, plus solidification and melting processes that often counteracted. Designed exclusively for the Křehký gallery, the Snow Vase limited edition of 15 pieces has just been presented there.

“I am more and more interested in the moment of ephemerality. I thought that frozen water would be an ideal material for exploring that moment,” says Maxim Velčovský. “You wait for the material to fall down from the sky and then model a shape. You are cold, your hands are freezing, and then the vase melts and vanishes or you manage to capture it in a different form of water combined with plaster. The entire process and all its aspects are very fascinating.

“For instance, the fact that you can mold a vase from snow only in a specific moment and in a specific part of the planet, or water circulation that is ever-present in the process even after the process is over and the vase becomes a water container. Initially, I only wanted to make an abstract object, but then I thought it would be more interesting to make an object in the context of design that would, in essence, be a casting of water that we perpetually try to close into containers.”

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Maxim Velčovský
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Fuse by Note Design Studio for Ex.t

Stockholm 2013: these porcelain and wood pendant lamps were created by Stockholm-based Note Design Studio for Italian design brand Ex.t.

Fuse by Note Design Studio for Ex.t

The Fuse lamps by Note Design Studio for Ex.t combine a porcelain shade with a wooden pendant holder, and are available in two sizes and three colours.

The lamps will be on show during Stockholm Design Week at Note Open 2013, a pop-up exhibition space in the old Luma bulb factory, at Ljusslingan 1, until 9 February.

Fuse by Note Design Studio for Ex.t

Other products launching in Stockholm this week include a chair that can be dressed up in an assortment of garments and a cluster of blown glass trees – see all products shown at Stockholm Design Week 2013.

We’ve featured lots of products by the same designers, including an aluminium lamp inspired by a circus trapeze and a herringbone-patterned architect’s desk – see all products by Note Design Studio.

See all lighting »

Photographs are by Mathias Nero.

Here’s some more information from the designers:


Fuse

Inspired by traditional Italian craftsmanship and mixed with Nordic simplicity, Fuse is a lamp in which the tactility of the materials plays an essential role. The result is a soft porcelain pendant lamp accentuated by a wooden pendant holder that together emulate the warm glow created within each cylindrical shade. Available in two sizes and three colours, there’s a style for every taste.

The FUSE Pendant Lamps will be on show at Note Open 2013, our new concept for this year Stockholm Design Week, in collaboration with Fabege (www.fabege.se), a pop-up office and exhibition space in the quite unusual location of the old Luma bulb factory. Here we will show this year’s great collaborations with Zero, Nola, Mitab, Örsjö belysning, Ex-t, Seletti, Boxit Design and Zilenzio. The space will be open to the public 9 – 18 hrs every day Mon 4th-Sat 9th of February.

Title: Fuse
Object: Pendant lamps
Client: Ex.t
Material: Wood/ceramic
Year: 2013
Art Direction: Note
Location: Strandhuset Luma Stockholm

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for Ex.t
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Steven Harrington “The Thinker” Porcelain

Steven Harrington collabora nuovamente con i belgi di CASE STUDYO per la relase di “The Thinker”, scultura/toy interamente prodotta in porcellana. In vendita a partire dal 9 novembre.
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Ceramic Subwoofer: Joey Roth takes his porcelain speakers to the next level of audio bliss

Ceramic Subwoofer

In 2009 product designer Joey Roth wowed us with the debut of his beautiful Ceramic Speakers, made by hand with little more than porcelain, wood and cork. Now after three years of extensive prototyping and numerous other projects, Roth announces a matching Ceramic Subwoofer to seamlessly improve his speaker’s…

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Aleksandra Pollner

Porcelain fortune cookies for the smashing

Aleksandra Pollner

In explaining how she came to collaborate with design shop Object on a collection of porcelain fortune cookies, Seattle-based designer Aleksandra Pollner points to three tenets: form, past experience and material. Certainly it’s form that caught our eye first when we happened upon her pieces at the New York…

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Tranquil Tuesdays

Our interview with Charlene Wang on her socially responsible tea brand

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In a cozy showroom nestled in the alleys of old Beijing, we met Charlene Wang of Tranquil Tuesdays upon her return from the spring harvest of white peony tea in Fujian province. Wang has combined her passion for tea and her background as a US State Department human rights officer to create her brand, which aims to bring back the purity of ancient tea tradition. Traveling to the hot spots of tea in China, she builds personal relationships with local family farms and to source the best natural tea in the country.

Her company is a social enterprise that works closely with people in rural China, providing training, encouragement and support. At the same time, Charlene works with young designers from Jingdezheng, China’s epicenter for the best pottery to refine the
experience of style related to tea culture. We talked to Wang to learn more about her thoughtful venture.

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Excellent tea and beautiful teaware hold represent the essence of what you called “pure releaf”—what is the idea behind this concept?

The cool idea comes from my sister, and I immediately found it brilliant! I feel “pure releaf” perfectly embodies all the values we want to offer. I think the phrase gives the idea of tranquility, calmness, purposeful quiet, a kind of refuge feeling which is a
strong part of traditional tea culture. And then it’s “pure” because we concentrate only on natural, unscented, unblended tea, so just pure tea.

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Your varieties include White peony tea, Organic Jadesword Green Tea, Tieguanyin Oolong tea, Keemun black tea, ancient tree raw Pu’er—how do you source all these teas? Do you plan to expand your collection?

We need to travel to the area, to see different farms, to meet people and build relationships before we even think of ordering tea from them. Sometimes I travel off season, to meet farmers and see how they take care of their land. In Fujian I was there seeing the leaves been picked and how they made. They only pick one season instead of the usual three, in order to preserve the quality of the plants. I build a friendship with my suppliers and we often share some of the key moments of their work. For Oolong tea, I stayed at a farmer’s house for a week during the fall harvest. I was on the
second floor of a local family’s workshop and every morning I could wake up to the smell of freshly made Oolong.

We want to add other qualities of tea to our collections but it requires a lot of work and for the moment we’re a bit overloaded. I’d love to add a yellow tea in the near future.

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Tranquil Tuesdays is also about teaware, how did you start your cooperation with studios in Jingdezhen?

I had several trips to Jingdezhen, which is nationally considered the home of traditional Chinese porcelain. The first time I was there as a tourist and I was totally amazed. Some local young designers have been able to take this tradition of craftsmanship and add a modern feeling to it. The first artist I’ve been working with is Zhang Min, who’s taking the traditional blue and white theme from Ming dynasty and kind
of twisting it to give a natural breath of life to our teaware. Then I met Ke Zhongxiang, who’s making the celadon line, and I was fascinated by his creative studio’s setup, in the simplicity of his small workshop some of his artworks really stood out. Zhu Xuan is making our crystalline glaze line, bringing back an ancient special technique of glazing zinc oxide before firing, to produce an unique effect where crystals spontaneously form on the surface, making each piece unique.

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Do you just source products from them or you participate in the whole design process?

I was inspired by their collections and I love their personal style, we’ve been working closely to build our own lines. They all run small workshops and our cooperation often requires a long time. We define each single piece together, we adjust the proportions, sometimes we work online on QQ (the most-used Chinese messenger), sometimes they
also make drawings live online using their kids tablets! I also travel back there, we discuss details personally and I can also see our teaware getting out of the community kiln. We work together from the beginning to the end to build our current feeling.

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How would you define the “pure releaf” aesthetic?

The idea is to take very classical, traditional, ancient art and porcelain-making and give it a kind of contemporary twist. We aim to make a fresh vision of what it means to be Chinese. Most of Europeans and Americans identify Chinese styles with flashy colors and a kind of kitsch style but if you go back to the roots of Chinese culture there are several examples of fine simplicity. To give an example, celadon has been China’s most prized porcelain since the Tang dynasty (618-907 A.D.), when it was largely traded with the Middle East. Until the 14th century, no one outside China and Korea was able to produce it, but sometimes, when people see the stunning beauty and simplicity of Chinese celadon handcrafts, they ask if it’s Japanese!

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Tranquil Tuesdays products are available online
and delivered worldwide.