Titanic by Luka Or for Monkey Business

Titanic cup by Luka Or

Product news: this pencil cup and stationery holder that appears to be sinking into the desk has been designed by Luka Or for Israel design brand Monkey Business.

The Titanic pen caddy sits slanted on a flat surface. Tel Aviv-based designer Luka Or designed it to store pencils, paper clips and other stationery items.

Titanic cup by Luka Or

The pencil holder measures 12 x 8 x 8.5 centimetres and is sold with paper clips. It is available in a range of three colours: red, charcoal and white.

Luka Or founded his own studio in 2003, after graduating from Holon Academic Institute of Technology (HIT), where he also teaches design.

Titanic cup by Luka Or

Other desk tidies we have featured on Dezeen include a cast desk tidy by Benjamin Hubert and Magnus Pettersen’s range of solid concrete desk accessories.

See more product news from Monkey Business »
See more stationery »

Photography is from Monkey Business.

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for Monkey Business
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Chidori Furniture by Kengo Kuma and Associates

Chidori Furniture by Kengo Kuma and Associates

Traditional Japanese toys inspired this modular furniture by architects Kengo Kuma and Associates for the East Japan Project.

Chidori Furniture by Kengo Kuma and Associates

Twelve wooden sticks slot together without glue to form the units, which combine to make shelving or tables.

Chidori Furniture by Kengo Kuma and Associates

The six-sided units can be connected to one another from any edge.

Chidori Furniture by Kengo Kuma and Associates

The Chidori Furniture is named after Chidori toys, which are made from simple wooden components with unique joints – see another furniture design based on a Japanese puzzle here.

Chidori Furniture by Kengo Kuma and Associates

East Japan Project brings together designers and local craft makers in the region, offering support to communities devastated by the Tohoku earthquake.

Chidori Furniture by Kengo Kuma and Associates

The pieces are made by skilled carpenters in the Tohoku region, which has traditionally been associated with small-scale craft manufacturing.

Chidori Furniture by Kengo Kuma and Associates

You can see more stories on projects supporting those affected by the earthquake here.

Here is some more information from the East Japan Project:


East Japan Project (Ejp) is a collaboration between designers and traditional craft artisans from East Japan, with the purpose to propose The New Lifestyle as a concept design for post 3.11 Tohoku earthquake. The New Lifestyle refers to a way of life that is deeply rooted in a locality. Locality is another name for the system in which every aspect of a place – climate, culture, and people – is integrated in a natural way. This system however, disappeared in the urbanized society of the 20th century with its pursuit for efficiency and convenience. The 2011 Tōhoku earthquake in eastern Japan urges us to revisit this lost system and reevaluate its implications for a modern society.

Chidori Furniture by Kengo Kuma and Associates

The New Lifestyle attempts to reverse the course of the 20th century and to revive the notion of place through the collaboration with craftsmen from the Tōhoku region in eastern Japan. – Yanagi Muneyoshi who lead the mingei (folk craft) movement of Japan in the late 1920s, once called the Tohoku region ‘the land of handcraft’.

Chidori Furniture by Kengo Kuma and Associates

In the framework of the East Japan Project (Ejp), to achieve this mode of New Lifestyle, the products are conceptualized as new types of daily tools with a deep appreciation of local craftsmanship and material and are to be part of a larger product portfolio called, ‘location’.

Chidori Furniture by Kengo Kuma and Associates

As one of Ejp Products, Chidori Furniture is a flexible system developed from the joint system of Chidori. Chidori, the name of an old Japanese toy from Hida Takayama, a small town in Japan, is originally an assembly of wood sticks with unique joints. Transformed from the traditional system of Chidori, 1 unit of Chidori Furniture consists of 12 timber sticks with different junction details. Each modular unit of Chidori Furniture can be connected to from all 6 sides making numerous combinations possible. Merely by twisting the sticks, without any nails or metal fittings, it shows a myriad of possibilities to become anything from a table to a shelf. The 2010 project GC Prostho Museum Research Center by Kengo Kuma and Associates is another project developed on basis of the Chidori system.

Chidori Furniture by Kengo Kuma and Associates

The junction details of the system require the high level of craftsmanship in Tohoku region to produce. One of the manufacturers, Fujisato Mokkoujo (Fujisato Woodshop) in Iwate Prefecture, is well- known for making Iwayado Tansu Drawers, which originated in the late 1700s. Their expertise in precise wood crafting and lacquer painting could produce multiple identical units of Chidori Furniture.

Chidori Furniture is currently exhibited in Bals Tokyo Nakameguro and Ginza stores and is also for sale.

Chidori Furniture by Kengo Kuma and Associates

Click above for larger image

Activities of EJP include:

  1. Designers and craftsmen from East Japan will collaborate to develop items of daily use that provide a sustainable and minimal New Lifestyle.
  2. Multiple corporations and groups will collaborate beyond the boundaries of a commercially driven enterprise and industry to develop a strong distribution and cooperative network.
  3. EJP will conduct a field study and research of the unique traditional craft industry scattered in the regions of East Japan.
  4. EJP will raise money from the profit of the EJP products sales to support the next generation of artisans, to acquire the skills of traditional crafts in East Japan.

See also:

.

Whackpack Furniture
by Brendan Magennis
Poles Apart by
Adrian Bergman
Family Bench by Valentin Garal for Le Porc-Shop

Plug and Player by Giha Woo

Plug and Player by Giha Woo

Product designer Giha Woo of Korea has combined an mp3 player with an electrical plug.

Plug and Player by Giha Woo

Called Plug and Player, the conceptual product is designed to be charged by plugging it directly it into the mains electricity.

Plug and Player by Giha Woo

It features buttons to control playback on the front and a headphone socket where the flex would be on a normal plug.

Plug and Player by Giha Woo

More product design on Dezeen »

Plug and Player by Giha Woo

Also by Giha Woo: The Bent Hands by Giha Woo and Shingoeun.

Plug and Player by Giha Woo

Here’s a tiny bit of text about the product:


Plug and Player – Concept

It is the mp3 player resembled the shape of plug.

Plug and Player by Giha Woo

Generally, users use a plug to charge a digital device, but the size of plug is big enough to play the role as mp3 player.

Plug and Player by Giha Woo

This design is a kind of minimalism through convergence of plug and mp3 player.

Plug and Player by Giha Woo

However, the unique value to be able to find between inevitable objects will outweigh that.

Plug and Player by Giha Woo


See also:

.

Product Mutation by Wannayos BoonpermSiren MP3 player by PearsonLloydChargerFrame by
Naolab

Coca Cola Bottle – Mystic

Un intéressant projet de packaging et de design produit pour la future bouteille de Coca-Cola. Des lignes épurés et fluides imaginée par le designer français Jérome Olivet. Intitulée “Mystic”, voici plus de visuels et une vidéo de présentation dans la suite de l’article.



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Previously on Fubiz

X-RAY by Tokujin Yoshioka for KDDI

X-RAY by Tokujin Yoshioka for KDDI

Japanese designer Tokujin Yoshioka has created a transparent mobile phone.

X-RAY by Tokujin Yoshioka for KDDI

Called X-RAY, the design was created for telecommunications company KDDI and will be on show KDDI Designing Studio in Tokyo from 19 October.

X-RAY by Tokujin Yoshioka for KDDI

See all our stories about Tokujin Yoshioka »

X-RAY by Tokujin Yoshioka for KDDI

Here’s a little text from the designer:


X-RAY for KDDI iida by Tokujin Yoshioka

Apart from arranging visual appearance, I have pondered a design without a shape. This collaboration project started with an enthusiasm of designing a new mobile phone that infuses a fresh, striking idea into today’s diversified mobile designs. I came to reach an idea of “designing from inside.”

X-RAY by Tokujin Yoshioka for KDDI

X-RAY is a brand new proposal of a mobile phone with its beautiful transparency and deep texture made by using a special material.


See also:

.

Nokia E-Cu by
Patrick Hyland
iPhonekiller by
Ronen Kadushin
Phone that drinks coke
by Daizi Zheng

ALPA 12 TC camera by Estragon

Swiss studio Estragon have designed a camera for Swiss camera manufacturer ALPA. (more…)

iPhonekiller by Ronen Kadushin

Designer Ronen Kadushin has designed an open-source mallet for smashing up iPhones. (more…)

O3 by Designaffairs Studio

Designaffairs Studio of Germany have designed a conceptual oxygen inhaler for a future scenario where there’s not enough oxygen in the air for humans to survive. (more…)

A.M.L. Clamp Light by Andreas Martin-Löf

Swedish studio Andreas Martin-Löf Architects have designed a lamp with a brass clamp for attaching it to shelves. (more…)

ThinPlug by Zihni Yalcin

Product designer Zihni Yalcin has designed a three-pin electrical plug that folds up for easy transportation. (more…)