Alessi Milano Shop Resort

Alessi launches its Milan flagship designed by Martí Guixé
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For 24 years the house of Alessi in Milan was the store on Corso Matteotti, originally designed by Ettore Sottsass and later renovated by Atelier Mendini. Nevertheless, last week Alessi opened a totally new store conceived by design star Martí Guixé.

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The project follows the collaborations for the Shop Museum in Paris and the recent experience of their exhibition at the Triennale Design Museum. Just a short walk from Montenapoleone, the store is located in via Manzoni, close to the metro station La Scala Theatre and the beautiful Poldi Pezzoli Museum.

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Divided into four different sections, the space includes a large entrance overlooking Via Manzoni and an area called Museum to display the most sculptural objects in a gallery-like setting. A retail section is reminiscent of the old space, though turned upside down, and “Wunderkammer” hosts new collections and curiosities. Each section has its own strong character, with different lighting systems custom-designed by Guixé himself and produced by Danese.

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The predominant colors are glossy red, shiny white and grey, while the materials are mainly aluminum, ceramic, resins and wood. The result is a perfect mixture of Alessi spirit and a design gallery.


Critter and Guitari Pocket Pianos

Go from stage to studio with a full spectrum of sound packed into a mini-synth
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Critter and Guitari, the same experimental audiophiles that came up with a Kaleidescope-inspired music device, recently added a new creation to their line-up of avant-tools. Ultra-portable, simple and versatile, don’t let the clean lines of the Pocket Piano’s aluminum and hardwood case fool you. This petite battery-powered synth’s six modes achieve large sound that cranks up for live performances yet is customizable and nuanced enough for studio work. Including vibrato and a control that cascades tones over two octaves, it delivers a wide range for such a small box.

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Other digital instruments in the works include the Single-String Flash Guitar, which records on the go but isn’t yet available. The Pocket Piano is; order it from the Critter and Guitari online store for $175 a pop.

Check out the above video demo to see the ins-and-outs of the Piano.


Fab.com

A fresh way to shop for great design online
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Fab.com, the latest entry to the online curated sale and design space, offers daily design inspiration and up to 70% off retail prices on a wide range of design products including furniture, home accessories, technology, entertainment, lighting, art, toys, and jewelry from more than 175 leading designers and manufacturers. Operating seven days a week, each sale runs 72 hours, giving you just enough time to stress over want vs. need.

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Every object featured on Fab.com is selected by leading design industry experts like Monica Khemsurov, the co-founder of Sight Unseen. Alongside the rotating daily sales you will find the Inspiration Wall, a communal portion of the site where members can share images of any aspect of design that inspires them, giving the site a more personal touch.

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Founded and lead by design industry veterans and self-proclaimed “serial entrepreneurs” Jason Goldberg and Bradford Shane Shellhammer, you can guarantee both an impeccable eye and customer-focused service. We find the site clean and easy to use, and so far their selections are spot-on.


Jaime Hayon

Spanish artist-designer pushes the boundaries in striking form
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Finding inspiration through observation, award-winning Spanish creative Jaime Hayon survives on a steady stream of design collaborations and consultancy gigs, all the while pushing the boundaries between art and design.

Native to Madrid, Hayon spent his University years studying industrial design in both his hometown and Paris. Although Hayon excelled in his studies, he never felt too connected to the traditional and logical design curriculum. Rather than subscribing to a specific category, Hayon felt compelled to lend his designs a unique touch and take risks.

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Hayon explains, “At a certain moment I was absolutely not interested in [traditional design], so I went through a different road. I was more interested in underground art, it opened my mind to see things differently.” This urge to create holds deep roots in his adolescence spent in Madrid where he immersed himself in skateboard and graffiti cultures, expanding the already whimsical imagination that is ever-present in his work today.

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In 1997, after finishing his studies Hayon took his bold creativity to Fabrica, a communication research centre/talent incubator/studio. Here he quickly established himself and after just one year he found himself head of the design department, overseeing projects varying from retail and restaurant design and exhibition conception to product and graphic design. Eight years later Hayon felt the urge once again find a new outlet for his creativity, this time branching out and developing his own collection of designer toys, ceramics, furniture, and eventually interior design and installation along with founding Hayon Studio. His quirky creations were then exhibited in galleries throughout London, Frankfurt, Barcelona, Paris and Kuala Lumpur, establishing himself as a major player in the new wave of creators transcending the line between art and design.

Gaining further exposure through solo exhibitions at London’s Aram Gallery and Milan’s Salone de Mobile, Hayon emerged as a mind to be sought after, eventually leading to positions in consultancy and design for a diverse list of clients designing furniture, lighting, textiles, vases, and ceramic objects. Included in this list is Spanish porcelain manufacturer Lladró, where for five years Hayon has held an ongoing position as Artistic Advisor. Thanks to his influence and encouragement Lladró has taken their company in a whole new direction, encouraging fellow designers to create new objects inspired by the Lladró’s traditional pieces.

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Impressed with his clean design and adventurous mind Hayon was brought on as premiere designer for Bisazza Bagno‘s debut collection of bathroom fixtures. “We first studied the weak points of existing bathroom collections. I’ve always thought they lacked beauty and identity. They often are too clinical and technical,” Hayon explained to Cool Hunting. By utilizing a combination of high quality materials such as lacquered wood, beveled mirrors, marble, and glass he achieved an elegant and distinctive look within an innovative modular system.

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The design process was not easy, as Hayon describes, “It was all about dreaming about options…during almost 3 years of work, I made infinite sketches and went through a very dynamic prototyping process. We worked intensely to achieve a collection that, I believe, is expressive of style, quality and personality.” Hayon has also collaborated with Bisazza on numerous of other projects showcasing his unique use of mixed mosaics and materials, including their interior decoration home collection and the Jet Set plane.

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From one project to the next, Hayon avoids stagnancy is every aspect of life and design. Most recently, premium Danish furniture brand Republic of Fritz Hansen brought Hayon on to design a new sofa. Named for the Danish word for embrace, FAVN is the result of a creative dialogue between designer and company. Launched during ICFF in NYC last month, FAVN sports a contemporary design that blends textiles and aesthetic perfectly to fit in alongside decade old designs that Fritz Hansen is known for. Hayon describes his sofa as being “based on a shell. A shell being hard on the outside, soft and welcoming on the inside…a form that embraces you, something really organic.”

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The shell-like design of FAVN is a nod to such influential designs as the Egg and Swan by Arne Jacobsen. However, Hayon’s pension for bright colors and fresh extroverted design is obvious as well in FAVN. The experimental dialogue which brought about FAVN presents a delicate balance of flamboyant Spanish taste and clean Danish design. FAVN will be available through Republic of Fritz Hansen stores and dealers in early September 2011.

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Hayon has collaborated with other such reputable names as Bennetton, Metalarte, Artquitect Edition, Coca-Cola, Adidas, and Camper. He continues to keep busy pushing limits of design well into his career as has from the start. With the definition of design in a constant flux Hayon excels in the void. “Today I don’t know my definition of design, but I do know it’s a very interesting moment for design, because there is more acceptance, it’s more hybrid.”

The Audi Icons series, inspired by the all-new Audi A7, showcases 16 leading figures united by their dedication to innovation and design.


Lexdray Boulder Pack

Clean lines, premium materials and unlimited ways to organize your stuff in a new modern backpack

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I recently got my hands on with the new, pocket laden Boulder Pack from Lexdray and after a couple weeks of serious testing I have nothing but good things to say about this modern backpack. Although the pack sports a simple clean aesthetic I was a bit stumped on what to do with the abundance of pockets. So I asked Lexdray’s creator, Alex Drayer, for a bit of background information on the line and to take me through the pack from top to bottom to tell us what he intended each pocket to be used for. His response to this task was a few paragraphs and and a diagram. The following is all that, summed up, just for CH readers.

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Web users, click on the diagram above to zoom in.

As an avid traveler Drayer often found himself jotting down notes on how he’d improve his luggage given the chance. In 2008 he took the first step and began designing bags based off of his long list of much needed details and tweaks. The process started with “four months designing fifteen styles. Our design efforts were pretty detailed.” After taking these sketches to illustrator he “spent another two months finalizing each tech pack complete with fabrics, measurements and endless notes… and finally wound up with a finished product almost three years later.”

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Lexdray bags like the Boulder Pack and more are available online. But be warned, each piece is only produced in limited edition runs of 550. As Drayer comments, “my favorite [bags] are always those that offer some sort of unique functionality without compromising style. I always cherish my more limited pieces over a bag that I know everyone owns.”


Too Hot For Spot

A car thermometer to help keep your furry friends happy and healthy

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After seeing too many tragic cases of animal hypothermia and heatstroke due to the desert’s extreme climate, New Mexico-based veterinary worker Denice Pruett created Is It Too Hot For Spot?—a static-cling window thermometer. This clever thermometer easily secures to your car window for an accurate indication of the current temperature inside your vehicle.

Designed to raise awareness about the danger of leaving your furry friend in confined spaces, the thermometer acts as a potential lifesaving device for pet owners and as a visual educator for curious onlookers.

On an 80º day, temperatures inside a stationary car can climb to a sweltering 120º inside a car within just 10 minutes, a stunning piece of information to keep in mind as summer approaches. Is It Too Hot For Spot? sells for just $13, a small price to pay for keeping your little buddy happy, healthy and safe. The thermometer is available online from the Too Hot For Spot website.


Tools at Schools

The youth of today design a better classroom for tomorrow
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Introducing design to youngsters, a recent collaboration between a uniquely-structured private school and two design firms instills the value of reshaping the everyday objects that surround us. The NYC-based project called Tools at Schools brought together The School at Columbia University, an eclectic mix of faculty offspring and denizens of Harlem, furniture manufacturer Bernhardt Design and top-seeded designers from Aruliden to reinvent the classroom in a way that’s comfortable, pleasing and above all else utilitarian.

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That’s because Tools at Schools teaches that design is not just about aesthetics but about crafting everyday objects that work. Spending hours a day in class, these pupils are well-qualified to help improve the quality of life at school through design. The upshot is a furniture collection that includes ergonomic chairs and desks, which easily hold pens, pencils and books.

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“I used to think that design was really exotic and abstract,” wrote one student in an testimonial. “The first thing I would think of when I heard the word ‘design’ was fashion. It amazes me to think back and see how off I was.”

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The roughly four dozen students who participated learned the entire design and manufacturing process—from rough sketches, to 3D plans to shaping the first prototype. Being fully immersive allowed them to work with real-life materials and hone creative skills, teaching lessons in communication, art, mathematics and science in the process.

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After 25 weeks, the fruits of this student labor have moved beyond the classroom laboratory, debuting at ICFF last week and moving on to the Museum of Arts and Design in November 2011.


KCDC Can Cover

A clever vinyl wrap for stealthy public drinking

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Innovations in the art of concealed pubic drinking don’t come along too often, so when we recently found the latest version of the ingenious static-cling can cover by KCDC skateshop we needed to share the news. While others like Anti-Hero skateboards have been making them for years, the innovation here is making the wrap “man can” size. The Brooklyn-based skateshop cleverly seized on Arizona Iced Tea to make the tall boy-appropriate sticker a few months back, replacing the design’s cherry blossoms with skateboard wheels and ingredients with clever skate-oriented copy.

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Holding down the NYC skate scene since 2001, KCDC sells these rad can covers for just $5 a pop. Cheaper than an open container ticket and re-usable, you’ll be set to evade the boys in blue any day you please. Check online or swing by their lone Williamsburg shop to snag one for yourself.


NYC Design Week 2011

Our top-ten preview of the U.S. design event of the year

Many try, but few succeed in creating the kind of citywide hum that an event like ICFF brings to NYC each May. We once saw the editor of one Los Angeles-based site navigate using a sheet of printer paper with scribbled notes on the many launches, openings, appointments and cocktail parties she planned to hit. With such an overwhelming agenda, we made this hit list to assist on decisions of where to go and what to see. So find a sheet of printer paper, jot down some dates, times and addresses or, if you’re not in the Big Apple, get a sneak peek of what’s coming next in the world of design.

Noho Design District

First on the list of “what not to miss” is the second-annual Noho Design District, which runs from 13-16 May 2011. Concentrated primarily around Great Jones and Bond streets, you’ll find product showcases, a film screening room, Sight Unseen‘s pop-up shop and much more.

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With Sight Unseen lending their design expertise for the second year in a row to produce McMasterpieces, the showcase of 15 design objects created entirely out of parts and raw materials from McMaster-Carr has some of our favorite local designers in it. Head to The American Design Building at Great Jones Lumber (45 Great Jones Street) to check it out.

Sharing the same location as McMasterpieces and with several more of the NYC designers that we’ve come to know and love, The American Design Club presents Use Me, an exhibit of “unapologetically functional objects” by 45 young American designers.

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While cruising the many new Noho venues, make sure to check out Sight Unseen’s first-ever pop-up shop, featuring a collection of eccentric and handmade wares—Iacoli & McAllister‘s perfectly-simple Hex bottle opener—by many rising talents in art, fashion and design. The pop-up shop runs May 13-16 and is located at 45 Great Jones as well.

Swing by Partners & Spade at 40 Great Jones for even more rising talent (that in this case is based mere blocks away). There Rich, Brilliant, Willing will show an exhibition of new large-scale Delta Lights handmade in the Tri-State area. Also keep an eye out for the limited run of table lights inspired by Estes model rocket kits and born out of a collaboration between Partners & Spade and RBW.

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Take a few steps over to 55 Great Jones and you’ll find yourself at The Future Perfect and their showcase of new furniture and lighting by a wide array of talents. Included in the exhibit will be Matt Gagnon, who will be building his wrapped Prototype lamps on site, and Mark Moskovitz’ Facecord Cabinet.

ICFF

The International Contemporary Furniture Fair returns to NYC this weekend to showcase the work of over 24,000 designers, architects, developers and more all under one roof of the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center from May 14-17.

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Emerging lighting brand Roll & Hill will present their second collection of new products since launching in 2010. Find time between May 14-17 to swing by ICFF to catch a glimpse of the stunning fixtures that brought the Brooklynites so much attention in the past year.

Designboom’s mart, an exhibition of 40 designers worldwide, always has something fun. The installation allows for patrons to meet young designers and purchase their work on the spot, directly from the talent themselves. Each mans a booth with their projects for all to see, hear, and touch. Make sure to bring some extra cash to this spirited event open for all on 14-16 May 2011 from 10am-4pm.

Fans of Spanish design shouldn’t miss a special presentation at the Javits Center where the Spanish design association Red in collaboration with our sister company Largetail brings together Stone Designs, Santa & Cole, Estudihac and Luis Eslava will give short presentations on what inspires their process and the significance of living and working in Spain. Cool Hunting and three other sites will be present conducting live interviews with the designers and exploring a variety of themes. The event is open to all ICFF attendees and takes place on Sunday, 16 May 2011, from 2pm-3pm at the Spanish Pavilion.

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NYC Design Week

Over on Bowery, a handful of goings-on make a good next stop after checking out Noho. Private Property, a show presented by New York Art Department, Alife, and Uhuru, features high-end sustainable furniture design inspired by NYC graffiti culture including the likes of Earsnot, Jim Joe, Semen, KR and the beloved hangout Max Fish. Be there for the opening reception Friday 13 May 2011 from 6-8pm at The Hole on 312 Bowery. If you can’t get into the opening the show, don’t worry it runs 14-17 May 2011, from 12-8pm everyday.

Take a quick stroll over to the Chelsea Art Museum to see a more diverse showcase of design at Model Citizens. Over 90 designers from here and abroad come together to present their latest works of furniture, products, ceramics, glass and jewelry. There is also a show retail shop in case something in particular catches your eye. It runs from 13-15 May 2011.


Nivea Blue Century

The German cream of creams celebrates 100 years with an installation in Milan
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Nivea‘s iconic blue tin is the focus of the German brand’s 100th anniversary, a feat they are celebrating in Milan with an imaginative video installation. Designed by Italy’s PianoB studio, the round shape and blue color surround the visitor, in a constant kaleidoscope of sounds, images and the cream’s signature scent.

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The exhibition is the latest appearance of the Nivea Lab, a series of events and cultural initiatives aimed to enact the company’s commitment in joining arts and industry.

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The animated interactive video installation is comprised of hundreds of images and commercials taken from Nivea Italia‘s archives. The event also brought with it a special temporary shop where you can buy classic products as well as some limited editions, and a book about the first century of this “cream of creams.” Nivea Blue Century is on view through 14 May 2011 at Metropol.