CH Gift Guide: The Insomniac: Lucid dreaming masks, handwoven hammocks, booze and more to help your favorite night owl get some rest

CH Gift Guide: The Insomniac


Garbage trucks, construction noise, emergency emails from the boss, unbearably sweltering summers and freezing winters, constant traveling for work—even if you don’t suffer from chronic insomnia, getting a good, restful night of sleep these days feels like a rare occurrence. What could be more thoughtful than offering the gift of…

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Ostrich Pillow Light by Kawamura-Ganjavian

Product news: design studio Kawamura-Ganjavian has introduced a compact version of the Ostrich Pillow that only wraps around the eyes and ears.

Ostrich PiOstrich Pillow Light by Studio Bananallow Light by Studio Banana

Designed for napping on the go, the Ostrich Pillow Light by Kawamura-Ganjavian is a smaller edition of the original pillow, which covers the entire head.

Ostrich Pillow Light by Studio Banana

Filled with silicon-coated micro-beads to remove background noise, the wearer can slip the pillow over their eyes and ears to sleep.

Ostrich Pillow Light by Studio Banana

The pillow can be adjusted to fit any head size by tightening or loosening the elastic cords that surround it.

Ostrich Pillow Light by Studio Banana

When not in use, the pillow can be worn around the neck as a chunky ribbed snood. It comes in grey with a red or blue lining.

Ostrich Pillow Light by Studio Banana

The original Ostrich Pillow was launched as a crowd-funded project a year ago. The designers have also created the Ostrich Pillow Junior for children aged six and over.

The post Ostrich Pillow Light by
Kawamura-Ganjavian
appeared first on Dezeen.

Ostrich Pillow Junior by Kawamura-Ganjavian

Product news: design studio Kawamura-Ganjavian is now producing a smaller version of its squishy headpiece for napping on the go for children (+ slideshow).

Ostrich Pillow Junior by Kawamura-Ganjavian

Spain and Switzerland-based studio Kawamura-Ganjavian have scaled down their Ostrich Pillows for ad-hoc snoozing to be suitable for children aged six and over.

Ostrich Pillow Junior by Kawamura-Ganjavian

Originally funded on Kickstarter, the padded grey helmets are designed to make sleeping at the desk, on long car journeys or in waiting rooms more comfortable – find out more in our previous story.

Ostrich Pillow Junior by Kawamura-Ganjavian

The design has been modified for kids so the whole face is visible through the hole in the front, compared to just the nose and mouth on the adult model.

Ostrich Pillow Junior by Kawamura-Ganjavian

Patterned fabric now lines the inside, visible through the two hand holes on either side.

Ostrich Pillow Junior by Kawamura-Ganjavian

When we published the adult version, our commenters called it “a pickpocket’s dream” and compared it to a “garlic clove” and a “locust head”.

Ostrich Pillow Junior by Kawamura-Ganjavian

Kawamura-Ganjavian has also designed a padded reading room at a bookshop in Lausanne and screens made of sticks covered in Velcro for an exhibition in Milan.

Ostrich Pillow Junior by Kawamura-Ganjavian

Our most recent stories about design for sleep include a squishy light that can be used as a warm, glowing pillow and the first Sleepbox hotel made from portable sleeping capsules in Moscow.

See more design for sleeping »
See more design by Kawamura-Ganjavian »

Read on for more information from the designers:


Ostrich Pillow hit the headlines across the globe 12 months ago and everybody was talking about it, from Perez Hilton to Stephen Fry, Jimmy Kimmel to the cast of ‘Modern Family’, Tech Crunch to the Sun, Hypebeast to Loose Women, Huffington Post to Bloomberg.

Ostrich Pillow Junior by Kawamura-Ganjavian

The Ostrich Pillow launch made a sensation last year when it it’s founders raised more than $200,000 in just 30 days via the amazing crowd-funded Kickstarter campaign.

The people have spoken with sales stretching across the globe, and the sleep-deprived masses have been relishing the calm in their “Ostrich Pillow moments”. Have you Instagrammed your’s yet?

Ostrich Pillow Junior by Kawamura-Ganjavian

We at Ostrich Pillow like to be inclusive so now with public demand telling us to think about the kids, so here we are announcing the launch of Ostrich Pillow Junior. From ages six plus, the Ostrich Pillow Junior is the perfect travelling and napping companion for kids for car journeys, study breaks and general time outs.

Beautifully designed, hand-made to perfection in Spain and supercool, this new addition is more fun, more functional and more bang for your buck.

Ostrich Pillow Junior by Kawamura-Ganjavian

Ostrich Pillow Junior comes with a larger opening for the face so both eyes and mouth are visible enhanced padding at the forehead and neck to give more comfort, support and ease for the younger user.

The pillow comes with two unique interior colours – Berry Snooze and Dreamy Waves and comes with a more attractive price and retails at €59, $75 and £50.

Ostrich Pillow Junior by Kawamura-Ganjavian

Alongside the launch of Ostrich Pillow Junior, the designers have created more colours for the adult range. As well as the original Ostrich Pillow Blue, we now offer you the choice of Mellow Yellow for those bright happy times and Sunset Siesta for those chilled out and laid back moments, solving more of your gifting dilemmas’ as the holiday season draws nearer.

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Kawamura-Ganjavian
appeared first on Dezeen.

Wooden Sleeping Pods

Basé en Australie, le collectif Sibling a imaginé cette série de rangements et d’espaces de stockage très réussis. Avec deux pods réalisés par Jonathan Brener et Qianyi Lim, ces créations originales « Wooden Sleeping Pods » proposent une optimisation de l’espace à travers différents types de rangement.

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Wooden Sleeping Pods5
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“Sleep” by Ted Spagna: Where science meets art, a photo book of humans in their most vulnerable state




Teacher, filmmaker and photographer Ted Spagna was as engrossed in the sciences of sleep and technology as he was in creating art. His sleep project depicts a shift from the…

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Soft Light by Simon Frambach

This squishy light by German product designer Simon Frambach can be used as a warm, glowing pillow.

Soft Light by Simon Frambach

Simon Frambach‘s balloon-shaped Soft Lamp gives off a soft light and slight warmth, creating an illuminated cushion.

Soft Light by Simon Frambach

As well as providing a headrest, the lamp can be squeezed into gaps or trapped between objects where needed. It’s made from foamed polyurethane and shaped using rotation milling.

Soft Light by Simon Frambach

The low-energy bulb within is protected by a cage so it doesn’t smash when the lamp is squashed. A red cord leads out the back to a power source.

Soft Light by Simon Frambach

We’ve featured a few products designed for sleeping, including headgear that creates the perfect conditions for a nap and a wearable cocoon of quilts and blankets for people to take their bed wherever they go.

Our archive of lamp designs includes copper-spun pendant lamps with chunky handles and scaled-up versions of a classic light bulb.

See more lamp designs »
See more design for sleeping »

The designer sent us the following information:


Soft Light

A soft and flexible occasional light that interacts with its surroundings in a unique way by Simon Frambach.

Soft Light by Simon Frambach

Soft Light is a soft and flexible light made of foamed polyurethane. Its curvy fluent shape that resembles a calabash pumpkin provokes an organic and familiar appearance for a thoroughly synthetic and industrialised material.

Soft Light can be placed in unused spaces like cavities in furniture and other places as an object that fills a void in one’s living environment. Its warm and tangible surface invites to touching and literally feeling light. The result is a light which is extremely flexible in use without having a technical characteristic.

Soft Light by Simon Frambach

The light shade has been crafted from a massive block of polyurethane foam on a simple self-constructed device for rotational milling. The device allows for a precise production of a desired shape. An energy saving light bulb, protected by a cage, illuminates the porous foam from the inside.

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Simon Frambach
appeared first on Dezeen.

Sleepbox Hotel Tverskaya by Arch Group

Russian studio Arch Group has filled an old building in Moscow with its portable sleeping capsules to create the first Sleepbox hotel.

Sleepbox Hotel Tverskaya by Arch Group

The modular hotel rooms were first developed for travellers taking naps in busy urban environments, but have also allowed Arch Group to convert an awkward building in the city centre into a functioning hotel.

Sleepbox Hotel Tverskaya by Arch Group

Conceived as a midpoint between a hotel and a hostel, the four-storey building contains units for up to two people on its first and second floors, while the top floor is filled with single-person capsules.

Sleepbox Hotel Tverskaya by Arch Group

Each Sleepbox is mobile and can be placed anywhere, provided it can be connected to a power source. As well as beds, the rooms are equipped with LED reading lamps, plus sockets for charging laptops and mobile phones.

Sleepbox Hotel Tverskaya by Arch Group

A lobby and reception occupy the ground floor and includes an information zone where guests can use iPads to access the internet, plus a storage area filled with lockers.

Sleepbox Hotel Tverskaya by Arch Group

Showers and toilet cabins are located on each floor and have bright green circular lights on the outside to indicate when they are occupied.

Sleepbox Hotel Tverskaya by Arch Group

The building also contains a handful of regular hotel rooms, which were added to the top floor in spaces where the ceiling heights were too low for a Sleepbox.

Sleepbox Hotel Tverskaya by Arch Group

Arch Group developed the concept for the Sleepbox in 2009 and the first capsule opened at Moscow’s Sheremetyevo airport two years later.

Sleepbox Hotel Tverskaya by Arch Group

See more stories about sleeping on Dezeen »

Here’s a project description from Sleepbox:


Sleepbox Hotel Tverskaya

The first Sleepbox Hotel creates a special niche in hospitality services between hostels and common hotels. Hostels are mostly cheap, which directly affects service quality.

Sleepbox Hotel Tverskaya by Arch Group

Traditional hotels have high level of comfort that it conditioned by high prices. Sleepbox Hotel Tverskaya is partly based on hostel principles to keep price low, but it offers considerably different quality of hotel services.

Every guest has an opportunity to live in his own module that has no comparison with any other type of hotel room. The hotel is a totally new and unique experience for every traveler, however it can boast low prices and excellent location.

Sleepbox Hotel Tverskaya by Arch Group

Sleepbox hotel is located in Moscow downtown in the immediate vicinity of Kremlin. The hotel doors open to 1-st Trevskaya Yamskaya Street and it is only 3 minutes away from Belorusskiy Railway Station, where Aeroexpress trains arrive from Sheremetyevo International Airport. Hotels with such location are mostly expensive, but staying in Sleepbox Hotel is 3 times cheaper than in nearby hotels.

 

This is owing to the use of Sleepbox modules created by architectural bureau Arch Group that allow organizing in only 4 sq.m. a proper place for rest and relax in a variety of buildings from airport terminals to offices. These modules are mobile, can be installed anywhere inside the building and just need to be connected to the power supply. These features give an opportunity to open a hotel in a building that has never been intended for a hotel.

Sleepbox Hotel Tverskaya by Arch Group

Sleepbox Hotel has 4 floors. On 1st floor you can find reception, information zone, lobby, individual lockers for visitors and management. Snow-white seamless reception desk with sleepboxish design is made of Corian. The desk can be seen from the street though glass doors. A visitor finds himself in a futuristic space that underlines unusual idea of the Sleepbox hotel. By the entrance there is an information zone that helps visitors to orient themselves or to find out railway schedule. For this purpose besides the maps there are iPads with Internet connection affixed to the wall.

Sleepbox Hotel Tverskaya by Arch Group

While working on the design of this hotel we aimed to create something absolutely different from the rest of Russian hotels. We wanted to make it so that even experienced European visitors make a booking here without hesitation. As for the expenses we sought to ensure that technical realization of this project was cheap so that the lodging cost could remain on minimum level as planned.

Sleepbox Hotel Tverskaya by Arch Group

The design of Sleepboxes is supplemented with a structure, which represents lighting and forms a part of ceiling and walls at the same time flowing by the boxes from the ceiling to the walls. It is made of transparent stretch sheet with LED spot lights behind. We have used this piece of design at all floors and even at the staircase, which gives a feeling of consistent space uniting all the floors of the hotel. To reduce the price of finishing works is was decided to leave the existing ceramic granite on the floor covering it with rubber. The floor pattern is similar to the ceiling pattern so each group of boxes is visually separated from walls and floor with black zones, which underlines boxes design and helps to combine wooden surface with general monochrome background.

Sleepbox Hotel Tverskaya by Arch Group

Wooden double Sleepboxes are located on floors 2 and 3, and single black and white boxes are located on floor 4. These boxes are equipped with an inbuilt TV set. There are common hotel rooms on the same floor with attached washrooms and dormer windows. This was made to use effectively the space under the inclined roof, where ceiling height in not enough to install a Sleepbox.

Sleepbox Hotel Tverskaya by Arch Group

Showers and toilet cabins are located on every floor and made in the general futuristic style. Toilet cabins look like separate capsules fixed in a row. Joints between them are illuminated with LED. There is a big round occupancy indicator, which shines green when the cabin is free and red when it is occupied.

Sleepbox Hotel Tverskaya by Arch Group

Area: over 800 m2
Architectural bureau: Arch group
Architects: Mikhail Krymov, Alexey Goryainov, Alexey Poliakov
Project and building: 2011 – 2012

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by Arch Group
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CalmSpace by Marie-Virginie Berbet for Haworth

French designer Marie-Virginie Berbet has designed a sleeping capsule for taking power naps at the office.

CalmSpace by Marie-Virginie Berbet for Haworth

Created for office furniture brand Haworth, the booth comes equipped with preset lighting cycles and soundtracks designed to make it easier to fall asleep and then slowly wake back up.

CalmSpace by Marie-Virginie Berbet for Haworth

Entitled CalmSpace, it contains a single mattress where users can make themselves comfortable and can be programmed for naps of between and 10 and 20 minutes long. “Never more because after 30 minutes you can fall into a deep sleep, so the awakening is hard and you lose the benefit of a nap,” Berbet told Dezeen.

CalmSpace by Marie-Virginie Berbet for Haworth

The design team claim that midday naps can help to improve cognitive ability, reduce stress and decrease the risk of heart disease. “Making the idea of sleeping at work acceptable and even obvious thanks to cumulated scientific data and a relevant sound and light device was crucial to overcome cultural barriers,” said Berbet.

The product was launched at the Orgatec trade fair in Cologne last week, where Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec also presented stackable chairs and tables designed for a Danish university and KiBiSi showed a mechanical desk that can be cranked up and down.

It seems there’s a growing trend for booths and products enabling naps in public and we’ve previously featured sleeping booths at airports and a squishy hat that lets you sleep at your desk. See more stories about sleeping.

Here’s a project description from Haworth:


CalmSpace – Effective recovery in power nap capsule

Haworth joins designer Marie-Virginie Berbet to present CalmSpace, a stand alone, “plug & play” power nap capsule for the office, at Orgatec 2012. Individuals searching for rest enter through an acoustic curtain and lay down on a fabric-upholstered mattress. The user is able to select a power nap period – from 10 to 20 minutes – that includes preset sound and light cycles, which helps the individual fall asleep and wake up smoothly.

CalmSpace allows individuals to refresh, relax, and reenergize to be ready for productive activity. In times of high-speed work and a demanding economy, many companies offer their employees collaborative relaxation areas like lounges and cafeterias, but few are exploring the benefits of calm, individual relaxation. With an unusual background in neuropharmacology, Marie-Virginie Berbet used her scientific knowledge in her CalmSpace design. The short- and long-term benefits of mid-day naps include improved cognitive abilities (e.g., alertness, memory, learning, and creativity), improved mood, stress prevention, better nightly sleep, and can even lower the likelihood of heart disease.

In 2011, Haworth tested a prototype of the CalmSpace concept at the call centre of France Telecom Orange in Lyon. Now, Haworth is extending CalmSpace’s innovative approach to lifestyle at work to all companies. CalmSpace is a helpful retreat area for people who do intense work, have demanding schedules or are subject to jet lag.

Developed by Haworth in cooperation with Zyken, who provided scientifically-validated light and sound technologies, CalmSpace is made of dark grey-blue coloured composite material. Acoustic foam is used between the internal and external skin.

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for Haworth
appeared first on Dezeen.

Dezeen archive: sleeping

Dezeen Archive - Sleeping

Dezeen archive: recently we’ve featured a huge wearable duvet for two and a squishy pillow helmet that’s perfect power naps (bottom right), so we decided to bring together all our stories about snoozing. See all the stories »

See all our archive stories »

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Sewn as a Site by Danica Pistekova

This wearable cocoon of quilts and blankets by Slovakian architecture graduate Danica Pistekova is just right for people who wish they could take their bed with them in the morning.

Sewn As A Site by Danica Pistekova

Pistekova sewed fabric and duvets into a complex, adjustable structure to create a portable environment for two people that’s meant to be halfway between clothing and housing.

Sewn As A Site by Danica Pistekova

“The project is something in between,” Pistekova told Dezeen. “Between fashion and architecture, small and big, private and public, intuitive and logical.”

“For me, dress is only another state of architecture,” she added.

Sewn As A Site by Danica Pistekova

Pistekova graduated from architecture at the University of Fine Arts and Design in Bratislava this year.

Sewn As A Site by Danica Pistekova

We recently featured a collection of folded paper dresses made by another architecture graduate.

Sewn As A Site by Danica Pistekova

See all our stories about fashion »
See all our stories about blankets »
See all our stories about houses »

Here’s some more text from the designer:


The result of the practical part of my diploma thesis is a set of dresses/houses. These objects blur the classic definitions of architecture (‘firmitas, utilitas, venustas’) to reveal the hidden ones.

Sewn As A Site by Danica Pistekova

If, as Zevi says, architecture is an object where I am able to come in, my clothing-house does that. If, as Rossi says, architecture is theatre for life, my soft house offers conditions for different situations by constantly changing the clothes and location in one system.

Sewn As A Site by Danica Pistekova

And if architecture is only the system of transits and boundaries, this process also provides them. For Tschumi, architecture is an event, a turning point, a place of shock.

Sewn As A Site by Danica Pistekova

The clothing-house is also trying to surprise by paradoxical behaviour, discovering in-between spaces or moments where the boundary between interior and exterior is changing with every movement.

Sewn As A Site by Danica Pistekova

The result is architecture as an intellectual and sensual experience. It was created by an architect with the hands of a tailor and wants to remind us that architecture is the way of thinking standing before any built reality.

Sewn As A Site by Danica Pistekova

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by Danica Pistekova
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