Data Clip by Nendo

Data Clip by Nendo

Japanese designers Nendo have combined a USB stick with a giant paperclip.  

Data Clip by Nendo

The Data Clip for Japanese electronics brand Elecom can be attached to paper documents or clipped together for easy storage.

Data Clip by Nendo

See all our stories about Nendo here and more stationery here.

Data Clip by Nendo

Photographs are by Hiroshi Iwasaki.

Here are some more details from the designers:


Data Clip for Elecom

A USB stick in the shape of a paperclip. It can clip to a stack of documents, business cards or memos for handing data to a colleague or friend, or connect to other Data Clips for storage. A design that aims for a new relationship between daily life and digital data.


See also:

.

Otokurage
by Nendo
Ceramic Speaker
by Nendo
Thin Black Lines
by Nendo

From Here For Here by Ariane Prin

From Here For Here by Ariane Prin

Show RCA 2011: Royal College of Art graduate Ariane Prin uses waste from college workshops as the raw material for her on-site pencil factory

From Here For Here by Ariane Prin

Called From Here For Here, the project uses waste generated by current students to provide drawing tools for the whole college and next year’s intake.

From Here For Here by Ariane Prin

Prin made the lead by combining clay from the ceramics department with liquid graphite from the glass department, or ink from the printmaking department with wax from the jewellery department.

From Here For Here by Ariane Prin

She then mixed sawdust with flour and water to make the casing and designed a simple device that extrudes both layers at the same time.

From Here For Here by Ariane Prin

Prin hopes the process will be adopted by future generations of students so that waste can be re-used on site and even earn the college some money through the sale of surplus pencils.

From Here For Here by Ariane Prin

More about Show RCA 2011 »

Here’s a lot of text from Ariane Prin:


Designers are best suited to methods of making that apply to specific and localized contexts. I believe design is about exploring the social and natural opportunities around us, taking advantage of every situation by connecting human activities with environmental principles. I am proposing a production system that treats the Royal College of Art as an experimental site for demonstrating these principles. It uses onsite waste as a raw material for a local pencil factory that will supply drawing tools to present and future students.

“Sustainability is a development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.” World Commission on the Environment and Development, 1987.

“Cradle to cradle is a manifesto promoted by Michael Braungart and William McDonough for a radically different philosophy and practice of manufacture and environmentalism.”

“Closing loop is a concept of industrial ecology of either reducing or using waste for other processes.”

My interests are focused on the role of the designer and the process of producing objects which integrate ecological and cultural issues.

Nowadays designers have a huge responsibility as we reach the limits of the world’s resources: the incorporation of sustainability in production is unavoidable. Such concepts need to be entertained early in product design and not as an afterthought to a process. The Sustain talk IV on January 24th 2011 posed the question: How can the creative world engage with opportunities inherent in the social and natural world, to design a more sustainable way of life? I think the answer is in the way we make things.

I believe designers should be aware of the product life-cycle, from the resource, to the fabrication, the energy used, the financial and social aspects, the distribution, the end-life and the locality. In other words, to include in the design process the “Cradle to Cradle” principles that have existed since the 1970’s even though the mainstream global trend is still to maintain the status quo, and industrial production works without environmental safety in mind. Instead, we not only have to brave the design of an object but the design of its whole system.

In such a context: What to create? For whom? With what? My response is to imagine a system based on useful products which are produced specifically for a site with the waste generated there. I am looking for legitimacy of creating objects which I can justify by maintaining the enjoyment of making without the guilt. Through my project, I am trying to find the correct approach of making.

I believe designers have to show a good example to their clients, the industry, and consumers by bringing eco-effectiveness into their projects. We have to be self-governing and not wait for others to do something about the problems we face. But, in order to change the big system, we have to start locally and create localised solutions. We have to look for fairness of production according to this already saturated world, simply because designers are the guardians of the future.

I am proposing a production system that treats the Royal College of Art as an experimental site for demonstrating these principles. It uses onsite waste as a raw material for a local a pencil production that will supply drawing tools to students of this year and years to come. In this case, waste is not discarded but recycled into something useful. We can do more with less by “closing the loop” in production, a useful exercise for the RCA itself. By the integration of a product policy during the creative process, we will end up with a more appropriate model that can incorporate all environmental, social, cultural and economical considerations.

The project in detail:

  • First, find a productive community,
  • Then analyse the place: culture, needs, waste,
  • Find opportunities there,
  • Create the new system,
  • Design the long lasting tools,
  • And finally generate a self-reliant production that can engender a mini economy on site.

The RCA includes 22 departments and all of them have different types of waste. The opportunity is to see the potential in that waste when they are combined and reintroduced into a daily useful object, according to the identity of the place involved. Here, the pencil acts as an emblem for an art school.

Let’s start with the workshop I know the most because I work there every day. The wood workshop produces a big bag of unrecycled sawdust daily. I see in this a remarkable raw material. The bodies of the pencils are made out this wood dust mixed with flour from the canteen as a binding agent and water. After a long period of experimentation, I discovered it was possible to use clay from the Ceramics department with liquid graphite from the Glass department or ink from the Printmaking department with wax from the Jewellery department for the lead. It was very important for me to keep the number of inputs for the pencil recipe to the strict minimum, so they could be easily reproduced.

The RCA has 1044 students and 370 employees and my goal is to create the opportunity for everyone to own a pencil. That is where the co-extruder operates because it creates the adapted process of production for the adapted number of objects needed. This tool that extrudes the body and the rod of the pencils at the same time, is designing a reconstruction process that considers waste a resource. It provides a homemade autonomous product production for local regeneration. I consider that my challenge as a product designer is not to design objects as masterpieces, but to go beyond that by creating the instruments that will endure and help a community to solve their problems.

The idea is to perform a production during the RCA Final Show by engaging people and encouraging students and staff to keep going with this sustainable practice. This installation is built on people’s growing awareness of social and environmental concerns, and their roles as consumers. This is the social and cooperative side of this project which talks about the interdisciplinary nature of the departments which are connected through the recycling. In the context of the Show, the visitors will animate the production of a unified output. There is still a massive educational job to do to raise the consciousness of waste reuse, slow design and low-energy production, especially in the framework of a school; because individual actions are often determined by local infrastructure. With this tool, people now take the control of their production and consumption, via a decentralised organisation.

The “From Here For Here” system presents itself as a small, local, connected, cooperative and open scenario. But now, if we think more widely, one wood dust bag can produce 90 pencils, there are approximately 5 of them a week. They make 170 bags a year – therefore 15,300 pencils. This production could consequently be used to raise income for the RCA and be viable economically. This system could also be extended to create other suitable products by using other RCA waste. Another scenario could be to provide a service by renting co-extruders to other wood workshops. The council could organize a big wood dust collect in a city, and hire the machine to schools in order to educate children about sustainable behavior while creating their pencils at the same time. And we can think even more widely when we know that at least 200 million cubic meters of wood chips and sawdust are produced in the world, just within the sawing lumber industry. The limit is only one of our imagination.

Now I am asking you: Do we need to pay for raw material when we have a considerable amount of waste? Do the next generations have to pay for our mistakes if we can start doing something now? We must be conscious of the difficulties faced by design today but see its extraordinary potential as well. With these pencils I am trying to draw the big picture of a new model of society.

For this project I have work with Engineers Benjamin Males and Nick Williamson, both tutors at the RCA, together with Rafael Gomes Fernandes, Postgraduate Research student in Turbulence, Mixing and Flow Control and Conan Hales, Master student in Environmental Technology both from the Imperial College. My two years tutors Daniel Charny and Roberto Feo, who helped me to find who I am and what I want. I thank them all very much indeed.


See also:

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Monster pencil
case
Bamboolarule by
Baskerville Studio
Buro by DesignWright
for Lexon

Bandit by Sebastian Bergne

Bandit by Sebastian Bergne

Here’s a ruler by London designer Sebastian Bergne that’s specially adapted for shooting rubber bands. 

Bandit by Sebastian Bergne

Slits in one edge mean users simply need to wrap a rubber band round one end to create a trigger mechanism before firing away.

Bandit by Sebastian Bergne

More stationery on Dezeen »

Bandit by Sebastian Bergne

Here are some more details from Sebastian Bergne:


Bandit was inspired by the 100s of red rubber bands littering the streets of London.

Bandit by Sebastian Bergne

What at first glance appears to be an ordinary ruler is transformed into a fun product to appeal to the naughty school boy in everyone.

Bandit by Sebastian Bergne

Typology: Shooting Ruler
Manufactured by: L’Atelier d’Exercises
Materials: Acrylic
L 32 x W 3.5 x D 0.3cm


See also:

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Bamboolarule by
Baskerville Studio
Ground by
Michael Antrobus
Anything by Michael
Sodeau and Suikosha

Paper Weaving Card Set

Stationery with a DIY twist for custom pixel graphics
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Sending someone special a card may seem gracious enough these days, but Present & Correct’s latest Paper Weaving Card Set really ups the charm with easy tools for constructing a personalized pattern in addition to undoubtedly endearing messages.

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The four-pack includes two “Happy Birthday” and one each of “Thank You” and “Congratulations” cards (all blank inside), as well as 40 paper weaving strips and envelopes. Wrapped in instructions, the handy guides show how to make more involved patterns, like an elephant or heart.

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THe 5″ x 7″ cards offer plenty of space to get crafty and sell online from Present & Correct for £10 each.


Terada Mokei

Paper pop-ups shrink everyday life into adorably tiny scenarios

by Meghan Killeen

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A slice of life shrinks even smaller with the miniature design line, Terada Mokei. Architect-turned-modeler Naoki Terada’s Architectural Model Accessories Series is a monochrome microcosmic representation of everyday life. Terada adopted a 1/100 scale ratio for the series, promoting a metric-based “global standard” that adorably scales down the largeness of reality to one-hundredth the size.

Populating the paper environments, Terada’s version of the modern man and his archetypal family consist of featureless cookie-cutter silhouettes of male, female and child figures. Each series places a variation of the family in different scenarios, ranging from park activities to earthquake-disrupted dinners and office obsequiousness, all packaged in single-colored sheets of pre-cut parts, reminiscent of model die-cuts.

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Terada Mokei also features a line of Architectural Model Greeting Cards. Pop-up figures with word-bubble expressions say it when you can’t with this sentimental stationary.

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The 1/100 Architectural Model Accessories Series retails for ¥1,575, with the Architectural Greeting Cards selling for ¥580, both from the Terada Mokei website.


Atelier Book Chair by Kana Nakanishi

Atelier Book Chair by Kana Nakanishi for Oiseau

This wooden children’s drawing case by Japanese designer Kana Nakanishi of Oiseau folds out to form a stool. 

Called Atelier Book Chair, the case is made from Japanese cypress and houses a sketchbook in one side and pouches for drawing and painting equipment in the other.

Atelier Book Chair by Kana Nakanishi for Oiseau

A trapezium-shaped piece of wood can be slotted onto pegs in the open case to form a seat.

Atelier Book Chair by Kana Nakanishi for Oiseau

Photographs are by Asaco Suzuki.

The information below is from Kana Nakanishi:


“ABC – Atelier Book Chair”

Oiseau Inc. released a product designed by Kana Nakanishi under the brand called “mother”. The product is called “ABC” standing for Atelier Book Chair. It is a portable “drawing set” that can carry drawing tools and becomes a stool. The user can take ABC anywhere they like and the place will instantly turn into one’s own atelier.

Atelier Book Chair by Kana Nakanishi for Oiseau

ABC is made of hinoki (Japanese cypress) from Nishiawakura village Okayama prefecture. It started as a project to utilize thinned wood from forests which is a big issue in the Japanese forest industry. The production is done by Masakyuki Oshima, a skilled craftsman residing in Nishiawakura.

Atelier Book Chair by Kana Nakanishi for Oiseau

ABC looks like a wooden suitcase which is light enough for a child to carry. Once opened like a book, there are detachable pockets to store drawing tools and a place for a sketchbook. The seat board is also stored inside and when the board is attached to the body, ABC will turn into a stool.

Atelier Book Chair by Kana Nakanishi for Oiseau

Oiseau Inc. established “mother” brand for its range of products. The name “mother” has a philosophy that the products should be used for a long period of time and the designer who produces them should be the “mother” of the product and consider carefully about the whole “life” of a product. ABC became the first product to be released under this brand.

Product name: ABC – Atelier Book Chair-
Materials: hinoki /wild cherry tree / leather
Size: W390xH260xD70 SH=270 (Weight 2000g)
Production: Masayuki Oshima (wood working shop: Youbi)
Design: Kana Nakanishi (Product Designer/Oiseau.,Inc)
mother Brand Art Director: Chikako Oguma (Graphic Designer/Oiseau.,Inc)


See also:

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Bookinist by
Nils Holger Moormann
Monster by Tomáš Král
and Camille Blin
Het Kruikantoor
by Tim Vinke

Le Programme de ma Semaine

Plan week by week with this Francophile notebook
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Combining their love of French tendance with clean and playful design, Tokyo stationery brand Mark’s Inc. aptly call their striking weekly planner “Le programme de ma semaine.” Each page features a blank calendar with the days divided into two sections, while the unprinted reverse side provides ample room for jotting down notes. The spiral-bound style helps both for laying it open on a desk or for times like Fashion Week when you’ve got to stay on task but your adorably tiny purse won’t allow for the full notebook.

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I happen to love this vibrant raspberry color, but the planner comes in a variety of colors from their online shop Mark’s Tokyo Edge (¥420) as well as from Papernation (£5) in the U.K. If you’re in Barcelona or Madrid, you might find it where I did (thanks Maite!) at the great bookstore
La Central
.


Tokketok: a gorgeous new website

Tokketok

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I have been a long-time fan of the letterpress studio Tokketok by Joke van de Gaer, a lovely Belgium lady living in Portland, Oregon. The name Tokketok comes from her little boy Oliver. It was the first word he said and it’s the sound a chicken makes in dutch. Want to hear him say it? click here

Tokketok2

Exactly one year after starting Tokketok Joke is opening the doors to her new website…a gorgeous one designed with the help of the very talented stylist, Chelsea Fuss and images were taken by  Lisa Warninger. I wish Joke a wonderful future with Tokketok and can't wait to see more super nice designs from her coming… Congrats Joke!

Tokketok3

 

IE-tag by Naruse Inokuma Architects

IE-tag by Naruse Inokuma Architects

Tokyo firm Naruse Inokuma Architects created these pads of page markers from demolished wooden houses.

Called IE-tag, the notes come in blocks shaped like gabled houses and can be arranged to represent a little village on a desk or along a book’s edge.

IE-tag by Naruse Inokuma Architects

See Dezeen’t top ten: paper products »

IE-tag by Naruse Inokuma Architects

The information below is from Naruse Inokuma Architects:


IE-tag

Yuri Naruse + Jun Inokuma
Naruse Inokuma Architects

This is a tag made of paper from wooden building waste.

IE-tag by Naruse Inokuma Architects

In regenerating wooden building waste into paper, rather than discarding or burning it for energy, we propose the entire process flow up to the final product.

This tag is shaped as a house, retaining the memory of the material when it was part of a house.

IE-tag by Naruse Inokuma Architects

When several are arranged together, they form a town. What had originally been part of townscape now creates a small version of townscape on your desk.


See also:

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Monster by Tomáš Král and Camille Blin for OKOLOBookmark lamp
by Léonard Kadid
More paper
things

Stitching Postcards

Tailor your own location-based correspondence
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Sending a card snail-mail to a special someone may seem like a charming enough move, but stitching a personal message or tying a bow on a significant city will undoubtedly seal the deal. The Stitching Postcards by designers Leihener, Seng, Valder for Köln-based distributor Details allow for creatively romantic gestures such as this and more with a collection of geography-inspired cards that come packed with a needle and thread.

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The cards cover six different countries, some cities and one world map, each a simple topographical silhouette and marked with an array of notable cities. By simply sticking the needle and thread through the card, you can easily relay where you’ve been or hope to go, as a souvenir to yourself or someone special.

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Select cards sell from UncommonGoods for $10 for a set of two or from Details when their online shop returns at the end of January 2011.