Paper Vase by Pepe Heykoop

Product news: Dutch designer Pepe Heykoop has created a paper cover to turn any glass jar or bottle into a faceted vase, sold to help impoverished women in Mumbai make a living.

Each Paper Vase is handmade by the women of the Pardeshi community in Mumbai’s red light district. The workshop was founded by Pepe Heykoop and the Tiny Miracles Foundation, which was set up by his cousin. “The ultimate goal is to pull this 700-person community out of poverty by providing healthcare, education and jobs within eight years,” says Heykoop.

Paper Vase by Pepe Heykoop

The vase is made of coated paper and comes in white or graduated green colour blocks. It’s transported in an envelope and can be rolled down to fit different sizes of bottle.

Paper Vase by Pepe Heykoop

Heykoop is known for his philanthropic design work and previous projects with the Tiny Miracles Foundation include lamp shades made from a patchwork of lambskin and traditional water carriers covered in leather. See all our stories about design by Pepe Heykoop.

Paper Vase by Pepe Heykoop

Other similar vases on Dezeen include one made from a thin curl of synthetic paper and another folded from a flat sheet of cardboard. See all our stories about vase designs and all our stories about paper designs.

Photos are by Annemarijne Bax

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Tyvek Vase by Jiwon Choi

Tyvek Vases by Jiwon Choi

This vase by Rhode Island School of Design graduate Jiwon Choi is made from a thin curl of synthetic paper.

The vase is made of Tyvek, a lightweight and tear-resistant material produced from plastic fibres.

Tyvek Vases by Jiwon Choi

Jiwon Choi intended to create a package for a bunch of flowers that would be simple and light but strong enough to stand upright.

She is currently looking for a manufacturer to produce the vase.

Tyvek Vases by Jiwon Choi

We’ve featured a few other Tyvek objects, including a crumpled pendant lamp and a clock that creates changing 3D shapes as the minutes tick by – see all products made from Tyvek.

Other vases we’ve published lately include vessels that loop over the flowers to frame them and jewel-like vases assembled from flat sheets of cardboard – see all vases on Dezeen.

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Heirloom by Benjamin Graindorge for Moustache

Maison&Objet 2013: French designer Benjamin Graindorge has created a series of vases with tops that loop over the flowers to frame them.

Heirloom by Benjamin Graindorge for Moustache

The Heirloom vases are made of ceramic in three designs: a small version with one half enclosed like a hood and two larger ones with four or eight ribs. They come in dark blue, light blue and yellow.

Heirloom by Benjamin Graindorge for Moustache

The vessels were on show at Maison&Objet in Paris last week. See all our stories about design at Maison&Objet here, including cutlery based on chopsticks by Toyo Ito and a chair draped in a wooden mat by Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance.

Heirloom by Benjamin Graindorge for Moustache

Benjamin Graindorge has a studio in Paris and we’ve previously featured his garden that floats on the surface of a fish tank and uses fish waste as fertiliser.

Heirloom by Benjamin Graindorge for Moustache

Moustache is also based in Paris and produces work with designers including Inga Sempé and Big-Game. See all our stories about French design brand Moustache here.

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Snug Vases by snug.studio

These jewel-like vases from German design duo snug.studio are assembled from flat sheets of cardboard.

Snug Vases by snug.studio

The Snug Vases come as a flat-pack, ready to be folded into shape and placed over a glass or bottle of water.

Snug Vases by snug.studio

The vases come in two sizes and three colours – white, grey and copper.

Snug Vases by snug.studio

Hanover-based snug.studio was founded in 2010 by interior designer Kerstin Reilemann and architect Berit Lüdecke.

Snug Vases by snug.studio

Other angular vases we’ve featured on Dezeen include richly coloured vases made by a 3D printer and faceted vases that emerge from a custom-made machine.

Snug Vases by snug.studio

We’ve also featured lots of projects using cardboard, such as a bicycle with a cardboard frame and wheels and ceiling lights made from scraps of corrugated cardboard – see all our stories about cardboard.

Snug Vases by snug.studio

See all our stories about vases »
See all our stories about homeware »

Snug Vases by snug.studio

Here’s some more information from the designers:


The German design label snug.studio, based in Hannover, has designed this vase. It’s a folding sheet made of brightly coloured cardboard. you can fold the geometric shape on your own. In combination with a small glass of water or a small bottle you will have a beatiful faceted vase for your flowers. It comes in two forms and three colors (white, grey and copper). Flat packed with assembly and ready to fold.

Snug Vases by snug.studio

Snug.studio are Kerstin Reilemann, interior designer, and Berit Lüdecke, architect. Since 2010 they create design-products in their studio in Hannover, Germany. Clear, minimalist and classic, this is the style of snug. By shape, paint scheme and processing from ordinary materials such as plywood or laminate they develop high quality interior-products and jewellery. Each design tells his own story. “We always follow our intention and we have high ambitions for what we do. Everything what will go into production we would like to have for ourselves.”

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Silverware by Glithero

Strips of seaweed have left their mark on the photosensitive surfaces of these vases by Anglo-Dutch design duo Glithero, who will present the collection at Design Miami this week.

Silverware by Glithero

The Silverware collection was created by Glithero as a development of the studio’s Blueware vases and tiles, which were decorated with silhouettes of plants captured by photosensitive chemicals.

Silverware by Glithero

The designers applied silver salt particles to the hand-thrown porcelain vases to make their surfaces photosensitive.

Silverware by Glithero

They then attached seaweed from the English Channel to the vases before exposing them to light, so that the area under the seaweed was protected from exposure.

Silverware by Glithero

A rotating machine exposed the pieces evenly in the darkroom before they were dunked in developer fluid to complete the process.

Silverware by Glithero

The vases will be presented by Galerie VIVID at Design Miami this week, where Dezeen will be reporting on all the best installations and exhibitions – see all our stories about Design Miami.

Silverware by Glithero

British designer Tim Simpson and Dutch designer Sarah van Gameren founded Glithero after meeting at the Royal College of Art in London.

Silverware by Glithero

We previously featured Glithero’s Blueware collection of vases and tiles as well as an installation of 1000 of the tiles in Rotterdam.

Silverware by Glithero

More recently we featured a movie by Glithero showing the creation of a temporary bar by pouring buckets of quick-hardening material over a smooth surface. We’ve also featured a table made by pouring liquid down a chute and a pair of twisted self-supporting candles by the studio.

See all our stories about Glithero »
See all our stories about vases »

Here’s some more information from Glithero:


Glithero Silverware 2012

Silverware is a series of hand thrown porcelain vases each devoted to a single specimen of seaweed. Glithero harvested seaweeds from the English Channel and configured the specimen graphically upon the surface of the photosensitive porcelain. The designers developed a rotating light-printing machine to exposes the pieces one by one in a darkroom, before they are immersed in the various developing baths to reveal a highly detailed and translucent print. The moment in the life of the saltwater species is captured as a lasting tonal photogram on the deep black of the silver salt particles on the surface of the vase.

Silverware is a project that follows the conceptual thread of Blueware Collection launched by Glithero in 2009 – to capture direct impressions of botanical specimens that reveal their delicate fabric and beauty.

Silverware will be exhibited in Miami with Galerie Vivid as part of Design Miami 2012 alongside several iconic pieces by Gerrit Rietveld, the great Dutch furniture designer and architect. The other designers in this show are Richard Woods / Sebastian Wrong, Bertjan Pot and Frank Tjepkema.

Dimensions of the vases:
Round : H36 x W43 cm
Tall : H58 x W30 cm
Big : H51 x W44

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Workaholic by THINKK Studio

Product news: Bangkok-based design firm THINKK Studio has launched a collection that includes hanging lamps made from concrete and wood, concrete vases with wire frames and a little truck to hold your pens and paper clips.

Workaholic by THINKK Studio

The Workaholic collection by Thai designers THINKK Studio includes the CementWood hanging lamps made from hand-lathed ash and concrete.

Workaholic by THINKK Studio

The Truck desk tidy is made from ash wood and powder coated steel and has a container that slides out to reveal two compartments inside.

Workaholic by THINKK Studio

The Foldo desk lamp comprises an ash base and a thin sheet of powder coated steel which curves over to form a lampshade.

Workaholic by THINKK Studio

The Truss concrete vase can be paired with one of three different wire frames in geometric shapes.

Workaholic by THINKK Studio

The vases in the Workaholic collection are similar to an earlier series of concrete and wire vases by THINKK Studio designer Decha Archjananun.

Workaholic by THINKK Studio

We’ve published two other lamps by THINKK Studio – a wooden lamp that slots into a marble base and another wooden lamp held together by a red cord.

Workaholic by THINKK Studio

Other desk accessories we’ve featured include a silicone pen pot with a dish for paper clips and sharpeners and a solid concrete tape dispenser, pen pot and tray.

Workaholic by THINKK Studio

See all our stories about stationery »
See all our stories about lamps »

Here’s some more information from THINKK Studio:


Workaholic is a set of small items for working space or studying area including Truck, CementWood lamp, Foldo lamp and Truss Vases.

Truck

Truck is a little desk organizer which allow us to have fun and enjoy our childhood memories in order to recharge and refresh our imaginations as we were young again.
Materials: Ash wood , Powder coated steel
Dimension: 110 x 200 x H190

Workaholic by THINKK Studio

CementWood lamp

On this project, We provide more choices of materials for 2 main parts of the hanging lamp which made of concrete and wood. There are 2 different hand crafted techniques for making the same shape made of both materials. Wooden pieces are made by hand lathing while the concrete pieces are formed by rotational shaping process.
Materials: Ash wood , FRC Concrete
Dimension: 130 x 130 x H180

Workaholic by THINKK Studio

Foldo lamp

Foldo is a simple desk lamp, combined with wooden base and a single piece of folded steel which act as a lampshade.
Materials: Ash wood , Powder coated steel
Dimension: 250 x 150 x H290

Workaholic by THINKK Studio

Truss Vases

Truss Vases are inspired by metal structures which normally found in construction site. 3 shapes of wired steel can be insert on the top of concrete base for different flowers arrangement.
Materials: Concrete , Powder coated steel
Dimension: A.135 x 200 x H240 / B.135 x 200 x H350 / C.135 x 260 x H350

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BD Barcelona Design celebrates 40th birthday with hand-painted vases by Jaime Hayon

BD Barcelona Design celebrates 40th birthday with hand-painted vases by Jaime Hayon

News: Spanish design brand BD Barcelona Design has commissioned designer Jaime Hayon to hand-paint 40 unique vases in celebration of its 40th birthday.

“We wanted to produce a piece to celebrate our 40th anniversary and we thought Jaime was one of the best designers to do a special collection,” BD Barcelona Design founder Jordi Arnau told Dezeen. “He proposed to do a hand-painted vase using a piece from the Showtime collection, hand-painted with 40 different designs.”

Jaime Hayon decorated each of the white porcelain vases with black enamel, incorporating a number from one to 40 into each design, Arnau explained. “He went in October to the factory in northern Italy to paint them. This is the only product we don’t produce in Spain.”

BD Barcelona Design celebrates 40th birthday with hand-painted vases by Jaime Hayon

“Jaime is an artist who works between art and design, and this has more and more demand in the world,” continued Arnau. “BD is well known for its historic collaborations with artists like Salvador Dali so this made sense for us.”

BD Barcelona Design was the first design brand in Spain and was established at a time when Spain was isolated from the rest of the world under the Franco dictatorship. The company began producing and importing classic pieces by designers including Antoni Gaudi and Charles Rennie Mackintosh as well as collaborating with figures including Salvador Dali.

In recent years the brand has collaborated with designers including Konstantin Grcic, Doshi Levien and NHDRO. See all our stories about products from BD Barcelona Design.

BD Barcelona Design celebrates 40th birthday with hand-painted vases by Jaime Hayon

Hayon created his first project for BD Barcelona Design – a mail box – in 2003 while working as head of the research department at Benetton’s creative research centre Fabrica in Italy. A year later he returned to Barcelona and set up his own studio, designing the Showtime vases for BD Barcelona Design alongside projects for clients including Camper, Lladró and Bisazza. See all our stories about design by Jaime Hayon.

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Deviazione and 3Dzionale by Guido Garotti

Italian designer Guido Garotti worked with traditional ceramicists to create a hand-painted vase with the appearance of a stereoscopic image and a pair of road signs that look like decorative plates (+ slideshow).

Deviazione and 3Dzionale by Guido Garotti

The project began when designer Guido Garotti was invited by the cultural association Gruppo Acca to take up an artist’s residency in Albissola, a small town in northern Italy known for its traditional ceramics.

Deviazione and 3Dzionale by Guido Garotti

“Once I got there, I was so impressed by the ability of the local painters executing their traditional decoration that I decided to design something to highlight their talent,” Garotti told Dezeen.

Deviazione and 3Dzionale by Guido Garotti

“They embraced the project with enthusiasm and curiosity, following my directions with outstanding precision. In both projects the result is so neat that it is hard to believe that they were painted by hand,” he added.

Deviazione and 3Dzionale by Guido Garotti

Garotti explored the local “Antico Savona” style, which is traditionally blue and white but also has a red and white variant.

Deviazione and 3Dzionale by Guido Garotti

He then combined these two styles in 3Dzionale, a vase decorated with the same image twice to create a stereoscopic 3D image – although not a perfect one, according to Garotti. “As the vase is hand-painted, it lacks the mathematical rigour that is necessary for a real stereoscopic image,” he explained.

Deviazione and 3Dzionale by Guido Garotti

The other project, called Deviazione, is a pair of ceramic road signs in the two traditional colour varieties, each hand-painted with reclining figures and winged babies known as putti.

Deviazione and 3Dzionale by Guido Garotti

“As the general interest towards very traditional ceramics slowly seems to decrease, the craftspeople involved genuinely appreciated this attempt to produce something fresh incorporating their culture and skills,” said Garotti.

Deviazione and 3Dzionale by Guido Garotti

The pieces were offered for sale at Cavallerizza Reale in Turin last weekend as part of the Operae design exhibition.

Deviazione and 3Dzionale by Guido Garotti

Garotti graduated from the University of Florence’s Industrial Design course before studying Furniture Design at Sheffield Hallam University in the UK. In 2011, he and Sehr Khan founded the studio Life Given A Shape.

Deviazione and 3Dzionale by Guido Garotti

We previously featured a series of chairs by Garotti designed to age gracefully and encourage their owner not to throw them away.

Deviazione and 3Dzionale by Guido Garotti

Other road signs and markings we’ve featured on Dezeen include a jumbled up zebra crossing painted on a road in Serbia and a set of illuminated glass and steel road signs in Madrid.

Deviazione and 3Dzionale by Guido Garotti

We’ve featured a number of ceramics projects lately, including an illuminated constellation of ceramic yoghurt pots and a tea service based on the parts of an engine.

Deviazione and 3Dzionale by Guido Garotti

See all our stories about ceramics »
See all our stories about vases »

Photographs are by Gianluca Anselmo.

Here’s some more information from the designer:


In May 2012 designer Guido Garotti was invited by Gruppo Acca of Albissola, Italy (popular in the ’20s to be home to Ceramic Futurism), for an artist residence project aimed towards promoting ceramics as a creative language for art and design. In this context two projects were developed exploring the local decoration.

The decorative code named “Antico Savona” identifies a particular style that was born and evolved between Savona and Albissola (Liguria, Italy) around the middle of the XVII century. Very popular in the white/blue version, the style developed a white/red variant and a fully coloured option can also be found. Traditional objects decorated with the Antico Savona style were once highly looked after, however as fashion evolved, these artworks today seem to have lost much of their appeal. The two projects “Deviazione” and “3Dzionale “, aim to utilize this local traditional expertise to obtain a contemporary result.

With obvious wit, Deviazione (Diversion) makes use of the chromatic analogy between road signs and the traditional decoration for a courageous proposal: to realize the local street signs with the Antico Savona style. The result is bold however possibly too precious to be realistically used on the streets.

3Dzionale (3Dtional) through an adventurous time travel puts forward an unusual hybrid: a three dimensional version of the Antico Savona hand decoration. Although without rendering – of course – an impeccable stereoscopic image, the project brakes the schemes which froze the Antico Savona for the last few centuries. The funny thing is that such an original and culture jamming result can be achieved simply by repeating twice the same age old decorations.

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Exploding Vases

Le photographe allemand Martin Klimas nous propose de découvrir cette série de clichés immortalisant l’explosion de plus de 10 vases. Utilisant une machine propulsant une bille d’acier à grande vitesse, l’artiste présente « Exploding Vases » avec des images très réussies à découvrir dans la suite.

Exploding-Vases9
Exploding Vases14
Exploding Vases12
Exploding Vases10
Exploding-Vases9
Exploding Vases8
Exploding Vases6
Exploding Vases5
Exploding Vases3
Exploding Vases2
Exploding Vases9
Exploding Vases1
Exploding Vases
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Dewar Glassware by David Derksen

Dutch Design Week: a Victorian scientist’s laboratory experiments inspired Dutch designer David Derksen to create these glass lamps and vases, which have double walls like a Thermos flask.

Dewar Glassware by David Derksen

The Dewar range is named after 19th century scientist James Dewar, who was researching absolute zero temperature when he invented the isolating container that became known as a Thermos flask.

Dewar Glassware by David Derksen

“Laboratory glassware has a very specific formal language,” Derksen said, explaining that the glass tubes are shaped on lathes under extreme heat, while rubber parts are often used in the laboratory to seal or connect the containers. “The material combination is both functional and aesthetically beautiful,” he added.

Dewar Glassware by David Derksen

In Thermos containers, a thin layer of silver is sandwiched between two walls of glass to reflect heat and maintain the temperature inside the flask.

Dewar Glassware by David Derksen

The Flask Vase and Flask Light in Derksen’s collection are made from two layers of glass, between which are layers of silver salvaged from old coffee flasks.

Dewar Glassware by David Derksen

The Dewar Light and Dewar Vase are made from borosilicate glass that has been darkened by radiation. The bases of the lamps and vases are made from silicone rubber.

Dewar Glassware by David Derksen

The project was on show as part of an exhibition called Objects for Sale during Dutch Design Week in Eindhoven last week. See all our stories from Dutch Design Week.

Dewar Glassware by David Derksen

Derksen graduated from the Design Academy Eindhoven in 2009 and completed his masters in Industrial Design Engineering at TU Delft before setting up his studio in Rotterdam.

Dewar Glassware by David Derksen

In Milan this year Derksen worked with designer Lex Pott to create selectively oxidised mirrors for an exhibition called The Front Room.

Dewar Glassware by David Derksen

We previously featured Benjamin Hubert’s collection of glassware inspired by laboratory equipment and Maarten De Ceulaer’s series of coloured lights inside glass vessels and beakers.

Dewar Glassware by David Derksen

See all our stories about glass »
See all our stories about lamps »
See all our stories about vases »

Dewar Glassware by David Derksen

Photographs and styling are by Camille Cortet.

Here’s some more information from the designer:


The Flask Vase, Flask Light, Dewar Light and Dewar Vase are the first outcomes from a continuing investigation into the beauty, form and manufacturing techniques found in scientific glassware. As a direct result of the production processes used in its creation, Laboratory glassware has a very specific formal language. All vessels and instruments start as glass tubes that are reshaped on lathes under extreme heat. Rubber parts are often used to connect the various instruments or to seal the vessels. Acting as a malleable and gentle buffer for the glass, the material combination is both functional and aesthetically beautiful.

Dewar Glassware by David Derksen

This contrast of materials and their aesthetic formed the starting point for this investigation. The project is named after James Dewar, who was in search of the absolute zero temperature point and invented the Dewar flask or isolating container. These containers (also known as Thermos flasks) use two walls of glass which sandwich a thin layer of silver to reflect the heat. These relatively complex parts can be found inside the everyday coffee flask and were the inspiration for this project and its initial outcomes.

Dewar Glassware by David Derksen

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