Designer Box

Designer Box has launched a new way to promote international design talents.
The concept is simple : Each month an international star designer imagines a new product made only for 1 month delivered at home in a nice numbered wooden box.
People know the list of the designers involved before subscribing but they don't know what they are going to receive : That is the main point of the concept.

So each month, people discover a new product, its designer with its universe, its story and material used (wood, blowned glass, porcelain, ceramics etc,..)….
The first shortlist includes designers like Arik levy, Ron Gilad, Harri Koskinen, Matali Crasset, Kazuhiro Yamanaka, 5.5 designers, Aldo Bakker etc,….
Starting at €29 per month, you can acquire a collector’s item to keep for the future in its numbered wooden box.

 

 

For Designer Box N°0, Sam Baron has come up with a creative table mirror shaped like a diamond in the rough. A little gem inspired by the renowned 1953 film 'Gentlemen Prefer Blondes', starring Marilyn Monroe in her quintessential role, a lover of gentlemen and diamonds. Sam Baron experimented with various gem cuts and settled on the “emerald” cut, which he stretched to an astonishing effect.

tags: accessories, project, new products
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Baker Cookstove

Swedish design Studio Claesson Koivisto Rune has designed the Baker Cookstove - an energy efficient cookstove for the developing world - for Top Third Ventures Ltd, a social impact company operating in Nairobi, Kenya.

The majority of women in the developing world prepare food on a technology called a three-stone fire. It is basically three rocks that support a pot with an open fire in the middle. This cooking method is very inefficient and leads to many environmental and health problems. One very real side effect being that children are denied education and future because they are sent to collect firewood. Wood that every day is found at further distances. The walk takes all day and leaves no time for school.

However, since the three-stone method is a tradition since thousand of years a new stove must allow the user to keep their way of life intact to be successful. The solution is to make a stove that burns wood, but as efficient as possible.
You can still cook over burning wood, but with the Baker stove you need only one third of the wood than before. Based on tests at the University of Nairobi the Baker Cookstove achieve a 56% reduction in CO and 38% reduction in particulate matter.

Local methods of cooking, tools and containers were studied as inspiration and to gain cultural insight. As a result the final shape of the Baker Cookstove as well as its strong colours are reminiscent of traditional African cookware.

"The Baker stove project has inspired us not for the prospect of making money, not for the design itself, but for the extraordinary satisfaction of actually making a tangible, positive difference in many people's lives and for the environment. And eventually, if the end users will come to tell us that they are proud to own this stove, our day is made."

tags: sustainable, outdoor, project, new products
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Ascent light

Ascent is a table light designed for Luceplan by Norwegian designer Daniel Rybakken.
By moving the head along the stem, the light intensity goes from being turned off at the bottom position, to gradually ascending to the full light at the top. This gives the user control over not only the light intensity, but also the spread of the light.

0% light intensity                                                           10% light intensity

100% light intensity

Ascent comes in two versions, with an anchor bolt for tables, or with a base.
The anchor bolt is made impact resistant by having a co-molding of steel and rubber in the base, allowing up to 15 degree of tilt of the stem.

Ascent with base

Photographs by Luceplan

tags: lighting, new products
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Medici by Grcic

'Medici' designed by Konstantin Grcic and launched in 2012 by Mattiazzi is a low chair with a comfortably reclined posture.
"Designing for Mattiazzi was like a personal time travel. It took me all the way back to my professional roots. At the very beginning of my career, I was trained a cabinet-maker. Working with wood is what I learnt from scratch. It is where it all started for me."

"Mattiazzi make furniture in wood, using both traditional means of production and the newest digital production technologies. 'Medici' was born on Mattiazzi’s factory floor. The chair was inspired by the material, the machinery and, of course, the skill and craftsmanship of the people we worked with."

"Right from the beginning, I was looking for a distinct grammar for my design, a language that would express the characteristics of wood. I liked the idea of working with planks. They signify the very beginning of the production process – a tree trunk that is cut into slices. I like the way in which a carpenter joins wood. It is immediate and direct. The construction remains visible and easy to read. Structure turns into form."

Since 2013, the 'Medici' chair is accompanied by a round side table and (foot) stool.

Project assistant: Sami Ayadi (KGID)

All photos: Gerhardt Kellermann

tags: furniture, Konstantin Grcic, new products, wood
designers: Konstantin Grcic
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EK MODERN
Self Book Pub. Blog, on June 1:
"Good post. Thank's a lot for your post."

Interiorally, on May 16:
"Hope this is available on Amazon, if so it's going on my wish list. I'm fascinated by tonal variety ..."

Daphne, on May 2:
"Love it..such a stunning pieces! want to have one"

Andy Grey, on April 26:
"Mainly hardened polyvinyl carbonate type materials are used to make inflatable furniture,so that the..."

David, on April 26:
"What a beautiful creation it is. I really would love to have this master pieces in my home. How can ..."

Joe, on March 20:
"Simple yet elegant. Great design."

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