Showing posts with label design. Show all posts
Showing posts with label design. Show all posts

September 21, 2012

Design Files: Friday Gawkfest

Come Friday and the world is a beautiful place. Maybe it's the weekend around the corner that helps? Whatever the case may be, here's some inspiration/eye candy because obviously you can't focus on that pile of work sitting on your desk.
8 Spruce Street, a 76-storey skyscraper designed by Frank Gehry in New York. 
Want to live here? You can now - it's up for sale.

Lovely, creative packaging for honey by Ah and Oh Studio

Nuevo's Kieren counter stool in walnut. Need this in my life.

The 'Emergence' sculpture by Sakaya Ganz. Stunning. More so because it's made with reclaimed materials.

A geometric pendant light by Finnish designer Weekday Carnival. So modern and elegant.
I love the stone holder.

If there ever was a desk on which to get your work done - it is John Reeve's handmade cobalt laquer and walnut desk.

No idea who designed this, but what a way to sell tea bags. 

I love brightly coloured doors and this citrine yellow one would make me stop in my tracks every time I saw it. This is from American Street Houses, a townhouse development in Pennsylvania designed by Materiality Office.
In the spirit of inspiring design and creativity, have a great weekend!

July 27, 2012

Design Files: Clever Table

I found this gorgeous side table on Etsy by Blisscraft & Brazen. I'm impressed because it's so simple and yet so functional. Perfect for those of us who live in smaller apartments and can't afford the space for little tables everywhere. Doesn't it make you feel like popcorn and a movie?
In the spirit of simplifying our lives, here's to the weekend!

July 25, 2012

The Travelling Gin Co.

Sometimes people surprise you with their ideas. Sometimes they surprise you with how easy and fun they make those ideas look. Sometimes you feel a little (or a lot) envious that you didn't think of it. Perhaps like me, you wish you had more access to said idea. 
Meet Edward Godden and Joseph Lewis who established The Travelling Gin Co. in 2011.
The whole premise of the company is that it's a portable bar for gin cocktails set up in a bicycle.
They can handle small and large orders, and fit in 'the smallest and largest of spaces'.
Best of all, if you see them in the street, you could just ask them to make you a G&T.
Can you imagine seeing this parked ahead of you? Joy!
This is how they roll.
So clever. Definitely calls for a  . . . wait, is that beer they're drinking?
So look out for a bicycle with a black banner next time you're in London. Those lucky English.

July 19, 2012

Motivations

A friend of mine recently asked me how come, if I was so interested in current affairs, that I did not choose to write about them on my blog. He wondered why I would ignore them and instead focus on design and food and books and the random events of my day.
Thing is, my blog is a space dedicated to things like design and art and books. I deliberately choose to keep my writing light because I want my blog to be a space people come to for a nice start to the day or a welcome mid-day break. I want them to feel cheered up, and hopefully a little inspired; even if it is only to try reading a book I’ve blogged about or listen to a song I've recommended.
There is a great deal of beauty and charm and relevance in the mundane, and I enjoy sharing that. I love writing about the brilliance of design and books and food and things that motivate me. I just don't see it as any less important. In any case, we all know what’s happening in the news, and there are far smarter, far more credible interpretations of it than mine that people could read.
So, this space, this blog, is my humble offering to anyone who cares to read it. Thank you, because I really appreciate you stopping by. The fact that you're reading this gives me an extreme case of the happies.
P.S. Speaking of doing things we love, is The Holstee Manifesto not the perfect poster

July 17, 2012

Product Design Gold

Design magazine Core77 recently awarded Vikram Panchal of the National Institute of Design (NID), Ahmedabad an award for 'Load Carrier for Labor'. Produced within the modest budget of Rs. 300, this brilliant load carrier can make the lives of so many so much easier
The beauty of design done well . . . sigh.

July 5, 2012

The Creative Life

I remember each jury I’ve ever had in design school. My sweaty palms, trying to make myself smile and seem confident, my friends’ faces peering back at me from the crowd as I talked about my work, hoping that the jury panel didn’t hate it. Hoping that the questions they’d ask would be something I could handle. I mostly could, but I do recall a lot of explanation-giving. 
Cut to many years later, today, with me working as a designer. I have a great work environment, very democratic (too democratic if you ask me), apolitical and indulgent of people’s time and space. However, everyone has an opinion on design. Whether they even care about colour or form or typography is immaterial, everybody has an opinion on art and design and how things should look. 
That is the very beauty of aesthetics surely, that great unifier of minds and people, but it's also the great misery of the creative soul who spent 5 years being trained in colour and form and typography and visual communication (and must have a more developed eye), but is reduced to producing work that will appeal to the 'masses' that basically, pardon my French, have no taste. It doesn't matter if we think it looks good, the masses need to like it. Bite your tongue, designers. You chose to 'create and inspire' in others and for others, now deal with it. But unless I produce incredible work, how will the masses know any better? They have no idea what I can do. The extent of my creativity. Oh well. My loss. 
So while no one questions a doctor or a lawyer when they roll out their verdicts, a designer or artist or architect is subject to a life of question, doubt and better-ways-to-do-it. 
The college juries prepared us. I guess they knew what they were doing at design school after all.

June 5, 2012

Design Files: Tribute to M. C. Escher

'I am always wandering around in enigmas. There are young people who constantly come to tell me: you, too, are making Op Art. I haven't the slightest idea what that is, Op Art. 
I've been doing this work for thirty years now.' 
- M. C. Escher
Self Portrait, 1929

Maurits Cornelis Escher (1898 - 1972), was a Dutch graphic artist known for his mathematical prints and baffling tessellation constructions. M.C. Escher, during his lifetime, made 448 lithographs, woodcuts and wood engravings and over 2000 drawings and sketches. Escher worked in a time where no one knew what computer graphics were; this is purely his brain thinking and his hand executing. His work is dizzying and incredible, and continues to inspire generations of artists and designers. Look at the prints closely!

Ascending and Descending

Sky Water

The following tribute to Escher was made by Nico Roig in Barcelona. What do you think?



I think Mr Escher would have smiled and carried on with his sketching . . . 

May 16, 2012

Design Files: Philippe Starck

Dapper Frenchman Philippe Starck is probably one of the most famous product designers of our time. Here's why: the man is brilliant
There is such a language to his work; stylish while being utilitarian, fresh while being classic, and brilliantly creative. I keep wondering how his mind works, in how many directions it must pull him, what his wife must feel living with a complete genius and if his children feel like they can never match his standard or whether his employees freeze when he calls them into his studio to discuss work because how do you tell Philippe Starck what you really think about design? Perhaps I'm over-thinking this. 
In any case, here are a few of my favourite Starck designs. 


THE JUICY SALIF, 1990
This polished aluminium juicer for Italian kitchenware company Alessi achieved cult status and is now in New York's Museum of Modern Art. For the tenth anniversary of this design, apparently 10,000 Juicy Salifs were individually numbered and gold-plated. Naturally, these are much coveted collector's items now.

WW STOOL, 1991
This varnished sand-cast aluminium stool was designed for filmmaker Wim Wenders' office.  It was made for people who preferred standing to sitting but still needed some support. Swiss furniture design group Vitra continues to produce this design.


UN ULTIME FRANC, 1999
Before the introduction of the Euro, France commissioned this award-winning commemorative Franc shaped like a wave. This was designed by Starck in collaboration with The Paris Mint. One side of the coin has a numeric '1' and the other has 'un ultime franc' or 'the ultimate franc'. Definitely a collector's item.


LOUIS GHOST CHAIR, 2004
This armchair is made of moulded polycarbonate in the Louis XV baroque style. While very delicate looking, it's supposed to be scratch-proof and weather resistant. Incidentally two of these chairs were featured on Ugly Betty in 2010, as part of Wilhelmina's office. Bet you didn't 'see' them. Ha.

BAOBAB DESK, 2005
The inspiration for this desk, as the name suggests, was the Monkey Bread Tree of Africa, also called the Baobab. The tree is traditionally a place for meeting and communication, and the shape of the desk is based on the seed of the Baobab. Again, this was made for Vitra and remains a classic design.

MISTER KNORR STOOL, 2008
Philippe Starck famously called these porcelain stools 'oversized chicken soup cubes made of gold and platinum' (they're finished with gold or platinum). 
Not too shabby for a 1000 euros.


MARIE COQUINE CHANDELIER, 2011
A cheeky and rather risky interpretation of French crystal company Baccarat's famous Zenith chandelier, this design never fails to amuse me. I keep thinking this the Starck version of giving snooty Baccarat the finger (an umbrella over the Zenith!) but we'll never know because this limited edition set of 120 pieces is all sold out. It looks incredible, don't you think?

FINALLY ALONE, 2012
Who wouldn't want a candle stand as stunning as this in their life?
This plastic see-through parallelepiped is based on Archimedes’ principle (buoyancy = weight of displaced fluid), pushing the candle up as long as it goes over.

See what I mean? Philippe Starck is an iconic designer. If you want to see more of his work head over here. Oh, and just so you know, he listens to a lot of Bollywood music. That explains the colour palette! 

April 11, 2012

Design Files: Black + White Book Covers

Who says you need colour to make a book cover attractive and eye catching?
The covers below illustrate the power of black and white. Their use of contrast and typography coupled with clever concepts make them clear winners in my book.

Designed by David Drummond 
Published by McGill-Queen's University Press


Designed by Doogie Horner 
Published by Quirk Books


Designed by Emily Harwood Blass 
Published by Random House


Designed by Gregg Kulick 
Published by Harper Perennial


Designed by Henry Sene Yee 
Published by Picador


Designed by Isaac Tobin 
Published by University of Chicago Press


Designed by Isaac Tobin 
Published by University of Chicago Press


Designed by John Gall 
Published by Knopf Books


Designed by Sarah Rainwater 
Published by Continuum


Designed by Susanne Dean 
Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt


Designed by Barbara deWilde 
Published by Picador


Design Files: Scandinavians Do It Best


Skog lamps by Caroline Olsson
The wooden base is perfectly complimented by the coloured glass bulbs. 



Themis mobile by Clara von Zweigbergk
This could decorate any space. They're light and breezy and would add a nice pop of colour.



Re-turned by Lars Beller Fjetland
These are made of discarded waste wood carefully and tediously assembled and finished.

Jackie tumbler by Asa Jungnelius
The golden rim of this tumbler makes it different, especially with the gold 
dripping off onto the glass.




Baker sofa by Finn Juhl
This is a 1951 design, but one that still looks contemporary and usable.
The basis of good design.


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