Archive for the ‘design’ Category

INDEX: Award 2011 Exhibition world tour news

Wednesday, January 25th, 2012

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New cities have been added to the world tour of the INDEX: Award 2011 Exhibition. Big opening in Risør in June!

Since the beginning of the INDEX: Award Ceremony, the finalist designs have gone on a world tour to display the designs and to promote sustainability and Design to Improve Life. This year is no exception.

After opening in Copenhagen in November 2011, the exhibition is set to go to Singapore, in February to kick off the international tour. The exhibition will stay for two weeks before being shipped off to Luxembourg in April. The following confirmed stops will be in Helsinki, the current World Design Capital, Risør in Norway and at the University of Huddersfield in England. INDEX: are also in talks with both Hong Kong and Guangzhou in China to bring the exhibition there later on in 2012.

At INDEX: we are extremely proud to be able to visit these great places with our exhibition, and are very much looking forward to sharing the Design to Improve Life philosophy with the world.

Please see below for the specific dates of the 2012 world tour program:

Singapore: February 4th – 19th
Luxembourg: April 13th – May 13th
Helsinki: May 10th – June 10th
Risør: June 20th – July 20th
Huddersfield: September
Hong Kong: November (pending)
Guangzhou: December (pending)

Bleed til topps med interaktivt design for BeyondRisør

Wednesday, June 22nd, 2011
For andre gang på to år gikk BLEED til topps med visuell kommunikasjon for BeyondRisør. Denne gang ble de tildelt sølv i Visueltkonkurransen. Kategorien var interaktivt design, åpen klasse.
“Beyond Light var et veldig eksperimentelt prosjekt og samsvarer ikke med kategoriene i de klassiske priskategoriene. Vi er derfor enda gladere for at vi vant sølv i kategorien “interaktiv design” i Visuelt. Det er svært positivt at publikum er klare for nye idéer innenfor dette feltet.” sier ansvarlig designer Astrid Feldner i Bleed.

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International Design Award til K8 for solcellelampen Bell

Wednesday, June 22nd, 2011

”Det er en fantastisk opptur for hele K8 teamet å få en slik internasjonal bekreftelse etter å ha investert tusenvis av timer etter at det ble vist for første gang under Beyond Risør juni 2010.”
Marius Andresen og Oliver Butstraen fra K8 dro til Los Angeles og mottok den prestisjetunge prisen 15. mai.  K8 ble tildelt tredjeprisen i IDA International Design Award med solcellelampen Bell i kategorien for  ”Sustainable Living/Environmental Preservation-Proffessional, Alternative energy Source Equipment.   Fw_ VS_ IDA designpris til K8 industridesign AS      (1)_blogbell_lq_blog

Dusk/dawn mirror

Monday, February 28th, 2011

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Droog design has made a beautiful mirror. Inspired by a reflection on a pool of water of the sky at dusk or dawn—the archetypical mirror—has become the basis for this mirror. Hung one way, it reflects dusk, and hung the other, it is dawn.

Light clock

Thursday, February 10th, 2011

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Swedish industrial designer Jesper Jonsson created a clock without a face: ”Movement of a moment”. It uses changes in light to depict the time. In the piece, an hour and minute hand hidden at the back of the clock cause breaks in the clock’s ambient glow. In this way the time is read in the conventional method, but cued by a more subtle visual. A reference to the rhythm of natural daylight.

“Movement of a moment” is on exhibition at the Stockholm furniture fair 2011 in ‘the collector‘, which features the work of graduate students at the HDK school of design and crafts.

SIX-FORTY BY FOUR-EIGHTY

Sunday, January 23rd, 2011

sixfortybyfoureighty_pixelcloud

Six-Forty by Four-Eighty is an interactive lighting installation composed of an array of magnetic, physical pixels. Individually, pixel-tiles change their color in response to touch and communicate their state to each other by using a person’s body as the conduit for information. When grouped together, the pixel-tiles create patterns and animations that can serve as a tool for customizing our physical spaces. By transposing the pixel from the confines of the screen and into the physical world, focus is drawn to the materiality of computation and new forms for design emerge.

Six-Forty by Four-Eighty was created by Zigelbaum + Coelho for the Design Miami/ Basel 2010 W Hotels Designer of the Future Award.

Six-Forty by Four-Eighty from Zigelbaum + Coelho on Vimeo.

Source: Zigelbaum + Coelho

Kwangho Lee: Lifelike Design

Tuesday, November 9th, 2010

kwangho01All Images by Fabian Battistell.

Raised by his grandparents, Kwangho Lee grew up on a farm in the far country side of
Yong Chong in South Korea. He is strongly influenced by his grandfather, working with his
bare hands to build implements for everyday life, and his ability to manipulate materials
and turn them into something useful. Learning traditional crafts from a young age,
this philosophy and habit of creating things taught lee the modesty and ‘down-to-earth’
qualities which are evident in his work today.

Developing one piece at a time, Kwangho’s childhood, among tradition and elements,
is the creative driving force behind his work, uniting design, art and craftsmanship
to make unique pieces in small quantities. Kwangho does not plan in advance how to take
a material and create something functional with it. Instead he prefers a more abstract way
of experimentally applying craft to a material.

kwangho02Kwangho Sculpts masses of styrofoam into light shades.

For one of his projects, Kwangho has taken the mundane material of styrofoam,
sculpting it into objects which results in a particular aesthetic. Using a basic technique
to carve huge blocks of styrofoam, he turns the common into something sublime,
with contouring lines and topographical textures.

kwangho03View of styrofoam carved lamps.

Kwangho’s knitted lights combine the most basic elements – bulb and electrical cords -
with the century-old habit of man to make knots, considering this act of tying and making
knots as a technique inherited and passed down among generations as a means to facilitate
or even maintain life. According to his motto ‘ordinary objects can become something beautiful’,
the initial idea of his ‘weave your lighting’ series is the simple thought of turning the lamp
inside out, getting rid of the lamp’s shade and body and keeping only the essentials.

kwangho05Lamp woven with electrical cord.

The biggest inspiration of this lighting is my mother’s knitting hobbies during my childhood.
Her knitted sweaters and gloves remind me of the good days of my childhood. I saw a neat pile
of electrical wires as yarn and soon decided to knit (weave) my own. Other than knitting
with needles, I developed a new way of weaving the rubber, but solid wires into long,
scarf-like or brush-like forms of lighting. They are each woven by one long piece of wire which
varies in length from 10 – 300 metres.
‘ – Kwangho Lee

kwangho06Knitted Lights.

Kwangho Lee was born in Seoul, South Korea in 1981.
He graduated from Hongik University in 2007.
A pattern of duality and contrast between his rural childhood in humble conditions
and the urban living experience from the years of his school education, play a key role
in the creative handling of his environment today
Kwangho currently lives and works in Seoul with his wife and son.

kwangho09Designer / Artist Kwangho Lee

Source: Designboom


Making Future Magic: iPad light painting

Friday, November 5th, 2010

Making Future Magic: iPad light painting from Dentsu London on Vimeo.

This film explores playful uses for the increasingly ubiquitous ‘glowing rectangles’ that inhabit the world.

“We use photographic and animation techniques that were developed to draw moving 3-dimensional typography and objects with an iPad. In dark environments, we play movies on the surface of the iPad that extrude 3-d light forms as they move through the exposure. Multiple exposures with slightly different movies make up the stop-frame animation.”

Read more at the Dentsu London blog and at the BERG blog.​

Day-Night Lamp by od-do arhitekti

Wednesday, November 3rd, 2010

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Lighting fixtures and lamps use a major percentage of the total amount of energy a household consumes. Using renewable energy for lighting systems can significantly reduce energy consumption. Od-do arhitekti has come up with a sustainable lamp that harvests clean energy during the day for sustainable lighting after dark.

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The lamp is incorporated with photovoltaic cells that can harvest solar energy during the daytime and stores it in an on board battery. After dark the energy stored is used to power a set of energy-efficient LED light bulbs for sustainable illumination.

Source: od-do arhitekti

Tua by Foscarin

Friday, October 22nd, 2010

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Tua, designed by Marco Zito, is the newest addition to Foscarini’s 2010 collection.

A surprisingly straightforward table lamp, developed with profound care, Tua is inspired by the palm of the hand containing a light: a reassuring pose transformed into a single, shaped metal plane that becomes both the support and screen for the lamp. Its simplicity enhances the elegance with which every detail has been designed: the wide angle of its bend, the subtraction of material from one of the two sides and the treatment of the rounded corners. These are details that give a soft, overall continuity to the design and help enhance its friendly, discrete, relaxed nature.

The light source is hidden under the fold that has a fine slot to both reduce heat and add further aesthetic value. When the lamp is on, the light creates a pleasantly intimate glow, indirectly cast by reflection off its supporting surface.

Its bend is a single gesture that gives the object a three-dimensional aspect. The one-piece thick metal component enhances its physical value and resistance. A single colour – pure white – defines the volumes by contrast and reveals the character of a light whose discrete charm is suitable for any environment, from a reading light on a beside table to a spotlight on a worktable. Contemporary and seductive, Tua creates an intimate relationship with whoever chooses it, not only for its function, but because its design is solid and unmistakeable.

Tua by Foscarini – design Marco Zito from designteka on Vimeo.

Source: Architonic