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Archived entries for Recessionista

ICFF 2010

Arriving with rather low expectations due to all the talk of depressed economies cranking out depressing designs, I was happy to find that not everything at this year’s ICFF was a frankenstein of last year’s show. For starters, this piece was all over the fair as well as the off-site shows and is part of the latest collection from furniture company Council, a company out of SF that won me over last year with their stunning Periodic Table. This year’s room divider still maintains the sort of Designer’s D.I.Y. feel that permeated the show.

Big themes were definitely eco-conscious materials and subtle pared down design. Taking material design to the next level was this “wooden fabric” lamp titled Miss Maple, featured in the Design Deutschland exhibit and made by german designer Elisa Strozyk.

Not all young designers are as experimental with traditional materials. For many, the emphasis on environment has led to a reexamination of the less eco-impacting past. Studio Dunn, winner of this year’s Editor’s Choice award for new designer, is going traditional not only with materials and design, but with manufacturing methods as well. All of the designs are manufactured in the good ol’ US of A by artisans in their native state of Rhode Island (this local pride also informs the name of each piece). Studio Dunn’s design sense references the hand-crafted nature of mid-century modern classics like Haywood Wakefield while also tapping into contemporary collective desires to be equal parts environmentally and aesthetically conscious.

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Scattered about and hidden in the nooks of the all the furniture booths were a couple of really exciting product and jewelry finds from some promising up and commers. Starting with the smallest – jewelry from designer Hao Shi was selling at the designboom mart like hot cakes. Shi’s designs consist of tiny, fantastical creatures made from an opaque white resin.

Hao Shi’s booth was too crowded to take photos. Fortunately I just couldn’t leave without my very own Rabbit X Ring pictured here next to the beautiful package it came in. I have since received many compliments from all sorts of crowds including design snobs and random children on subways. It doesn’t get much better than that!

Everyone’s favorite from Brooklyn Designs, FRAMEicariums was also selling at designboom mart. For those who haven’t already seen them, these are real live ant farms in frames! Absolute genius!

And last but not least, for all of you out there with an irrational fear of numbers, Qlocktwo has found a solution- a typographic matrix that spells out the time in a way we can all understand. If only there was a version for my phone, I just might start being on time to things.

Today, in Smooshed-Together Furniture

My apartment is pretty small, which is probably why I’m a sucker for any furniture with multi functions.  Jon O’Conner’s apartment also small, which inspired him to design this fantastic two-for-one Table Chair.  Most of the time this piece pretends it’s just a regular coffee table, holding your fish tank, storing your magazines, books and small radios.  But on special occasions – BAM! it turns into a chair. Best yet, it’s RTA, making it extra perfect for nomadic youngsters with small living spaces.

Someday, maybe I’ll have a table chair in my apartment . . . someday – Mike

See Also: O’Conner plays, ridiculously, with stool
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Sorry neck, that scarf is for butts now

maria-figueira-hammock-2

Normally speaking, hammock chairs don’t turn my crank.  This is because usually they look like this and fit somewhere between papasans and tuna helper on the things-that-remind-me-of-janky-first-apartments scale.  Right? Right.

Be that as it may, it is still possible to create some pretty baller minihammocks.  I know it’s true because of this thing Patricia Urquiola did for Moroso a while back.  And now, presented for your consideration: this thing!  Which is called the Hammock’s Hammock and is by Argentinian-American designer Maria Figueira.  Now, it’s obviously got this nice cloth-vs.-angles thing going on, but what’s interesting here is that she whipped it up in seconds* with only the materials every designer-maker has lying around the house: some steel rod, some oxy-acetylene tanks, and a stolen pashmina.  It’s like the furniture equivalent of a thanksgiving sandwich.  Only without the bacteria.  What what!

More pics after the jump!

*maybe, or days

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DIY M-U-J-I

If I owned any CDs this would be hot shit

If I owned any CDs this would be hot shit

You could either buy Naoto Fukasawa’s totally fucking badass CD player for Muji at the MoMA store for $178, or you could go to this mysterious vvork spoof  site Vvank and learn how to build it yourself for basically a dollar.  Too bad we half.com’d all our cd’s a few months ago when the recession hit.  For those of you who haven’t done that yet, just a couple Alanis Morisettes should do the trick – then you can play the rest on this!

D.I.Y. Muji CD player guts



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