Tag Archive for 'Design'

My Private Sky

Kram Weisshaar designs a series of plates for Nymphenburg called My Private Sky.

kram_weisshaar_nymphenburg_myprivatesky_concept1

Submit your birth data including place and time (date, hour and minute of birth) and Nymphenburg will generate the stars and constellations above the exact location and time. 

plate

legend

 

set

Photos copyright kram/weisshaar, Frank Stolle.

I, Wanderer Business Cards II

Just found a stack of biz cards from a trip to Syd/Mel last year.

Enjoy.

Best fish and chips in Sydney.

One of the best coffees in Melbourne. Maybe best gelatto.

Cool shop filled with one of a kind jewelry and objects.

Arguably the best pizza in Melbourne.

One of my favorites.

Fantastic cafe in Sydney CBD.

Monday. Bondi.

I, Wanderer Word Cloud

Desigual Me&You Collection Primavera/Summer09

When I think of Desigual I think of Custo. Of course when I think of Custo I think of Desigual. I can’t help it. This is not a bad thing as each brand is incredibly artistic AND both labels smother their clothes in detail. 

I like the logo – yes it’s another helvetica type treatment – however the inverted ’s’ adds just the right amount of irreverent personality. Their website sums it up: Atypical Spanish Wear since 1984. 

Each line on this shirt is fantastic.

So many circles …

Great type treatment with paint splatter and a continuation of the Below Summer’s Intense Color theme. Go to Desigual’s website and check out the Campaign Catalog, Video and Catwalk.

Desigual has US stores in San Franciso, Seattle and a few locations in Florida.

Online here.

New Lamp by the.

I like this lamp — inspired by SANAA’s design for the New Museum.

Each piece is hand made using laser cut translucent white acrylic with a cool-white fluorescent bulb. Available at the website. $1200

Chiodo Online Store

Chiodo updated their site to include an online store with a limited range of shirts and accessories.

 

Graniph World Tshirts Design Award 2009

Check graniph.com for more detail on their World Tshirts Design Award.09 running from 1 Feb – 28 Feb 2009. Grand Prize is 1,000,000yen.

 

I, Wanderer Business Cards

A project I’ve wanted to start for a while now has been posting some of my favorite images and designs from my business card collection. Hopefully you can find some creative inspiration amongst these unique business card designs. 

Jeffrey Burk Design, Seattle

 

Prism, Harvey Nichols Restaurants Limited, London

I Dream of Cake, San Francisco

Flowers by Paula Pryke @ Liberty, London

Six Seven Restaurant & Lounge, Seattle

Post Brasserie at GPO, Sydney

Key London Limited, London

 

Chocolate Buddha, Melbourne

 

Spice Market, New York

 

OXO Tower Restaurant, London

Bills, Sydney

 

The Fifth Floor, Harvey Nichols, London

 

Maharishi, London

 

boom noodle, Seattle

 

Whitewater, Manly

 

Icebergs, Bondi

 

Akira, Sydney

 

Senok Tea, Seattle

 

Love + Hatred, Sydney

Yellow Door Café, Melbourne

Billabong Manly, Manly

Jones The Grocer, Woollahra

 

Honolulu Coffee Co., Wailea

 

Paddington Alimentari, Paddington

Buddakan, New York

 

Nudie Jeans, Paddington

North Bondi Italian Food, North Bondi

The Slanted Door, San Francisco

Yauatcha, London

Pier, Rose Bay

Mao Tai, London

 

Space Furniture, Sydney

Stitch, Chicago

Moss, St Kilda

Werkhaus

Sailors Thai, Sydney

Gallery Funaki, Melbourne

Max Brenner, Paddington

 

The Farnsworth House, Plano

Tangerine, Chicago

Great Jones, Seattle

Photo Book Store, UK

Mr Tulk, Melbourne

 

Red Flag Recycled Sailcloth Products

Red Flag breathes new life into old sails. Red Flag takes the material and repurposes it into series of Recycled Sail bags, duffles and totes. Each sail is unlike the next; there might be numbers or other markings. Each bag is a one of a kind creation. They also make shopper totes with nautical themed ‘tatoos’ of pirate flag, octopus or cheeky phrases like “NOW WHAT?”

 

Shoulder tote.

Medium Duffle.

Their website states there will be some new product arriving soon. 

Red Flag Open Studio in December. Check it out if you’re in Vancouver. 

 

B&B Italia Limited Edition Shelf X

We bought one of the last remaining editions of Naoto Fukasawa’s Shelf X for B&B Italia. We ordered the piece from our Interior Design source in Italy and waited patiently for about 22 weeks.

The limited edition Shelf X design created by Naoto Fukasawa is limited to 300 pieces worldwide.

It took us several hours to de-crate the Shelf and get it into position. Davide at Santiccioli fabricated an excellent container that made the trip from Florence to Seattle. Above the shelf hangs Tony de los Reyes’ The Imago Sea Series no. 12. 

We liked the idea of the white corian  Shelf X against a white surface so we painted three walls in the room a modern bright white. This color scheme allows rich grey shadows to wander across the wall throughout the day. 

Notice how the Shelf appears to float.

On top of the shelf sits a series of 8 beakers by Pieter Stockmans.

Unique spaces are created between the vertical forms. Books can stack flat or stand conventionally with vertical bindings.

There are no visible seams in the piece which gives the impression it’s been cut from a single piece of stone. Although the overall appearance is thin and light, the corian is absolutely rigid and can easily withstand the weight of a collection of books and objects. 

Love & Hatred Identity

Just found this online … Nice Idea Creative designed the identity for Sydney jeweler Love & Hatred. 

 

Spacecraft

Textile artist Stewart Russell and Donna O’Brien collaborate on the designs for densely packed silkscreen fabrics. they create a range of products including sheets, pillows, fashion and more.

There are a number of shops I like to visit in GPO Melbourne, one of them is Spacecraft. They’ve done a nice job with their retail space by creating vignettes and smallish environments within the store. Nice detail: some of the prices appear written on the ground in chalk.

Russell has collaborated with the innovative designer of the Zaishu, Matthew Butler.

Spacecraft
City Store
Shop F03 on Level 1 (next door to Akira)
GPO Melbourne
Cnr Bourke & Elizabeth St.
Melbourne VIC 3000

All Aboard Upholstery

There’s a van driving around Seattle with this great logo on it.

I gave them a call to see what they were all about. Found out from Brian Rowe, owner of All Aboard, they are getting heaps of positive comments about the skull logo from everybody. As in, everybody that sees it on the van. So it appears I was just another lunatic raving about their cool skull & scissors identity!

Everybody knows it rains a lot here in Seattle … but did you know boating is a significant contributor to commercial and recreational activities in the region? Although they specialize in marine upholstery, Brian tells me they can upholster anything in your home too.

Maxalto + B&B Italia New Designs for 2008

Maxalto and B&B Italia are showing their new designs from Milan.

Maxalto:

Omero, Antonio Citterio (Apta Collection)

Pathos, Antonio Citterio (Simplice Collection)

Bibla and Eikos, Antonio Citterio (Apta Collection

B&B Italia:

Frank, Antonio Citterio

Link, Jacob Wagner

Back, Patricia Urquiola

Papilio, Naoto Fukasawa

Chiodo – Melbourne

Chiodo is a menswear shop in Melbourne that designs and manufacturers clothing with fine fabrics and unexpected details. Designer Andrew Chiodo takes a conservative icon, like a business shirt, and adds unconventional twists like zippers, buttons or patchwork fabrics. His menswear line includes shirts, pants and t-shirts with additional designer labels offered including Yohji Yamamoto, Comme des Garcons, Junya Watanabe, among others. Here’s the part I like about Chiodo’s designs. On closer inspection, what looks ordinary is actually designed with humorous and irreverent details, giving each piece a singular personality.

Chiodo
Basement
114 Russel Steet
Melbourne VIC 3000
Australia
+03 9663 0044

Mr Tulk – Interior Images

I posted a story about the graphic identity for Melbourne cafe, Mr Tulk a little while ago. I found some interior shots I had taken on a recent visit.

Great space. Great coffee.

The wispy lines and swirly shapes of the Mr Tulk identity get applied all over the interior walls of the cafe. Graffiti meets wallpaper; there’s always something new for your eye to take in. I like the green fixture – the scale of that light is really unique and unexpected. The look of the light is slightly retro but the color and proportion make it feel modern.

 

Pick up your drinks at the copper bar.

One of the seating arrangements features a communal bar along the wall and a tall table. Note the exposed bulb fixtures dangling overhead. The spare black lines formed by the cords pick up on the wall treatments.

The main room at Mr Tulk features additional table seating along the wall, a large communal work table with red stools and unique lamps and a tiny table with a couple of brown metal stools in the foreground. Double-height windows saturate the space in natural light. Note the additional future-retro fixture attached to the wall in the upper left of the picture, this one is black. Adding the two steps up makes a nice division to the space.

James Cameron Interview

I asked Melbourne clothing designer James Cameron if I could interview him for I, Wanderer. He was gracious enough to reply fairly quick, saying yes he would — only after Sydney Fashion Week was over! As it turned out, James was putting in some serious hours finalizing all the details for his latest collection and preparing for the big event scheduled in Sydney on Friday, May 2, 2008.

Although James Cameron is a relatively new label in the Melbourne fashion scene, he’s obtained a reputation for designing particular details. It’s the refined and restrained looks, with unique proportions and scale, that epitomize his collections. During a visit to his studio/shop, located at 18 Oliver Lane, I discovered more about his passion for clothing design and all things modern. I also learned how James takes a look back in time for inspiration and factors a ’slightly familiar’ quality into his timeless design sense.

From the Spring Summer 2008 / 2009 collection.

So the dust just settled from the Sydney Fashion Week show and James got back to me for the interview. Thanks James!

Enjoy.

What’s your typical day at work like?

Depending on the time of year, we’ve just had Fashion Week in Sydney and in the lead up we have been working ridiculous hours. But generally we sit around our large central table and think about what’s on the cards. We refine designs. patterns, cut make and sell all within the same space. We’re sticklers for detail and as simple as our shirts or trousers may look we’re constantly refining and honing our pieces. A lot of coffee, not much eating.

Describe your workspace.

When we started here I really wanted the space to blur the line between studio and store. I wanted to welcome and make comfortable those who came here into a personal space, therefore (theoretically) breaking down any walls or pretension between the designer and his work. It’s a great idea but flawed in many ways. I still love the idea but there are times I wish we could close it off. But it’s part of our history now and I think no matter where we go I would like to always use an element of the idea.

The space itself is very simple. We are just below street level so you enter by going down a small set of stairs and we have small window pane frontage. The design of the space is meant to reference the modernists and post modernists I love.

Any rituals you have to perform before starting to work?

Coffee.

What are you passionate about?

To those outside of design I would sometimes sound like a broken record, whining all the time about bad design, poorly executed work etc, but there are so many great things out there being done by great people I don’t understand why we celebrate laziness and mediocrity. For new things I love what Established & Sons are doing from the U.K. I love food and the way it truly brings people together. It’s one of the most honest things you can do, cook for someone and find out. I love it.

Where do you find inspiration?

Always a difficult question. As a designer I guess you don’t stop finding inspiration everywhere you go. But I love how car design is changing as we have to solve fuel, environmental and congestion problems while still remaining true to to the ideas of freedom, creativity and our desire for speed and style. I read a lot, I love film particularly Jean Pierre Melville, the French Noir style. I love that stuff. I am particularly inspired by the near future, I love the aesthetic problems it poses on design. What will we be doing in 5-20 years time, how much will we change as we accelerate (technologically speaking) if at all? I love the idea of existing in “no-time” at all, that there are familiar notions or gestures but actually are new, for example, in our next season we are working on knitwear patterns that at first look like a traditional cable or fair isle knit but upon closer inspection their patterns are thoroughly modern, they haven’t been seen before and by doing so we’ve created a piece of no historical significance or pretense, except for ourselves. It is subtle but it’s not retro and in turn moves us forward

How would you describe your style? How has this style developed over time?

The style is as above, we want people to double-take and inspect. What looks like black upon closer inspection is super dark aubergine or brown. We want men to be men, not in costume, feel handsome and confident but unlike everyone else. Bring a little of themselves, a little of me, a little of something else. We’re the sum of many parts and this should be reflected in a strong, confident way. Over time the style or more importantly the philosophy has been cleaned up and become clearer. It has been important to us that we establish a design language that is clear and coherent. I still want people to have a sense of discovery and unexpectedness and so we still develop this over time, but at least now our clients know where we are coming from. We’re romantics and we love telling a story whether it be our own or somebody elses.

Which artists, designers or creative people are you inspired by?

In fashion and in life we so often fall into cluster groups, ie you like listening to so and so, you wear this label and drive this car, but you aspire to this etc etc. This is great and it gives us a sense of belonging but there are times that I like to break this model and include something from left of centre and bring it to the group with a new sensibility. That’s a long way of saying that the designers I like are for their philosophies and process, I don’t always like their results but I love their thinking. Nicholas Ghesquiere and Raf Simons are genius, as is Martin Margiela. Dries Van Noten is incredible with colour and his steadfastness, unchanged after so many years. I am obsessed with Donald Judd and from art to furniture, Jean Prouve and the great American and European Modernists.

What’s your Spring Summer 2008/2009 line like? What’s new? And your inspirations?

It has been dubbed “The Getaway”. From this we took our hero and his story from leaving work Friday to his return Monday. The colours are bold and confident but they all work harmoniously and I can’t wait to have them in for Summer. There’s a sense of the late sixties but as previously explained when seen first hand they take on something else and should reference no time but exist on their own. Sounds serious, but this is our starting point. New pieces and silhouettes are deep double pleat trousers. The pleats are stitched flat down the thigh and then let loose giving fullness and then to a subtle taper at the ankle. It’s great new silhouette. Also, great shorter bomber jackets in silk and short finishing trousers, so formality is retained during Summer. They are all great looks that push the label forward but don’t alienate anyone. I’m really looking forward to next season as we further solidify what the label is about.

What makes a good collection?

Clarity, Cohesiveness and fun.

You opened your Flinders Lane shop in 2007 – how’s that going?

If I could make it purely a shop then I’d have something. It’s going well, but as I said earlier, theoretically the idea of a store/studio is great on paper just not so much in practice. I would love to just let go and not have to worry about the consequences of leaving the shop messy, but for now we will keep the store as it is. It works well and conversation is second nature when standing around the pattern table and I wouldn’t want to lose that.

Will James Cameron create a line for women? – seems like the kind of question you’ve heard 1,000 times before or maybe you just can’t be bothered answering since your hands are full with the mens collection…

Not at all. I think designers like Veronique Branquinho have done this perfectly (albeit vice-versa). She masterfully translated her structured womenswear sensibility into menswear without making it feminine but still retaining her core values. Dries is another. I would love to and my training is womenswear. I will have to wait and see, but it is definitely on the cards.

You told me a story about how you had seen a sweater worn by JFK and that you were inspired by it. Could you relate that story to me again?

Well I guess this is an example of story-telling in the store, but I truly believe it adds something to the garment and the experience. I wanted some truly iconic cuts of the sixties and I stumbled across this black and white photo of JFK, sleeves pulled up on this small sailing boat I imagine somewhere in Massachusetts. It had more than just the former presidents preppy style and actually gave me a sense of adventure and optimism. From that we (re)created the sweater. A small crew neck with three stripes on a saddle shoulder pattern. But it needed to prompt questioning so I did some further research and this wasn’t as fortuitous as the finding the photo. Eventually I found some information pertaining to the Kennedy’s yachts. They had several of course. But one in particular was small boat they had while growing up and was called the “Victura”. In turn we named our sweater the Victura, which is a hell of a lot better than The Jack or JFK. I read recently that one of the Kennedy’s boats was sold at auction and another was destroyed by fire.

MELBOURNE SPECIFIC

Favorite Coffee Shop?

Jungle Juice, The European and Mini (my local).

Favorite Restaurant?

I used to be a real foodie but since the store opened I have had to curb my love a little. Il Solito Posto is a great bustling, but somehow still romantic Italian restaurant mid-city. The European for breakfast and Madame SouSou too. Julio’s (literally down by the schoolyard!) in North Fitzroy is very humble and cool. Anything by Andrew McConnell or Maurizio Terzini, who has just opened at the casino which is a big no-no, but he’s managed to pull it off and the food is phenomenal (Giuseppe Arnaldo & Sons). Gils Diner is the one I’m dying to try. So many in Melbourne, we’re really fortunate.

What’s your typical Saturday morning like? (other favorites, routines, etc.)

Generally the search for a great cup of coffee on a Saturday, near the shop continues. I get that, then I’m happy. I have to wait til Sunday to have a sleep in and think about other loves besides design.

The shop at 18 Oliver Lane.

James Cameron website here.

James Cameron Boutique
Level 1 / 18 Oliver Lane
Melbourne Victoria 3000
Australia
PH + 61 3 9662 2506

Marc Newson – Ikepod

Marc Newson relaunched the Ikepod watch brand in 2007 to include three models: Horizon, Hemipode and Megapode. Now the watches are made exclusively in precious metals including platinum, grey gold and red gold.

I just received the new catalog featuring mouth-watering photography of each of the three models.

Beautiful watches … and cool branding by Studio Berg.

Hemipode, black rubber strap, platinum case, 750 grey gold dial and clasp. $44,000

Horizon, black rubber strap, platinum case, 750 grey gold dial and clasp. $39,000

Mr Tulk – Melbourne

Love the mannered-typewriter aesthetic used on the Mr Tulk identity. I never thought I’d say it, but isn’t it refreshing to see layers of dirty grimy type treatments? Its a nice contrast to all the ultra thin, extra kerned helvetica in use out there. This is a really nice design; each letter looks carefully placed next to its neighbor on the page. The interior walls were immersed in a similar style and became especially inspiring. A sublime wallpaper effect was created when letters were packed in tight and the dripping shapes oozed down the wall. Good coffee too. I’ll try to find some images of the cafe and post later.

Mr Tulk, 328 Swanson St, Melbourne VIC 3000

Tobias Grau – Bill Table Light

I recently bought this Bill 60w Table Light for use in my office; my prior table light was a Tizio by Artemide.

Tobias Grau Bill Table Light

Having the on/off switch on the handle is a nice detail as it allows you to easily turn the lamp on in darker conditions. The base is ridiculously heavy and has an ample diameter. No fears about the light going anywhere! $362

Tobias Grau Jane

I like the Jane Lamp for a writing desk. The on/off button in Wenge is a nice touch and I prefer the cord in brown.