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dmy

Home Tag dmy

The 'simple and surprising' veronika wildgruber.

Aug 8, 2012

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It was easy to miss the small DMY satellite show where Veronika Wildgruber‘s craft-focused products were on display earlier this summer, though I wish I hadn’t. The attention she pays to every aspect of the design process, from concept to execution, is clear even just by looking through her website. Because she has a knack for making hard wood appear soft, the Berlin-based designer describes her work as “simple and surprising.”

The best example of this is Soft Wood, a limited edition collection of chairs that, at first glance, appear to have upholstered seats and backrests but are actually made from wood. Her Wood Bulbs series has a similar soft look, with rounded edges that mimic the form of a traditional bulb, though these are fitted with LEDs. Little Creatures, her latest collection is a modular storage unit that can be stacked one on top of the other for a tower of handmade wooden cubicles, or used alone on the ground, where “they look like little living creatures who conquered our spaces. A bit familiar, a bit strange.”

See the rest of Wildgruber’s work, like her clever Hand Towel, which is equal parts dishcloth and oven mitt.


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DMY 2012: trick, by alberto ghiradello.

Jun 26, 2012

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Alberto Ghiradello is one of eight Italian designers at Dustodesign who showed work at DMY earlier this month. Most recently he won first prize at the Generazione Expo for Tattanimali, a set of educational toys for young children, and he’s designed everything from watch cases, vases, seating and tableware. For DMY he showed a clever kitchen tool called Trick, a chopping board that comes with it its own knife. On one end of the board where a handle might normally be, Ghiradello has made an inset for a semi-circular blade held in place by two magnets on either side of the handle that meet with two magnets on either side of the blade’s slot. Trick is still a prototype, but it can easily be reproduced in a wide variety and thicknesses of wood, even, I suppose, a series of different knife blades, too.

Ghiradello’s Plano serving tray makes equally clever use of materials. The flat metal sheet is machine pressed to make handles on the sides, eliminating the need for extra parts or manufacturing processes.




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DMY 2012: gap chair by oliver reinecke.

Jun 25, 2012

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Designed to meet the needs of live/work spaces, Oliver Reinecke‘s elegant Gap chair is hybrid that can function as an office or dining chair. The chair is shipped in parts and requires user assembly, but with very few components it’s an easy build. This element also allows the user to decide on one of several available configurations.



The Gap chair works nicely with Reinecke’s Hyde table, a simple, streamlined work table with sheet steal legs and a table top with an embedded electronics and cord organizer. Both of these pieces were shown at both Milan and DMY and attracted a fair share of attention for their attention to line and materials.



Reinecke was recently awarded a scholarship from the IKEA Foundation and he currently works freelance at Burge Giebichenstein, Halle, as an Interior Architect and Assistant for new materials and technologies.


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