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ICFF

Home Tag ICFF (Page 5)

Lighting roundup.

Feb 29, 2012

click > enlarge

With Stockholm Design Week just behind us and ICFF up ahead, we’ve seen some exciting new ideas in lighting design. Here are some of the best (and worst).

Kristin Five Melvaer

Reminiscent of glowing candles, Melvaer’s Sunday lamps set the perfect mood for waking up, going to sleep or relaxing on, say, a Sunday afternoon.



I also love Ray, which feels more like a sketch for a finished lamp. Due to its “unusual appearance and large size,” says Melvaer, Ray lamps are more like “functional sculptures.”



Pablo Figuera

This Barcelona-based designer also creates sets and graphics, but it’s his Folio lamp I like best. The perfect modern desk lamp, Folio can be easily adjusted to various heights. I also appreciate that the cord is in a bright color, making it part of the design instead of a necessary evil.

Luca Nichetto

Another Stockholm debut, the Vader lamp may have been a crowd favorite but it’s way too bubbly, plasticky, early iMac for me.



Monocomplex

This Japanese studio’s Scene #01 lamp is just too much lamp for me. There are branches, some kind of moon shape and a base that feels like an afterthought. This is also a case where a contrasting cord doesn’t work. I don’t even think Monocomplex knows what it really is. They call it “an illumination lamp…a skinny branch is reaching over a window. suddenly the moon emerges making a picture within frame that is called window completed. The branch is fixed, and moves as time goes. through this, the plane view on the window represents ‘momentary instant’ within three dimensions.”


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Green lighting solutions. 2011 icff.

May 19, 2011


New York Design Week plus energy-efficient plus sustainable equals green lighting solutions.

1] qisdesign
2] aqua creations
3] perhacs studio
4] hulger design
5] peter stathis | joby
6] dcs corp

2011 ICFF editors awards winners.

May 16, 2011

may 14 – 17 nyc international contemporary furniture fair. @ICFF #icff2011 #icff
The much-anticipated 2011 ICFF Editors Awards were bestowed in 16 categories. The ICFF Editors Awards Ceremony took place during the 23rd annual International Contemporary Furniture Fair (ICFF) last night at the ICFF Exhibitors Reception at New York City’s Jacob K. Javits Convention Center. This year’s ICFF Editors Awards Committee: Arlene Hirst, Anniina Koivu of Abitare, Elizabeth Pagliacolo of Azure, Sam Grawe of Dwell, Annie Block of Interior Design, Nadia Lionello of Interni, Bénédicte Duhalde of Intramuros, Paul J. Makovsky of Metropolis.

The winners circle:

Body of Work
Vitra, Booth 1826

New Designer
Rich, Brilliant & Willing, Booth 1936

Craftsmanship
George Nakashima Woodworker, SA, Booth 1147

Furniture
Artek, Booth 1804

Seating
Wilkhahn’s Chassis Chair by Stefan Dietz, Booth 1326

Carpet and Flooring

Ltd. Edition, Booth 1304

Lighting
Wästberg, Booth 1840

Outdoor Furniture
Herman Miller Retail’s Eames Aluminum Group, Booth 1624

Materials
Stone Source’s Mutina, Booth 2026

Wall Coverings
Piet Hein Eek, Booth 2223

Accessories
Angell Wyller Aarseth, Booth 873

Textiles

Teixidors, Booth 926

Kitchen and Bath
AF New York, Booth 1226

Multiple Production
Fermob, Booth 1253

School

Tools at School by The School at Columbia University with Aruliden and Bernhardt Design, Booth 1604

Booth
Tom Dixon, Booth 1104

The ICFF is produced and managed by GLM, LLC. Metropolis sponsors the ICFF. International sponsors include: Abitare, Domus, Frame, Interni, Intramuros, and Wallpaper*. The American Society of Interior Designers (ASID), International Furnishings and Design Association (IFDA), and the International Interior Design Association (IIDA) provide approval.

ICFF 2011.

May 14, 2011

may 14 – 17 nyc international contemporary furniture fair. #icff

Oshibe by tomomi sayuda

Jun 3, 2010

when i rounded the corner of tomomi sayuda’s booth at ICFF she was holding a handful of translucent eggs and placing them into the pods of her light and sound-based sculpture, sending her captivated audience atwitter.

The sculpture itself is a round, nest-like structure made of very soft spun yarn. It’s called Oshibe, the Japanese word for stamen, which is what each pod, five in all, were initially inspired by.

When each egg is placed in a stamen it glows and emits “tender, ambient sound.” The combined effect when all five are in action is like birds quietly chirping in a forest. Unlike the other products as ICFF, Oshibe might not serve a specific purpose or solve a problem, but touching the nest, placing the eggs and listening to the sound they make instantly relaxes you and sets your mind at ease, which is more than can be said about even the most cutting edge designs ICFF had to offer.


Designer:
tomomi sayuda


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Goose cones.

May 27, 2010

They may be neon orange, made of thick, durable plastic and protected by Federal law, but if they’re in your way chances are you’ll run them over.




After all, they’re only traffic cones. But what if it was more than just a cone? What if those bright orange safety indicators were shaped like helpless animals? Would you have the heart to run over a mama goose and a trail of her little ducklings? The answer, in most cases, is no.

This ingenious solution to the traffic cone dilemma is what designer Michael Savona calls the “family dynamic,” a brilliant redesign that goes beyond structural solutions and cuts to the heart of the matter. Savona, who’s currently finishing his Masters in Design of Designed Objects at the Art Institute in Chicago is still sifting through the Department of Transportation’s regulations he needs to meet in order to produce the Goose Cones, but in the meantime you can buy a palm-sized replica that stacks just like the real thing.

Designer: michael savona


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ICFF 2010. Design relevance statement.

May 27, 2010

another perspective at ICFF this year. via design observer [RK]

Emerson doll house.

May 27, 2010

here we go. let’s play house or designer / architect.

newly listed, the emerson house is the perfect home for the modern family. the home has six rooms including a living room, kitchen, library/office, master bedroom, bathroom and child’s bedroom. With an open floor plan and floor-to-ceiling windows, the emerson house enjoys year-round sunlight. the modern house features many extras including mitered-glass corners, two fireplaces, sliding glass doors, solar panels, and recessed LED lights. finally, the house is easy on the environment with only non-toxic and lead-free wood stains and paints.

• 18”H 22”W 36”L
• scale: 3/4″ ( 1:12 )
• lights powered by solar panels
• Designers: tim boyle & doug rollins

a beautiful house deserves beautiful furniture. this living room set creates the perfect atmosphere for entertaining guests, reading a good book or relaxing with family. the set features eleven pieces including TV console, lamps, HD television, sofa, chairs, coffee table, console, side table and rug.

• scale: 3/4″
• 11 pieces
• materials: wood, fabric, leather

ICFF 2010 wrap up 1.

May 22, 2010

The wave of über-hip, W Hotel-esque modern (and modular) design that has swept the globe in recent years is finally, it seems, beginning to subside.


above: a quilt and bed from shimna



above: from parsons student show — can you guess what these are for?



above: textile design from dana barnes

While that school of thought was certainly not lacking in representation at this year’s ICFF, it was clearly giving way to the growing trend towards natural and handmade artisanal goods that made itself known in every category at the convention.

I’m not just talking about sustainable design, though this craft-based movement happens to be that too. If you took a step back from the booths at the show and watched what people gravitated towards, nine times out of ten it’s to something they can touch and feel. That plastic injection molded lounge seating may have been the new, slick thing not too long ago, but it doesn’t appeal to the human touch the way a handmade chair of aged Moravian Oak does.

The judges felt it too, just take a look at the ICFF Editor’s Awards to people like textile designer Dana Barnes, who sculpts fibers into beautiful, totally unique, curl-your-toes-into floor and wall coverings. Or the award to MICA (Maryland Institute College of Art) for best Design School for their exhibit “Material Inspired Concepts and Artifacts” that showed off work from an environmental design class that examined traditional, natural materials and invented modern uses for them.

Elements of the handmade popped up in surprising places, like the Oshibe light sculpture, a woven nest with light-up eggs or at Shimna, a Mennonite furniture company and in the work displayed in Metropolitan Magazine’s Airstream. Stay tuned for highlights from the show.

Resources:
ICFF
ICFF editor’s awards
dana barnes
shimna
oshibe


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