Nitton Stool by Karl-Oskar

Swedish designer Karl-Oskar has created the Nitton Stool.

From the designer:

A stool made in bent wood. The construction allows much weight with minimum material, the form is bent in two ways. The stool is sustainable designed, use of material and choice of glue makes the stool environmentally friendly.

The name of the stool comes from the Swedish word for nineteen. The stools angle is nineteen degrees, put nineteen stools together and you’ll get a circle, a perfect size to easily communicate within a group for example at the library or at the museum.

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Piet Fireplace by Fredrik Hyltén-Cavallius

Swedish designer Fredrik Hyltén-Cavallius has created the Piet fireplace.

From the designer:

Piet is a chimney free indoor stove with a brass reflector, that burns ethanol fuel instead of wood. This gives no smoke or soot and thereby eliminates the need of a chimney.

A layer of rockwool fire insulation between the reflector and the outer shell keeps the outside cool. This means that you can always touch the ceramic body of Piet without burning your hand and also means that Piet can be placed closer to walls or other furniture.

Since it doesn’t require any permanent installation you can just bring it with along when you move or place it wherever you like when you refurnish.

The name is a tribute to Danish architect and mathematician Piet Hein since the stove has the form of a super elliptic egg.

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Hye Ro Hun House by IROJE KHM Architects

Seoul, Korea based IROJE KHM Architects have designed the Hye Ro Hun House.

Full description after the photos….

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Tijolinho’s House by Marcio Kogan

Brazillian architect Marcio Kogan has designed Tijolinho’s House in São Paulo, Brazil.

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The SP210 Rocking Chair by Shawn Place

Shawn Place, a Canadian designer/craftsman, has sent us photos of the SP210 Rocking Chair he has created, and recently exhibited at the IDSWest show in Vancouver.

The chair is made of rift-cut white oak with a soap finish, and hand woven binder cane for the seat and backrest. Every piece is hand-built by Shawn Place, from the shaping of the timber to the weaving of the seat.

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Afro Chair by Yangsoo Pyo

Korean designer Yangsoo Pyo has sent us photos of the Afro Chair he has designed.

Description by Yangsoo Pyo:

“Afro” is a chair that employed the image of the hair style “Afro Permanent hair.” Springs are used to visualize the tangled and puffed up texture of the afro hair. The springs used to create the “Afro chair” are the two-ring binder springs used to bind together a notebook. The two-ring binders do not get tangled but rather wraps around each other.

Therefore, there is no danger of destroying women’s stockings or knitwear. In fact the chair is very comfy. The manufacturing process of this chair begins with a simple iron frame. Then, the springs are used instead of the normal sponge and leather cover.

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OPUS Lamps and Sisters NO Tables by Jean-Paul Marzais

French designer Jean-Paul Marzais has released two new collections, the OPUS Lamps
and Sisters NO Tables.

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Koerner Hall by KPMB Architects

Kuwabara Payne McKenna Blumberg Architects (KPMB) have designed Koerner Hall in Toronto, Canada, as part of the Royal Conservatory of Music’s TELUS Centre for Performance and Learning.

The design of the 1135-seat concert hall is based on the classic shoe-box shape of some of the world’s finest concert halls, and features two balcony tiers above the main orchestra level, and a third technical balcony. Juxtaposed against the shoebox form of the hall, the wood balcony fronts and curving walls create a warm, sculpted ‘liner’ within the rectangular form. Sightlines and adjustable acoustics allow for a broad range of concert types including live televised broadcast.

The signature element is the ‘veil’ of undulating oak ‘strings’. The ‘veil’ forms the backdrop for the chorus at the first balcony level, then hovers over the stage below the fixed acoustic canopy, extending into and over the hall at the technical balcony level. The strings act as part of the acoustic reflection when under the canopy, and then become acoustically transparent over the rest of the space. Balcony fronts and seats, as well as the hall floors are natural oak, contrasted against undulating black plaster panels that line the hall and resonate the dark stone that wraps the exterior of the Hall.

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Reel Light by Guy Brown

Nottingham, England based designer Guy Brown, who is part of the British design collective FARM, has created the Reel Light.

Twin Houses by Predock_Frane Architects

Predock_Frane Architects have designed two Twin Houses in Los Angeles, California.

Full description after the photos….

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The Contour Table and Chair by Bodo Sperlein

London based designer Bodo Sperlein has introduced the Contour table and chair at the
2009 London Design Festival.

From the designer:

The Contour table and chair are part of a capsule furniture collection which continues his signature style of sensual and curvaceous forms – this time however working on a larger scale. The final shapes strongly reflect the design process, based around folding flexible and malleable materials such as paper, to create a series of dynamic curves and forms.

The chair exudes a simple elegance, and has been designed to look like a single sculpted sheet. A ribbon-like profile draws the eye effortlessly around a series of loops terminating in slender legs that conceal their true strength. The lines of a traditional table have been elongated, and embellished with curves. Concaved sections play on negative space, and give the table a ‘lightness’ that contrasts with the weight and solidity of the hardwood from which it is made.

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Ceramic Sculptures by Merete Rasmussen

Merete Rasmussen is a Danish artist who predominately works with one-off sculptural forms in stoneware clay. She has lived and worked in London since 2005.

Merete is interested in the idea of one continuous surface, with one connected edge or line running through the whole form. Clear, clean shapes; soft smooth curves in contrast to sharp edges; concave and convex surfaces; the discovery and strength of an inner/negative space – these are all form expressions that appeal and results in her continuous exploration and expression in many different variations.

Merete’s work is hand built by coiling technique. Stoneware is her chosen material for its qualities – ‘I like to challenge the material and my own skills by building complicated shapes; fragile in the building, drying and firing process which upon firing attain the strength to be handled and positioned without support’. To emphasize the form she uses matt monochrome colours.

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Dondolo Armchair by Milla Rezanova

At the 2009 Abitare il Tempo exhibition in Verona, Italy, Russian designer Milla Rezanova exhibited the Dondolo Armchair.

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Norwich Residence by Clive Wilkinson Architects

The Norwich Residence is the personal home of architect Clive Wilkinson in Hollywood, California.

Full description after the photos….

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The Trestle Legs Table by undpartner(punkt)at

Barbara Gollackner and Michael Walder of the Austrian design studio undpartner(punkt)at,
have created the Trestle Legs Table.

From the designers:

No space, money or time for a real table?  The Trestle Legs need hardly any space when not in use, are easy to put up, and with their straps can even be hung on the wall—a universe of design away the dusty sawhorses in your Granddad’s workshop

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