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Packaged in a new sleek and sophisticated design, the N1 Vision wireless router offers an easy way for you to view your network's broadband speed, computer bandwidth usage, and the status of your connected devices - all from an easy-to-read display.



via Belkin

Shock Proof is a collection of existing vases upon which Tjep. has applied the Do Break principle. When broken the vases don't fall apart and remain watertight because of a special rubber coating that is applied to the inside. The cracks form a new superimposed decorative pattern, witness to dramatic events to which the vases may be subjected: anything from a lovers quarrel to earthquakes.



via Tjep

Sometimes the most beautiful form of an object is the classic form it was created in. Designed for large spaces in mind, Lampost features 5 lamp shades in their most rudimentary forms. They are arranged on a metal platform to portray a random and asymmetrical facade. Not only does it exudes a fine touch of contemporary art, it pays due tribute to design at its most bare and elementary.

After the highly successful Time Tuner clock, Antrepo is designing a minutes edition clock with the same style, same base of design but more colourful touch and more digitalized.
The Minu Tuner is based on the linear flow of time and it have a led based screen, line indicator for minutes, big numbers for hours. It's colour options; red, yellow, blue, orange or green and the dimensions are 340x65x65mm.
The Minu Tuner is based on the linear flow of time and it have a led based screen, line indicator for minutes, big numbers for hours. It's colour options; red, yellow, blue, orange or green and the dimensions are 340x65x65mm.





via Antrepo

While we have seen many pendant light featuring flowery or swirl shape, this lionfish pendant light at least show us the different. Designed by Melbourne-based lighting company, Alex Earl, the lionfish pendant light is a unique shade emitting a luminescence from the intriguing form of a deep-sea creature.


Made by polypropylene, besides functioning as a lighting source, the lionfish pendant light can act as an impressive art piece in the space its' exist.
ente.com.au has a cool rollover animation of the original lionfish, which was made for an exhibition at Craft Victoria click here to see it


via alexearl | indie.com
ente.com.au has a cool rollover animation of the original lionfish, which was made for an exhibition at Craft Victoria click here to see it


via alexearl | indie.com

Critically acclaimed designer Marloes ten Bhömer produces shoes that are both provocative and otherworldly. Her work fuses artistic and technological experiment in order to discover shoes anew.
Born in Duiven, the Netherlands, Marloes ten Bhömer studied product design at the Higher School of Arts Arnhem before receiving an MA in design at the Royal College of Art in London. Marloes currently focuses on innovating footwear. Her cutting edge, distinct shoe designs offer an alternative to existing design languages and typologies. They have a design language that is built on clean lines, materials, and construction techniques that are closer to design and architecture than women’s fashion. They allow women the incredibly rare chance of freedom from conventional style clichés and codes, because they do not conform to the existing codes.




Marloes ten Bhomer's experimentation with 'new shoe typologies' began when she was a child and slathered an old pair of her mother's shoes in papier-mache to exaggerate their shape. Twenty years later, when looking for a way to create a shoe of varying thickness, the 26-year-old Dutch designer remembered her mother's heels and began to experiment. The result was a shoe made from leather-mache, which was followed by forays into carbon fibre, untearable paper and shrink-wrapped leather, often producing shapes that better resemble architectural models than shoes.


Ten Bhomer's current line of footwear, which she established after working on a shoe engineering project for Alexander McQueen in 2002, is an inspiring example of how to turn fantastical shapes into technically sound products. "I'm interested in designing objects that ignore or challenge conventions in order to make the product-design world less generic," says the London-based designer. "l rethink what an object can look like or how it can function. There can be more to clothes." In her efforts to change an object whose form has shifted only slightly over centuries, and in her wide-ranging investigations into unconventional materials, shapes and construction methods, Marloes ten Bhomer is a Hussein Chalayan for the extremities.
“If the key commandment of glamorous, upscale shoe design for women is to amplify and exaggerate the curves of the human foot, ten Bhömer’s shoes are riotous and sensuous sinners” Shumon Basar, design and architecture critic.



via Marloes ten Bhomer




Marloes ten Bhomer's experimentation with 'new shoe typologies' began when she was a child and slathered an old pair of her mother's shoes in papier-mache to exaggerate their shape. Twenty years later, when looking for a way to create a shoe of varying thickness, the 26-year-old Dutch designer remembered her mother's heels and began to experiment. The result was a shoe made from leather-mache, which was followed by forays into carbon fibre, untearable paper and shrink-wrapped leather, often producing shapes that better resemble architectural models than shoes.


Ten Bhomer's current line of footwear, which she established after working on a shoe engineering project for Alexander McQueen in 2002, is an inspiring example of how to turn fantastical shapes into technically sound products. "I'm interested in designing objects that ignore or challenge conventions in order to make the product-design world less generic," says the London-based designer. "l rethink what an object can look like or how it can function. There can be more to clothes." In her efforts to change an object whose form has shifted only slightly over centuries, and in her wide-ranging investigations into unconventional materials, shapes and construction methods, Marloes ten Bhomer is a Hussein Chalayan for the extremities.
“If the key commandment of glamorous, upscale shoe design for women is to amplify and exaggerate the curves of the human foot, ten Bhömer’s shoes are riotous and sensuous sinners” Shumon Basar, design and architecture critic.



via Marloes ten Bhomer

Heart this China by Babara. Just nice!
Designed by Barbara Barry, the Musical Chairs Giftware Collection features silhouettes of Barbara's favorite chair designs on crisp white china. This iconic range pays tribute to Barbara's success in furniture design while bringing a stylish and graphic element to serving.
Designed by Barbara Barry, the Musical Chairs Giftware Collection features silhouettes of Barbara's favorite chair designs on crisp white china. This iconic range pays tribute to Barbara's success in furniture design while bringing a stylish and graphic element to serving.
The Musical Chairs Giftware Collection features a tea set including a teapot, four teacups and four saucers. To coordinate, there are two Sets of Plates, perfect for dessert or petit-fours, available in 8" and 10" plate diameter. The Musical Chairs Gift Collection is also a great accent to the Top Note fine bone china pattern. Made in England.


For those who not know, Babara Barry is among the world's most influential and talented designers. Her name stands for unique blend of sophistication and livability. Babara's homes are as comfortable as they are beautiful, as simple as they are refined, and as peaceful as they are powerful.
Babara has received numerous awards and honors throughtout her career. In 2005 she was honored to become one of 'House Beautiful's "Giants of Design" and Elle Deco International "Designer of the Year". She has been inducted into the Interior Design Hall of Fame by Interior Design magazine, included in Architectural Digest's "AD 100", as well as House Beautiful's " 100 Best Designer". Additionally, the pacific Design Center in Los Angeles awarded her its "Star of Design", and Traditional Home magazine named her "Designer of the Year."


via Wedgwood | Babara Barry


For those who not know, Babara Barry is among the world's most influential and talented designers. Her name stands for unique blend of sophistication and livability. Babara's homes are as comfortable as they are beautiful, as simple as they are refined, and as peaceful as they are powerful.
Babara has received numerous awards and honors throughtout her career. In 2005 she was honored to become one of 'House Beautiful's "Giants of Design" and Elle Deco International "Designer of the Year". She has been inducted into the Interior Design Hall of Fame by Interior Design magazine, included in Architectural Digest's "AD 100", as well as House Beautiful's " 100 Best Designer". Additionally, the pacific Design Center in Los Angeles awarded her its "Star of Design", and Traditional Home magazine named her "Designer of the Year."


via Wedgwood | Babara Barry

Offi's Nest Crib (formerly Ooba Nest Crib) designed by Scott Wilson combines simple iconic style with the integrity of materials that today's parent expects. The Nest Crib features the highest quality walnut or maple veneers which is seamlessly applied to a bent plywood frame. The Nest Crib includes a toddler day-bed conversion panel to sustain the life of the crib and adapt to your child's changing needs.
The shell is made of bent plywood, slip matched cathedral veneer in walnut or maple while the rails are painted hardwood with protective clear-coat with a high polish metal base.
*Note: I'm sure swissmiss will like it!*




via Offi | mnml
*Note: I'm sure swissmiss will like it!*




via Offi | mnml

A reminiscence of the classic design, embodied within a modern contemporary form. It brings back the classic design and fits it seamlessly into the modern homes of today. A unison of the past and the present.
Vintage Shelve by Jaren Goh for MUNKII Lifestyle is a cupboard with no different from a traditional cupboard if we judge the outside shape, a rectangular cupboard. But the creative play is the inside. By embedding a classic cupboard into a modern form, & we get a cupboard with an (Alien?) hiding inside....



via Jaren Goh Design



via Jaren Goh Design

Projector lamp designed by UK-based hyuh jin lee is a fun twist on conventional pendant lamp. By adding a layer of printed OHP film, the shadow of image project form the lamp will define a table's function such as a dining table Or working desk.
I just thinking may be the projector lamp will come with a set of interchangeable printed film with different images. Beside the plate & cutterly, stationery...may be some image of hamburger or roasted chicken will do just fine!


via coroflot


via coroflot










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