Archive for the ‘Products’ Category

Friday, May 11th, 2012

Product Placement 4.5: Heart of Glass, 5/20, with Harry Allen, Omer Arbel, Bec Brittain, Johan Liden

Product Placement 4.5: Heart of Glass
Sunday, May 20, 1-3 pm (presentations start promptly at 1:30pm)
WANTED Design
269 11th Avenue (btwn W. 27th and W. 28th Sts.)

As we continue with our spring term of guerilla Product Placements, we evoke our love of Blondie and invite you to our latest edition, held as part of ICFF extravaganza WANTED Design. This installment explores a range of innovative glass items and will feature:

• Product and interior powerhouse Harry Allen

• Architect and Bocci creative director Omer Arbel

• Lighting designer extraordinaire Bec Brittain

• Aruliden principal and product provocateur Johan Liden

Open to all with no RSVP required, although trade guests may pre-register for free at 2012.wanteddesignnyc.com/attend

Monday, April 9th, 2012

Audi’s Product Placement: R18 Ultra Chair by Kram/Weisshaar

The prototype R18 Ultra Chair (photo courtesy of Tom Vack).

You’ve got to give a tip of the hat to luxury car brands. In their race to differentiate themselves and each new model, they’ve continued to experiment with different platforms and media, from BMW’s shortform films to Aston Martin’s art collection. Audi’s latest gambit—a chair made by the Munich- and Stockholm-based design duo of Reed Kram and Clemens Weisshaar—plays upon the auto manufacturer’s interest in products and technology. Dubbed the R18 Ultra (after Audi’s Le Mans-winning racecar), the seat will have its shape crowdsourced from users at next week’s Milan’s Salone Internazionale del Mobile. The chair’s final form will be presented to the public in December 2012 at collectors’ fair Design Miami.

The many sensors on the R18 Ultra prototype.


The R18 Ultra prototype chair comprises three main components: a carbon composite seat, a carbon-rubber composite backrest, and aluminum alloy legs. During the Salone, Audi and the designers will set up the chair in a testing booth in the courtyard of the city’s Palazzo Clerici and invite visitors to sit on it. Each user’s unique physical impact on the seat will be registered in realtime via industrial sensors integrated into the chair; the results will be displayed via a multi-colored simulation on a wall inside the booth. At the end of the week, Kram and Weisshaar will study the gathered data and optimize the final product accordingly, shedding every excess gram of weight.

A simulation of the Milan installation


The experiment, claims Audi, will elucidate Ultra (the car’s) principles of “state-of-the-art lightweight construction, technology, and design…[beginning] with the raw materials sourced for production all the way through various manufacturing stages.” Fair enough, but it seems like an awfully esoteric way to show off the auto’s gee-wizz advances.

The inspiration: the R18 Ultra race car.

Friday, February 3rd, 2012

Product Placement at MAD: Design for Kids Feb. 16 @ 7pm


What’s going to be the first Product Placement event of 2012? Glad you asked. Kimberly and I are talking the series to the Museum of Arts & Design Feb. 16 for a special fundraising version that’s part of the museum’s The Home Front 2012: American Design Nowseries. The evening’s topic is design for kids, and the speakers will be a mix of new names and old friends:

DwellStudio founder and creative director Christiane Lemieux
Rockwell Group principal and studio leader Barry Richards
• Furniture, lighting, and toy designer extraordinaire David Weeks

The details:
Feb. 16 at 7pm
Museum of Arts and Design
2 Columbus Circle
 New York, NY 10019
 


Tickets:
$12 general /
 $10 members and students
 / $6 Product Placement mailing list (use discount code MADPRODUCT). Call 800.838.3006 or click here to purchase tickets.

Architects & Artisans also just did a piece on us and the event. Check it out and leave a comment. And rest assured, we’ll be adding info soon about additional forthcoming PP events.

Wednesday, October 5th, 2011

There’s a New Marketplace in Town

Look out 1st Dibs and One Kings Lane, because another online market, Dering Hall, has just launched, making high-end custom furniture that was formerly only available to the trade accessible to the general public. The site offers permanent online storefronts for architects, interior designers, dealers, and “artisans” to display small selections of their products. Additional content includes Q&As with designers, and guides on decorating (current offerings include lighting strategies and what to look for when purchasing a sofa). For those impatient types who don’t want to wait the typical 6-plus weeks for custom pieces, Dering Hall offers an “available now” search option, so you can satisfy your need for a demilune table or Dunes and Duchess lamp in record time.

Wednesday, September 14th, 2011

Bing.com “Finds” Uhuru Design

Occasionally I indulge in a bit of reality television, and during The Rachel Zoe Project last night, I was pleasantly surprised to see a commercial for Microsoft’s Bing.com search engine, featuring Robert and Cortney Novogratz (of The Novogratz). In the ad they use Bing to find a use for wood scraps, and come upon New York-based Uhuru Design and their signature Stoolen table.

Uhuru Design's Stoolen Table

Stoolen is one of Uhuru’s original designs, and has stood the test of time (or at least the seven years since RISD grads Bill Hilgendorf and Jason Horvath founded the design/build company). The Stoolen tables are created from hardwood scraps generated by the many local woodshops in Brooklyn, collected by Uhuru, and carefully pieced together. To complete the “up-cycling” product, Stoolen is also available circled by a found bicycle rim, to provide a bit of sustainable shine to the wooden piece.

The popularity of the Stoolen and ready availability of scrap wood from their many projects has prompted Uhuru to look for other ways to use the material. They now offer a Stoolen lamp, and the “Puzzle” series, which features short lengths of the wood scrap formed into mirror surrounds and tops for a console table.

Uhuru Design's Puzzle Mirror

We’re delighted to see this talented young studio being recognized for one of their first designs – oh, and Rachel Zoe’s premiere collection looks pretty solid too.