Archive for the ‘Posted by Kimberly Oliver’ Category

Sunday, March 7th, 2010

Trends in Tile

On February 22, Product Placement 2.1: Explorations in Italian Tile Design took place in front of a standing room only audience at Nemo Tile Company in Manhattan. In a slight variation on the usual format, Julie Taraska and I took over as presenters, and highlighted four trends in tile design, with a featured tile for each trend. The first trend was “Texture”, with a product highlight on Patricia Urquiola’s Dechirer for Mutina. Texture was followed by “Size Matters”, which encompassed the increased availability of tiles in massive and micro sizes, as well as ever-decreasing thickness. The highlight in this category was the colorful micro-tile Anthologia, designed by Davide Pizzigoni for Appiani. Tiles that look like snakeskin, cork, horn, linen, sisal and wood illustrated the trend of “Material Trompe L’Oeil”, with the featured tile being Emilio Mussini’s Bioessenze for LEA. The last trend was “Shades of Green”, referring to increased sustainability in tile design, and the highlighted design was Area’s photovoltaic tile Tegolasolare (the design team consisted of experts in solar energy, ceramics, and engineering, but they credit the 19th-century Italian architect Corinto Corintini with the shape of the tile).

Corinto Corintini's Castle of Acquabella in Vallombrosa

Corinto Corintini's Castle of Acquabella in Vallombrosa - the inspiration for Tegolasolare.

Area's Tegolasolare tiles installed on a roof.

Area's Tegolasolare tiles installed.

The teams from Product Placement, Nemo Tile, and Novita PR.

The teams from Product Placement, Nemo Tile, and Novita PR.

Our thanks go out again to our sponsors, Nemo Tile Company and Ceramic Tiles of Italy, and to the entire team at Novita PR for their help with coordinating the evening (including translation services from the Italian designers).

Look for our next installment in May!

Friday, January 15th, 2010

Woolly Pockets by Miguel and Rodney Nelson

Knoll in brown

Woolly Pocket "Knoll" in brown

There’s good news for urban dwellers longing for a patch of green in their small space. Brothers Miguel and Rodney Nelson have created portable, flexible, breathable gardening containers dubbed Woolly Pockets. The pockets come in a number of sizes, ranging from the Wee Woolly, which can host a tabletop herb garden, up to the Knoll, which can hold a 15-gallon fruit tree, or Meadow, a 4’ square oasis of vegetation suitable for a small garden. For those who are especially space-challenged, Woolly Pockets offers Wallys, containers that can be hung on walls or other vertical surfaces for aerial gardening. Wallys come in one, three, or five-pocket modules, and can be used to create living walls of any size. Not just for home use, the Pockets have a number of potential applications, including bringing gardening to urban kids. Woolly Pockets has teamed up with School Nutrition Plus to install edible gardens in public schoolyards throughout Los Angeles and is working with the city to create community gardens in other parts of the city. If the product story wasn’t green enough, Woolly Pockets are handmade in the U.S.A. from recycled plastic bottles. And while the company offers the pockets on their site in neutral tones of black, brown, and cream, Miguel Nelson assures us that any color is possible (with a significant order), so if you want your Pocket to complement your posies, that is an option.

Massive Wally living wall

Massive living wall made up of multiple "Wally" units

Friday, January 8th, 2010

DIY Design by/from Lindsey Adelman

you make it chandelier by lindsey adelman

In an industry where designers typically struggle to protect their work against unauthorized or low-cost reproductions, Lindsey Adelman has taken a bold step. The talented artist/designer recently relaunched her web presence, and there, among the hand-blown glass and custom metal ceiling fixtures that sell from $3,600 to over $20,000 (depending upon the number of globes desired), is the “you make it” chandelier. Adelman provides detailed drawings, step-by-step instructions, and a materials list complete with recommended sources so that fans of her work can make their own Adelman-designed piece. At least two have done so successfully, and one estimates the cost of materials at $120, plus their labor. Comments in the shelter blog world have been unanimously positive in response to Adelman’s generous gift to the DIY community, but we’re curious as to how other designers and design retailers, especially those whose product offering is readily “knockoffable”, will react to this foray into open source product design. From the Product Placement perspective, it is an illuminating insight into Adelman’s approach to design, but we do wonder if it may lessen the perceived value of her custom work. In other words, this artful experiment may not serve her long-term business well.