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Showing posts with label tableware. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tableware. Show all posts

Monday, March 28, 2011

Donna Wilson



I think pretty much everything that Donna Wilson does is adorable.

Thursday, March 24, 2011

MUTE Soji Tableware



How beautiful is this wooden tableware by MUTE? I want!

Via Spoon & Tomago.

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Vitamin - Drink Bottle Opener



Love these cute and funny Drink Bottle Openers by Vitamin...

Friday, February 18, 2011

Nendo - Forest-Spoon



The Forest-Spoon! Nendo's design for the Japan-wide curry chain restaurant Coco Ichibanya's annual 'Grandmother Curry' campaign, in which 100,000 lucky customers win curry spoons through a lottery.
Spoons are a tool for eating, and our world is full of spoons designed for that function. In contrast, we wanted to make a spoon that would be fun to look at when it wasn't in use. As part of this, we know that spoons are used on their own, but wanted to create a spoon design that would have a new charm when the spoons were brought together. When our spoon is lying on its own on a kitchen shelf, it looks like a single tree. But when you assemble a number of spoons, our design creates a 'landscape' in the home.

Friday, December 10, 2010

Sub-Studio 2010 Gift Guide: Rainbow

This is our last gift guide for this year. Hope you enjoyed them and found a little something for your loved ones! Happy holidays - thanks so much for visiting our blog! You can see all of the gift guides here.


Sub-Studio 2010 Gift Guide: Clear


Sub-Studio 2010 Gift Guide: Gold


Thursday, December 09, 2010

Sub-Studio 2010 Gift Guide: Silver


Sub-Studio 2010 Gift Guide: Brown


Wednesday, December 08, 2010

Sub-Studio 2010 Gift Guide: Purple


Tuesday, December 07, 2010

Sub-Studio 2010 Gift Guide: Green


Monday, December 06, 2010

Sub-Studio 2010 Gift Guide: Orange


Friday, December 03, 2010

Sub-Studio 2010 Gift Guide: Red

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Heath Ceramics - Winter 2010



As always, Heath Ceramics' winter 2010 collection is understated and beautiful.
Following the success of our 2010 hand-dipped Summer Seasonal Collection, we're continuing the technique into the winter season. Introducing two new winter-inspired glazes: Scarlet and Snow Dip—both three-color patterns are achieved through the intersection of two glazes in the hand-dipping process. Together, the collection features strong gradation, as well as subtle variation —in both the overlapping glaze color and the line blend itself.

Monday, September 20, 2010

Ange-line Tetrault - Hidden Animal Teacups



These Hidden Animal Teacups by Ange-line Tetrault are pretty sweet. A fox, an owl or a bear waits to be revealed as you sip your coffee. They are supposedly available through Imm-Living, although I don't see them up on the website yet.

Monday, August 30, 2010

Aurelien Barbry Wine Stoppers and Pourers


Image via Notcot.

These new cork wine stoppers and pourers by Aurelien Barbry for Norman Copenhagen are super nice! The wine stoppers are a sculptural play on the traditional wine cork (they look like little mushrooms!), and the wine pourer looks like a cork stopper, but then pulls apart to reveal the metal pourer...

Via Notcot.

Friday, June 04, 2010

Wannekes Flatware



Wannekes carries some pretty awesome flatware. I love the simplified forms of the Cinque stelle Cheese knife set by Ettore Sottsass (top left). Also in the same language are the Accento flatware and serving pieces by Konstantin Grcic (top right).

My favorite set, though, are the wire frame Certamente salad servers by Konstantin Grcic. Love that he has essentially created a serving set out of bent wire - they call it "metal origami". Lovely!

Thursday, May 06, 2010

Mischer Traxler - Reversed Volumes



How beautiful are these Reversed Volumes bowls by Mischer Traxler? They are cast in ceramic from actual vegetables and fruits. Lovely!

Via MoCo Loco.

Friday, April 30, 2010

Rob Southcott - Totem Cups



We always stack our tea cups/glasses (who doesn't?), so I love that Rob Southcott took the idea of stacking and turned it into a design feature for his Totem Cups.

PS - Maybe I'm being nit-picky, but it always bugs me when a shop doesn't credit the designer. I had to google Totem Cups to find out who had done these.

Thursday, April 15, 2010

Kristine Bjaadal



Spotted Kristine Bjaadal's work over at Omami, and now she's one of my new favorites...The idea behind her Underfull Tablecloth isn't particularly new, but I love the subtlety of her designs. The tablecloth looks like a traditional floral damask at first, but when made wet it reveals a beautiful pattern. I love what Kristine says about the product:
Sooner or later someone is bound to spill, but where this person usually feels clumsy and embarrassed, he will now feel fortunate. An everyday negative situation is turned into a positive experience.

Some stains, like red wine, are hard to wash out and might leave vague colour traces after washing. But since these traces will be formed as figures, the tablecloth will not look stained. The figures will form a pale, shadowy pattern that will grow as the tablecloth is being used and spilled on over time.

This creates stories and can contribute in giving the tablecloth sentimental value – important in a society where we seem to have an increasingly superficial relation to the objects we surround ourselves with.

The concept allows a great collection of patterns. Different patterns will tell different stories. In the prototype, butterflies spread out over the woven floral pattern – creating a layered image. The butterfly pattern resembles the tablecloth itself; butterflies always come as a surprise, they are soundless and suddenly come into view, as if out of out of thin air. They go through a tremendous metamorphosis; starting out as rather dull caterpillars, changing into beautiful, colourful, playful butterflies. A butterfly seems to be free and happy, but at the same time fragile and transient – just like the pattern of the tablecloth.



Also lovely is Kristine's Undertone Decor tableware - just a simple tone on the back produces a beautiful hint of color.