I came across this the other day and I'm a bit surprised I haven't seen it before. The MazeCafé is a cup and saucer with a little maze embossed into the surface of the saucer. So when you inevitably spill your beverage, you can chase the dribble around the maze (presumably until it wells in the middle or falls off the saucer...?!).
Nice bit of product photography here!
A-maze-ing! (oh dear!)
I kinda like this, because it reminds me of something I came up with several years back involving an egg and the runny yoke. But then again, is it completely pointless? I guess that's up for debate, but at a boring conference function, it might be just what you need to keep you sane!
Being a freelance designer who works from home and a Northerner with a Yorkshire bias, I can be a little tight when it comes to central heating. Rather than putting the heating on (which would subsequently warm the whole house) I'd rather sit in my office, shivering with a snotty icicle at the end of my nose.
As Winter is clearly drawing in, I thought it apt to find a suitably themed product to help us deal with the icy chill. The Corkcicle Classic is designed to fit inside a wine bottle, to chill your wine to the correct drinking temperature. In fairness, it's probably more of a Summer product than a Winter one, but I found the link amusing (forgive me).
For a further description, I'd like to turn to my favourite designer goods website, Fab.com, who exclaimed that the Corkcicle Classic:
"...can be used in red and white wine (immersion time is less for red wine than for white and is explained on the box). Corkcicle is made of BPA-free plastic and contains a non-toxic, proprietary freeze gel inside. It’s not recommended you chew or eat your Corkcicle; it’s much better suited for chilling wine than for snacking on."
A timely warning indeed, for those of us who like to chew our icicles.
Look on the Corkcicle website, and you'll see they have developed this concept further, with colourful Corkcicles, Corkcicles for your beer and the futuristic 'Corkcicle One' which features an integrated cap to pour your drink from the top and a built in aerator: http://corkcicle.com
What do I think of this product? Well it's bonkers isn't it?! Yes, I can see it being a bit fussy to use, but it's great fun and will get people talking. You can get one for about £20. Alternatively (if you live in the UK), place your bottle on the outdoor step and assuming that you don't have thieving neighbours, you'll have a chilled bottle in 5 minutes!
(No.16) The Curve Salad Set by Veit Streitenberger
I really need to change the name of this feature (it was mid June when I last did a design of the week!). Anyway, sometimes a product catches your eye simply because it is super sexy. The curve salad set pushes all my buttons that's for sure!
The stainless steel servers look to have been effortlessly cast from a single piece of metal, with the handle flowing seamlessly into the spoon. You can't begin to appreciate just how difficult this level of simplicity is to achieve. I'm getting far too excited about a set of salad servers but they're just so elegant I can't help but stare!
With the glass salad bowl you'll need the best part of £60 to buy this set, but man, it'll make one hell of a statement on your dining table. Love it.
Hello readers, I had a rather exciting evening in London on
Wednesday night and thought I ought to share it with you. Peroni, the Italian
lager company, have opened 'The House of Peroni' in Portland Place, London
(right near the Kenyan embassy where I went for my holiday visa interestingly enough!), a residency that will be open for a month and then return again for another month in November. Keen to associate their brand
with Italian design, culture and innovation, Peroni have brought together a host of creatives to
celebrate Italian art and design.
On Wednesday, I went to a talk by Giovanni Alessi, a 4th
generation family member of the famous Italian kitchenware company, Alessi. For
me, as a kitchenware designer, that's pretty cool! Alessi are up there as one
of the leaders in their field. If you've ever been in a department store, you've
probably seen their work before, and if you read my blog regularly, you've
definitely seen it! Giovanni took us through the history of the Alessi company
and discussed the philosophies behind how and why they work. Without spending
ages regurgitating his presentation, I thought I'd just highlight one or two of
the interesting points:
1. Firstly, Alessi still have their factory in Italy and
pride themselves on the fact that they have not succumbed to the commercial
need to have a base in China. In fact, Giovanni was keen to stress that Alessi
are an Italian design company rather than a commercial business. To that end,
the main drive is design with the exploration of cultural and artistic ideas,
rather than just profit (although it helps!).
2. Along with functionality, Giovanni presented two other
key considerations when designing a new product; sociology and poetry. The first point, sociology is
fairly obvious, but the idea that a product should fulfil a poetic need is
interesting. I guess what he was effectively saying is that we can buy
kitchenware to make an artistic statement (rather like buying a painting), as
an expression of our values and interests. So when someone buys you Alessi's
Philippe Starck designed 'Juicy Salif' lemon squeezer and you realise it is a
completely hopeless lemon squeeze, try to appreciate it as an artistic
statement; an exploration of possibilities and stick it on your windowsill!
Dividing opinion, the 'Juicy Salif' by Philippe Starck, an iconic Alessi product.
3. Giovanni is now 31 and still classes himself as an apprentice. He was born into a family of
product designers yet admitted that he was not initially driven to join the
family business. This didn't surprise me, both my parents were teachers and living with them was enough to put me off the profession! I sensed it must have been
hard for him to establish himself (in his own right) carrying the Alessi name and with the weight of
three generations of successful product designers above him. This was evident when he timidly showed us some of the products he'd designed himself. That said, I don't think Giovanni need worry, he's clearly very talented.
Talking about what he has been designing, he was involved in
the design of this ace set of products for the Alessilux range. The team
looked at re-designing the aesthetic of
a light bulb, to make the most of LED technology. What they came up with was a
series of bespoke bulbs intended to be displayed rather than hidden behind a
lamp shade. They then took this one step further and developed portable lamps. I particularly like the portable one that looks
like a little alien in a spacecraft and rocks around on it's base! Great for kids and the outdoors. I've
popped a few photos on my blog but you're best viewing the video to see what
it's all about :-)
A selection of designs from the Alessilux collection
From the AlessiLux Portable Table Luminaire collection, an alien shaped lamp that rocks around on it's base!
Thanks Peroni for setting up the House of Peroni and giving
me the chance to chat with Giovanni. And a big thanks to Giovanni himself, he
seems a thoroughly nice chap and I wish him well for the future.
It's exciting times for product designers. When I was training in Sheffield back in 2004 we were still using workshops. If we wanted to test a design, we went and made it. If we wanted to see what a form might look like, we tried to re-create it in foam or clay. Back then, I was always keen to cut corners (excuse the pun), in my haste and excitement to see an imagined 3D form (from my head), translated into a physical, worldly form. If I could do it on a disc sander I would! Consequently, how often did I shave the end of my fingers off trying to quickly file down a prototype knife blade?! Or super-glue a new piece of foam to my existing model when I'd shaved too much off?! Oh dear, patience was never always my strong point! Back then, 3D printing, or rapid prototyping as we called it, was in it's infancy. Rather crude, not so rapid and very expensive, I dabbled, saw the potential and dreamt of the future. Now, nearly ten years on, technology is catching up. If you're handy with 3D software, you can re-create pretty much anything from the comfort of your home. Yes, some of the techniques are still very expensive, but others quite affordable. As many of you know, I'm in the process of launching my own kitchenware company. I began thinking about designs back in 2005, but needing to earn a living, gain experience and formulate a viable career have got in the way. But now, as I find myself supporting my income as a freelancer, I've finally got the time, budget and energy to follow my dream. A few months back I began prototyping, I now have five models. Sadly, I can't share them with you yet (as they need to remain confidential for a little longer), but I thought it'd be nice to blog about some of the cool things people are doing with 3D printing. It's now possible to print in all types of materials, from resins and plastics, to ceramics and metal. If you have the budget (and it's sometimes considerably cheaper than you'd imagine) the world's your oyster. Check out some of these kitchenware inspired designs (all produced through a company called Shapeways):
Eggtopus, designed by Emporio Gusto
A totally brilliant egg cup, made in 3D printed, food grade safe, ceramic! I love everything about this, particularly the fact that the designer has made it public and you can order your own 3D printed version for only £30! This is a lot for an egg cup I hear you say, but given the fact that a one off ceramic egg cup like this could set you back several hundred pounds using traditional manufacturing methods, it's a steal! What's also great is the designer's product description, very much in line with the cheeky style I like to design my own products:
"Because a soft boiled egg without tentacles is like a H.P. Lovecraft novel without an ominous sense of doom. These egg cups are guaranteed to make your breakfast at least 70% more awesome - also hold your boiled egg in place."
Hidden heart Expresso Cup by 12AM Design
Another clever little design, taking advantage of the 3D printing technology. I kinda wish the outside of the cup was a bit more regular to emphasise the surprise, but it's still really cool.
Monkey Skull Egg Cup by Macouno
Monkey brains for breakfast anyone?
Really like the simplicity of this one, the form does what it needs to do. Cheap too, available for £25.
Saltypus Salt Cellar by Lovettlab
And here's the magazine shot (although I doubt the salt is in it!!)
Yes, a running theme, people love Octopuses ( and Octopus puns!). This one is made from a 3D printed polyamide, not totally sure if it's food safe, but yours for a mere £15. I like the personality that the octopus has been given with very minimal shaping. The down angled eyes are genius. Apparently, 'Pepper Fish' is coming soon, watch this space!
Africa Ceramic by Growthobjects
A nice touch from Growthobjects; for each dish purchased, they are donating 12 Euros to a fight against hunger charity in Africa
An interesting 3D printed ceramic design here, shaped like the continent of Africa. I initially presumed it was designed for olives, but there's more thinking behind it than that. The original concept was based around the Spanish tradition of 'Las doce uvas de la suerte' or 'The twelve grapes of luck'. A tradition dating back to 1895 which involves eating one grape every time the clock bell strikes at midnight on the 31st December. According to tradition, this practice results in a year of prosperity (maybe I will try it!). The dish can of course also be used for olives, chocolate truffles and berries.
Robot Cookie Cutters by Entwurfswerk*
Charming little cookie cutters designed using Shapeway's 3D printed, 'Strong & Flexible' nylon plastic material. You can own one of these for just over £6, or make you own customised shape of course!
Flamingo Cake Toppers by Henry Alfredo
Pretty lady not yet available via 3D printing...
These cake toppers are cute, but I have a soft spot for flamingos, I was born in a hospital near Lake Nakuru in Kenya (you'll have to look it up to make the connection!).
Nothing but EGG by B1GB1OCK Creation
...and finally, something wonderfully silly, that demonstrates just how strong the 'Strong & Flexible' 3D material really is! Man this is as daft as it comes, but I love it :-) Looking forward to showing you how I have been using 3D printing sometime in the near future, keep checking back followers! Much love, Rik xx
(No.15) The Traditional Chippy Mug and Plates by Home Slice Design
I may have lived in Essex for five and a half years now, but despite my propensity to swear in an Essex accent, I still class myself as a Northerner. I grew up on the North-West coast, a hardy part of England, where the Winters are cold and the Summers even colder. Growing up, one of the things I remember with great fondness was Tuesday evenings. Me and r'kid used to go for our swimming lessons followed by a chippy tea. Now having burnt mega calories whipping up and down the pool we were in need of a good feeding. So desperate we were when we turned up at our local fish & chip shop, that the women who ran it would take pity on us and give us a 'chip lolly' to keep us going. For those of you not familiar with chip lollies, it was essentially one of those plastic forks you could pick up on the counter with 3-4 chips stuck on it. This was ace, and helped us survive the five minute trip home without collapsing. So I was pottering around on the net the other day and I came across Home Slice Design, a design team "on a mission to create refreshing products that celebrate the overlooked, everyday Britishness and unsung domestic heroes of our time." What particularly caught my eye was their chippy range, so I thought I'd share it with you. I'll let Eleanor and Steph of Home Slice Design explain it to you: "Everyone knows you can't beat a chippy tea on a rainy Friday night, with lashings of salt and vinegar and picking at the crispy bits stuck to the paper- one of the greatest pleasures in life. The Chippy range was created to celebrate these moments as well as all things fried and all things British."
An awesome mug, I'm sure I remember this motif in my local chippy!
There are those chip forks, used to great effect on the bottom!
Yum yum... mushy peas (left top)
A selection of some of their other plate designs
The mug retails at £15 and the plates are £25 each. Check out Home Slice Design's website for more details: http://www.homeslicedesign.com/
Thank you Home Slice Design, for bringing back such happy memories. I think I'll be making a small purchase ;-)
This one is wonderfully silly, the Igloo Ice Cube Container does exactly what it says on the tin, it's an igloo that contains ice. But not content with merely being a glorified ice bucket, this igloo also has a silicone top for freezing ice in too! Some designer at XD Design had great fun dreaming this up...
...but wait, there's one more trick up it's sleeve, you can use the door at the front as a set of tongs to remove your ice! Ha ha, bonkers!
Is this a pointless novelty item or does it really work? I don't know if I can answer that. I certainly love the principle of it, but can't help thinking it's trying to do a little too much. I don't imagine those tongs are the easiest things to use, but I might be wrong. I'm also looking at the shape of the ice-cubes in the lid and thinking they perhaps they missed a trick. How cool would it be (excuse the pun), if the ice cubes were shaped like igloo blocks? What I mean by that is that they are curved so you can create your own igloo from real ice? Sod the drinks, I just want to play with the ice!
(No.13) The Kikkerland Drowning in Debt Salt and Pepper Shakers by Sebastian Errazuriz
I thought this was highly appropriate for Design of the Week number '13'. This poor little fellow is up to his eyeballs in salt.
Designer Sebastian Errazuriz (great name) says of his product:
"Like so many of us, these two humble workers have found themselves buried under an inescapable debt. Whether its debt or unemployment, these two little salt and pepper shakers humbly attempt to represent the struggle that is the sign of our times."
"As soon as the seasonings are used the two workers slowly emerge, only to find that they will soon be covered again."
A bit arty farty for my liking to be honest, but I like the idea behind it. When I first saw it I thought it was representational of some gangster mob torturing a victim... that's a bit cooler really isn't it?! (well, not for the victim!).
The other thing that is slightly weird is that you save the little man as you use up the salt (or pepper), it's a shame it doesn't work the other way around. It's like debt consolidation I guess!?
I'd like to have seen Indiana Jones in the pepper one, with his whip up in the air trying to escape a pit of quicksand! Maybe I'll save that for the Stir™ range if someone doesn't pinch the idea from my blog ;-)
The Kikkerland Drowning in Debt Salt and Pepper Shakers retail for around £16.50, a bit too much I think. Still, great fun!
This week I begin my look at tea infusers. For a product that you would have thought had become somewhat redundant since the introduction of the teabag, there are a remarkable number of designs on the market. And not only that, there are some really quirky and, dare I say, outlandish, designs! So much so that I suspect this won't be the first tea infuser making it into design of the week.
To kick things off, I bring you the 'Mr.Tea' Infuser (no relation to the ex-special forces, Mandinka hair-styled, plane fearing, 80's tough guy!).
This little dude sits on the side of your tea cup / mug and infuses boiled water through his pants! An extraordinary talent, I hope you'll agree! I love the way he's posed so that he looks comfortable both inside the cup and slumped up against the outside of the cup. It's enough to make me want to buy my tea loose!
This weeks Design of the Week (ish month) is a pot for your honey. What's lovely about this design is how it has taken inspiration from nature. The glass pot itself is shaped like a honeycomb and the dipper inspired by a bee's backside!
Now I have a lot of time for bees, they do a wonderful job for mother nature. We get quite a few bees in Essex and I'm always keen to stick some lavender in the garden for them and buy honey from our local farm shop. For those of you who are not great lovers of honey, you should be. There are so many different varieties and flavours you're missing out!
Anyway, back to design. The Hive Honey Set is available in clear and frosted glass and retails around the £35-50 mark. Not cheap, but you're buying a piece of art and that glass design is not the easiest to manufacture. Love it!
When I was growing up all I wanted to do was draw. I'd find myself a quiet corner, grab a pencil and scribble away for hours. I loved the creative freedom I had as a child to create whatever I wanted, no holds barred. It didn't matter what it looked like, whether it was in perspective, if it was even in the right colour, because my imagination did the rest. The older I got and the more I progressed through school, the more serious art became. I now wanted things to look as close to real life as possible. I spent years honing skills with paintbrush and pencil always striving perfection. Then I went to university to study design and my style had to change. Lose, free and most importantly, fast, was the order of the day. This didn't suite my cack-handed lefty pencil grip and I found it really difficult. When your thumb overlaps your forefinger and your wrist twists inwards it doesn't lend itself to producing long, sweeping lines! We also used a lot of marker pens, again designed for speed. And then it all changed. Computers took over. Why spend 6 hours doing a hand rendered illustration when you can produce it in two hours in a spectrum of colour combinations? Why use tip-ex (remember that?!) on an engineering drawing when you can easily alter your measurements in CAD (Computer Aided Design)? Ironically, by the time I reached professional design, the pencil was dead. I can honestly say, in 6 years in the profession, I have barely done a hand draw illustration. Yes, scrappy sketches in a notebook to communicate an idea, but nothing more. Nowadays I draw in Photoshop, Illustrator and 3D CAD software. What is startling is that my chiropractor now tells me my right hand is now stronger than my left from all the mouse work! I have software that tracks my movements - yesterday, in approximately 7 hours, I moved my mouse 50 meters and clicked over 11,000 times! Is it any wonder I have RSI problems?! So what am I getting at with this little story? Well, this week I bought some new rendering software - KeyShot 4. It's used to 'colour in' my 3D models. I've not updated my rendering software in years (probably 10 years!!) and I was truly astonished at A; How easy the new software is to use (no messing about with complex lighting setups), and B; How fecking ace it looks!!
The 'Juicy Cactus', a lemon squeezer I designed and rendered in KeyShot 4.
I think I am finally getting close to the holy grail; a photo realistic visual / illustration, that can trick the viewer into believing it is a photograph. This, I guess, is something, I have been pursuing since a was a kid. Being a perfectionist can be useful as a designer, but it can also be a sin. Thankfully, this new software is making the perfectionist in me a little easier to deal with! :-)
Hello all, this week a bring you a wine bottle holder. Artori Design (based in Israel) have come up with this ingenious design for holding your wine bottles. A silhouette of a man and women can be seen running away from a falling object - the object being your wine bottle!
The brilliance of this product is it's simplicity, from a perspective view point (shown below) you can see just how simple the design is. It's just one sheet of metal, cut and bent in to shape and coated black. It reminds me of Godzilla, I love the way you can see the movement in the man's tie and the woman's hair!
Artori Design do loads of other great designs around this theme, but I think I'll save one or two for future posts! A special mention too for the name 'Wine For Your Life', great pun!
When I was a lad we had a metal egg poacher that came out of the cupboard every six months. As I recall (this was the 1980s so forgive my hazzy description) it was made up of 4 metal 'cups' with little wire handles that sat in a disc on top of your saucepan. Although it looked wondrous, me and 'r' kid always preferred boiled eggs - because you got toasty soldiers and could use the top of the egg to create a little crash helmet for your finished shell (and then destroy it!). It would seem it has become a tradition for people to buy me novelty kitchenware for Christmas and this year I was given a microwavable egg poacher. Surely this can't be right I hear you say, you use boiling water don't you? What act of Satan is this?! Well I intended to find out so gave it a go... Today I will be comparing two egg poachers, the Poach Perfect Silicone Egg Poachers and the Joie Microwave Egg Poacher. The reason I'm doing this is because I've had the silicone ones for over a year now and in my opinion they work great, so we'll see how the micro-witch poacher compares (no bias creeping in I promise!):
Poach Perfect Silicone Egg Poachers
Joie Microwave Egg Poacher
Using the Joie Microwave Egg Poacher:
Bang and the egg is gone!
First off I tried the 'Joie' and was immediately instructed to crack the egg in to the orange base and pierce the yoke. Reflecting, this seemed a funny act (piercing the yoke), given that this is what you normally do with your toast soldiers once you've cooked it. Anyway, I presumed this was to stop your egg exploding in the microwave and continued. The rather fetching chicken themed cover was then added and the poacher placed in the microwave for two minutes on a medium heat. After about one and a half minutes this happened (see picture right). No toasty soldiers for me!
I hoped this was a one off and that perhaps I hadn't pierced the egg yoke enough, so tried again...
...and made a bigger mess!
At this point the wife was enrolled to clean the microwave while I resulted to plan B; boiling water...
Using the Poach Perfect Silicone Egg Poacher:
Egg-straordinary!
Sometimes, if it ain't broke, don't fix it. So (rather hungry at this point), I reverted back to the tried and tested. The lovely thing about silicone egg poachers is, they're easy to use and even easier to clean. They also work wonderfully. You simply line the inside of the poacher with a little olive oil (you only need a drop), crack your egg into it, season and pop in a pan of boiling water. You then cover the pan with a lid and wait four minutes to cook. The best thing about silicone of course is that it is pliable so you can remove the egg easily. And voilà! A tasty and healthy snack (without an explosion!) Rik x If you're interested, the Poach Perfect Silicone Egg Poachers retail at around £3, a bargain!
It's been more than several weeks since my last 'Design of the Week'. For this I apologise. I went on holiday in October, got food poisoning, had a nasty incident with lawyers and turned 30, so I hid myself in a cupboard for 3 months. But I'm back! (hooray!...) and here's my favourite design this week; the Creature Cups (click to enlarge).
These little critters are great fun! I'd love to try them out on my gran: Me - "Here you go love, a lovely steaming hot brew. I've put two sugars in it just like you like it. I love you Nan..." Nan - "Oh you are a dear, you've always been my favourite..." "You do know I'm diabetic?..." (Sip, Sip, Sip) "Arrrgggghhhh! What the what?!!" (Nan collapses) Only joking! But it would be ace to prank people. My favourite has to be the Octopus - please feel free to buy it for me (they retail at around £10). Sadly the cups don't come with a saucer (not very British) but this can be forgiven as the designers, known as 'Yumi-Yumi', are based in Brooklyn! So, kudos to you 'Yumi-Yumi', I love 'em!