Showing posts with label INTERACTIVE furniture. Show all posts

Must have side table designed by Iselin Lindmark Dubland .


coadg_Iselin_Dubland_03

Norwegian School of Art and Design (KHiB) graduate, Iselin Lindmark Dubland, has designed Birk, a coffee table with concealed storage for magazines, laptops and television remotes, and a removable tray perfect for TV dinners.

coadg_Iselin_Dubland_10
The four-legged table is made of birch wood with a one metre by 50 centimetre elongated circular top, containing a storage section accessible via a sliding tray that can be removed and used separately.

coadg_Iselin_Dubland_08
“I wanted to create a coffee table with storage space for all those objects that you often keep around the coffee table and sofa, that don’t really have homes,” says the designer. “It was about making something that I felt was missing for consumers with the same needs in that situation.”

coadg_Iselin_Dubland_09
The table’s form was informed by an insight uncovered in Iselin’s research phase, when she asked friends and family to send her photographs of their coffee tables in use. “It became clear that most of the items we keep on and around our coffee tables are slim,” 

coadg_Iselin_Dubland_04
The two half circles at each end are connected with four wooden pegs to the side parts, and then the top completes the construction. The green top has tracks under it, so it slides smoothly. The four legs are turned from solid birch, and glued and screwed to the table construction.”

coadg_Iselin_Dubland_05
 “I thought about those old wooden Domino boxes with sliding lids – I wanted the mechanism to be quite low-tech in contrast to the high-tech world we live in now.”Iselin constructed this prototype at the university workshop. “The table comprises four birch veneer half-circles,” she explains. “Two in each end of the table and one that completes the storage room, and one thin one that the green top rests on. 

coadg_Iselin_Dubland_06

 “Magazines, a laptop, notebooks, remotes, pencils, playing cards… that meant a storage space for these things wouldn’t need to be very deep.”The designer lined the base of the seven-centimetre-deep storage space with 100% wool by Kvadrat, which serves two purposes – it means precious electronic items don’t get scratched; it also deadens the sound of placing them into the space. “The wool creates a comfortable meeting between two hard materials,” says Iselin.The green sliding lid is made of Valchromat to differentiate its function and add a pop of colour. “This part slides under the table top, creating a feeling that is quite nostalgic,” says the designer.


"Iselin Lindmark Dubland’S Side Table Is Designed For “Lazy Sofa Days” | Confessions Of A Design Geek". confessions of a design geek. N.p., 2016. Web. 26 May 2016.


Interact and Communicate with JUNO JEON Furniture



anigif
Netherlands-based designer juno jeon has created two pieces of furniture that aim to bring ordinary objects to live, by making them interact and communicate with their users. The humor-infused project aims to create a relationship between our space, which is full of objects, and ourselves.
 ‘Pull me to live’ is a drawer that has a special skin: when the drawer is closed, it just sits there, showcasing its fancy skin. When it is pulled, its outer layer gradually changes the color from back to front. this creates the sensation that the drawer is reaction to the human stimulus, as if it was an animal. when the drawer is pushed back, its skin changes color again.A simple gesture of opening and closing the drawer changes the skin of the drawer
by painting the skin with two different colors, the user is able to appreciate its two faces