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    Areaware Cubebots 

    Donald Rattner WA-AS-TA-HX-CU-1_1

    Wiley Prefab Architecture

    June 3rd, 2013

    Joe Doucet’s Iota: It’s All In The Cards

    How low can you go? Or more precisely, how minimal can a design be and still function as a usable and attractive deck of playing cards? For Iota designer Joe Doucet the answer is – very low!

    These elegant and sleekly designed cards do away with overdressed kings and queens and oversized hearts and spades in favor of a quiet elegance more suitable to our contemporary, light-filled decor. Oh, and it’s a great deal for today’s Modular Man (hint: Father’s Day is coming up!).

    Joe Doucet is an award-winning, widely exhibited designer whose portfolio encompasses furniture, electronics, jewelry, fashion, toys, environments and architecture. Among his clients are BMW, Braun, Hugo Boss, Lexon, Moët & Chandon and Target. He currently holds more than forty patents for his designs and inventions.

    Purchase here.

    May 16th, 2013

    We’re Popping Up at Wanted Design 2013

    We’re running a popup shop at the Wanted Design show this year. Lots of our classic interactive products, plus brand new pieces from Seletti, Metylos and Joe Doucet.

    Come join us!

    WHEN AND WHERE

    May 17-20, 2013

    The Tunnel
    269 11th Avenue, New York, NY 10001
    Map It

    Tickets available here.

    Comments (0)
    May 9th, 2013

    Modular Masters: Nendo’s Oki Sato

    We admire designers who explore the universe of modular design, but we’re especially appreciate of those who come back to it again and again. After all, isn’t the idea of repetitive exploration a fundamental precept of modularity itself? Nendo’s Oki Sato certainly qualifies for our pantheon of Modular Masters for his past work, and has just checked in for another residency with his latest creation for Kartell. While you’ll have to wait till next year for his modular bookshelf design, you can pick up one of his Yuki Modular Screen Systems for Cappellini shown below in our very own store right now (mea culpa for the shameless plug). You can also read this interview conducted by the folks at Cool Hunting, reprinted here.

    Arguably one of the most influential — and certainly one of the most prolific — contemporary design studios, Nendo is everywhere. From furniture collaborations to large scale architectural installations, the Japanese studio, led by celebrated designer and architect Oki Sato, is well on its way to becoming a household name. After a welcomed assault on Milan Design Week last year, Nendo returned with yet another fruitful showing across multiple platforms at this year’s Salone del Mobile. Standing alongside their recent modular bookshelf design for Kartell, we had the pleasure of catching up with Sato at the fair, who shed light on color, scale and time, and showed no signs of slowing down.

    Where does the name Nendo come from?

    Nendo means like Play-Doh, like that kids would play with. That’s exactly the way I want to work as a designer—to be flexible and changing like Play-Doh changes color, shapes, sizes, to have that flexibility in designing.

    Kartell is known for their use of color and transparencies, whereas your work tends to be more monochromatic. How did this effect your collaboration?

    I guess it’s part of our cultures. Let’s say for Italians, when one says red, Italian designers can see a lot of different reds. They have hundreds of colors of reds, but not just red. On the other hand, I think the Japanese, we perceive more tones of light and shadow. So that’s one of the reasons why I guess Japanese designers tend to like white and black—so we can play more with shadows and light. And that’s where we start working on finishes and forms as well. Usually we start working on white and black because it’s totally the contrary and we can see if it works or not, if it works on white and black it works for all colors.

    It seems much of your work is inspired by a kind of “ah-ha” moment. Where do you see that in Cliff, with the modularity?

    Mm-hm, yes, I think so. Not many shelves could be used in all directions. They snap into each other like a jigsaw puzzle. You can really play with and it can be combined in different ways, you can flip it in 90 degrees or 180. It’s a very simple idea, but every unit has I think four shelves—vertical shelves and horizontal shelves. And so when it’s vertical it’s used as like a bookend almost. It’s a very simple idea but I think it’s an idea that users can really play with.

    Your studio recently created an installation for the Stockholm Furniture Fair, which was quite large. And here you have something so small, like Cliff. What scale do you prefer to work on?

    I like working on small scales. The huge installation that I did in Stockholm, that started from a small idea—a single sheet of paper that is stretched open to create this transparent mountain. And then by duplicating those it created a big installation. I try to have my ideas be very small and try to maintain the big according to the project.

    Last year during Salone del Mobile Nendo was everywhere and it seems like this year as well. Looking at all the projects your studio has done, how do you juggle it all? Are you involved with every single project?

    Yes, yes. I work on all of the initial concepts. I meet all my clients. I do all my presentations and check all the prototypes and the construction sites as well. We are a team of 28 to 29 designers, but I check it all. Everything.

    So you never take a day off?

    No, I don’t. And we’re working on about 220 different projects at the same time, all at once. So in the end I have to travel around the world almost every month. I start from the west side of the States, go to NY and then fly to Europe, and I stay there for about a week meeting with all the clients there. Then I go to the Asian countries to check on the interior sites. And then I come back to Japan for about two weeks and it just keeps on going like that. It’s really nice. It’s really exciting.

    Stockholm Furniture Fair images courtesy of Nendo, studio image by Kartell, Yuki Screen by Cappellini, others by Graham Hiemstra.

    Via Cool Hunting

    Comments (0)
    April 15th, 2013

    Tripp Trapp Convertible High Chair

    In 1972, a Scandinavian designer named Peter Opsvik took it on himself to revolutionize the design of infant high chairs after watching his son’s struggles with table eating. The result was the Tripp Trapp Convertible High Chair.

    Opsvik’s thoughtful response to the challenges of early eating stages was to more fully engage the child with loved ones by making it possible to slide the chair right up to the table without an intervening tray.  Presciently, he also designed the chair to accommodate growth by making its various parts adjustable, thus anticipating today’s cradle-to-college design philosophy and its associated environmentalism. (Just think: when your kids go to college they can take their Tripp Chairs with them!)

    Winner of multiple awards, the Tripp Chair was the signature piece at MoMA’s 2012 exhibition “Century of the Child”. Check out their wonderful video.

    Comments (0)
    March 18th, 2013

    MODULAR MATZAH: LAURA COWAN SEDER PLATES

    Noted Israeli metal designer Laura Cowan designed the plates in her traveling Dune Seder Plate set with a distinctly curved profile to evoke the rolling dunes of the Sinai desert where, as the Passover story goes, the Israelites made their journey out of Egypt. There is also a travel version that comes in a metal box suitable for transport.

    Plates measure 4 x 4 inches, come 6 to a set and include a small round dish for the egg that attaches to the Beitsah tray by a hidden magnet to prevent the egg from rolling away. Sets are available in two finishes: all Stainless Steel, or a mix of Stainless Steel and Anodized Aluminum. Each plate is hand-crafted and signed by the designer.

    We are showcasing this item as part of our weekly series MODULAR MONDAYS, in which we present products recently added to the MODULE R catalog.

    Comments (0)
    March 4th, 2013

    Let It Roll: Tempaper Wall Coverings

    The idea for Tempaper wall coverings was born when a group of set decorators for the film, television and entertainment industries decided to create a peel-and-stick wallpaper that was affordable, easy to install, and just as easy to uninstall. Why? Because they found themselves continually in need of such a product for their work, and yet could not find it anywhere. No way, no how.

    So what does any true blue creative do when they don’t get what they want? They make the thing themselves, of course. True to form, in 2008 Tempaper came to market. Since then the founders have grown the collection each year with the addition of new designs. Our favorite? The DIY version that comes blank and ready to take paint, crayon, pencil, marker, pastel and just about anything else you can throw at it. Now there’s no excuse not to do a Michelangelo on your wall.

    Tempaper is a breeze to install. Just remove the backing along the top edge and roll it down your wall, pressing with your hands to smooth it out as it sticks. No glues, pastes, water or brushes are needed. To take it off just pull from a corner and let ‘er rip. Watch the video below to see how ripped you can really get.

    Because it’s self-adhesive, you can use the paper not only on walls, but on any smooth surfaces in good condition, such as doors, cabinet faces, ceilings, and paneling. Tempaper can even go in wet areas, such as bathrooms, because indirect moisture will not affect adhesion.

    Tempaper is made in the U.S.A. and sold in a roll of 20 1/2 inches wide x 33 feet long (52.1 x 1005.9 cm) for a total of 56.37 square feet (5.2 m2). Let the good times roll!

     

    We are showcasing this item as part of our weekly series MODULAR MONDAYS, in which we present products recently added to the MODULE R catalog.

    Comments (0)
    February 28th, 2013

    Totems Modular Table System

    Recently presented in Paris during Maison & Objet, the Totems modular table system was created by Swiss design studio Allegory.

    There are three principal elements comprising the system. Stackable Carrara drums – reminiscent of the way marble columns were erected in ancient Greek temples -  form a base. By varying the number of drums in the stack you can modulate the height of the table top. (Just don’t drop one on your foot.)

    Above the base comes a circular, oak veneer table top which comes in several different diameters for further versatility. Finally, the piece can be topped off with a choice of vessel, including plates, urns and lamps. The entire assembly is held together by centering pins made of anodized aluminum (we believe the Greeks used wood, but same idea).

    From desk to dinner table, pedestal to stool, lampstand to flower display, Totems does what you need it to do. (Just don’t drop that drum on your foot!)

    via Designboom
    Images © Allegory

    Comments (0)
    February 25th, 2013

    Linx Straw Sculpture Connector

    Linx is a Kickstarter success story. Conceived by French-born visual artist Patrick Martinez in 2012, Linx is a modular connector that lets anyone turn conventional drinking straws into sculptures simply by joining them together. Build anything from small table-top structures to stadium-sized installations, highly geometric constellations to free-form organic webs. You can even build a straw man! Watch this video to learn some techniques to start with.

    Great for children motivated to exercise their imaginations and equally great for grownups who want to do the same. Made in the USA of post-consumer plastic. Comes 125 to a pack.

    Patrick Martinez studied art in France and has been exploring video, drawing, sculpture, installation and sound art for over twenty years. His work has been exhibited throughout Europe as well as in Japan and the US, where he is represented by Parker’s Box Gallery.

    We are showcasing this item as part of our weekly series MODULAR MONDAYS, in which we present products recently added to our catalog. Please visit our Facebook page for special pricing events that may accompany these posts.

    Comments (1)
    February 21st, 2013

    PLAYING FAST WITH LOOSE JOINTS

    If you’re like many creative people, you keep whole closets full of old stuff on the chance that you’ll use it for a project (someday). The problem is that someday doesn’t always come. Loose Joints, a kit designed by German designer Joscha Weiand, is meant to motivate you to turn someday into today by giving you the tools to re-purpose your stuff enjoyably and imaginatively.

    Weiand graduated from Design Academy Eindhoven, where Loose Joints was his thesis project. The set consists of two simple components: seven types of white plastic joints about the size of dice, plus a load of simple wooden poles. It’s up to the user to concoct shapes and forms, which, as Weiand demonstrates, can get surprisingly complex. For example, he’s used the kit to construct a vortex-like cage for a hanging light and a rough facsimile of Marcel Breuer’s Wassily Chair.

    The idea behind Loose Joints is to capitalize on what we already own, making it conceptually similar to F.A.T Lab’s Universal Toy Construction Kit. Weiand says that he wants to empower people to make unique objects using mass-produced materials. “These days many products are mass produced to keep up with demand and to lower cost,” he explains. “This means that many of us have exactly the same products in our homes. Loose Joints is a modular system that can be mass produced, but can also be used to create unique products.” Now, check out his video and get that stuff out of your closet!

    via Co.Design

    Comments (0)
    February 18th, 2013

    COIL LAMP: IT’S A WRAP

    Coil Lamp by Chicago designer Craighton Berman blurs the traditionally distinct elements of shade, stand and wiring by enveloping the entire fixture in a continuously wrapped, 100 foot long power cord. The cord, which is draped over a lasercut clear acrylic frame, makes the lamp appear to float in space, endowing it with a quality of weightlessness evocative of light itself. Plus it looks really cool.

    All the parts needed to make your Coil Lamp come in the package: frame, cord, light socket and CFL bulb. Just snap the 2-piece frame together, wrap your cord, plug it in, and bask in the glow. You can also order just the acrylic lampstand, which comes with a socket.

    Coil Lamp is in the permanent collection of the Art Institute of Chicago. Available with Blue, Green, Orange and Yellow cords. Assembled it measures approximately 11 inches across at its widest by 17 inches high (28 by 43.2 cm).

    We are showcasing this item as part of our weekly series MODULAR MONDAYS, in which we present products recently added to our catalog. Please visit our Facebook page for special pricing events that may accompany these posts.

    Comments (0)
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    Mission

    MODULE R is a concept store focused on transformable art and design. We collect pieces from all over the world that are customizable, reconfigurable, expandable, stackable, interchangeable, interactive and modular. Our catalogue includes accessories, books, furniture, children’s playthings, cookware, jewelry, lighting, storage systems, space dividers, floor and wall coverings, and artwork. In bringing this collection together – and authoring this blog – we hope to promote flexible design as an ideal way of making things in an age that prizes personalization, multi-functionality, economy and experience.

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