Switched on

Decanterlamp by Lee Broom
Here's an inventive use for wedding presents you don't know what to do with
Port and wine decanters were piled up to create this rather elegant lamp base. Made by award-winning designer Lee Broom it has been produced in an original crystal (clear) version and a more modern lacquered white. 
A limited edition will be on sale shortly at the always ahead of the curve The Shop at Bluebird. I've no idea on price, let's just assume quite a lot.
And one with a white lacquered finish

The fabulous fifties

Miro wallpaper from Sanderson
Today's post is an homage to the print and pattern of the fabulous 1950s - a decade which is proving to be an enduringly popular reference point in the interiors world.
Last year we had the Heal's Rediscovers range of chairs, cushions and china inspired by Lucienne Day archive prints. Now we have the Sanderson collection of 1950s-inspired wallpapers and fabrics (pictured) which will appeal if you are a fan of bold, graphic prints. 
Yep. Guilty. 
Mobiles fabric from Sanderson
This year also marks the 60th anniversary of the Festival of Britain, the 1951 exhibition of ideas and innovation on London's South Bank designed to lift the spirits of the nation in the post-war period. Highlights of the exhibition included buildings such as the futuristic Skylon, the Dome of Discovery and the Royal Festival Hall (the only structure still standing today) which feature on the very retro new Festival wallpaper by Mini Moderns.
Festival wallpaper by Mini Moderns


Domestic delight

Saving the world one sock at a time
I'm on a bit of an eco-trip this week as I've been road-testing a revolutionary (so they tell me) cleaning product. Method is the brainchild of San-Francisco-based Adam Lowry, a chemical engineer and environmental scientist, and Eric Ryan, a former graphic designer. 
Together they combined a passion for green living with some savvy design and marketing skills and created a range of non-toxic cleaning products that appeal to the fair-weather end of the eco-worrier market as well as to the truly committed. 
Rather like the Plumen low energy light bulb I mentioned earlier in the week, this is a way you can ease your green conscience without dramatically altering your life; which - as the smart companies have realised - is one of the more effective ways of getting people excited about environmental issues. 
And it works. 

The laundry detergent actually works, the bottle looks good, plus it ticks all the right eco-boxes.
It is 8x concentrated (so you use much less), it's made from 95% plant-based ingredients (which are biodegradable), it comes in a handy pump-dispensing recycled bottle (you squirt it straight into the machine). The packaging uses less plastic, energy and oil to produce. It was given a rave review on sustainability website Tree Hugger. It is so right on it practically has a halo. 
And, as if that wasn't enough, last year it received Cradle to Cradle (C2C) product certification which is like getting a big GOLD STAR in the green world. C2C is essentially a philosophy for doing business in a socially responsible way: from the ingredients, through to manufacturing and packaging, right down to the corporate structure. 
The innovative company is 10 years old this year and has a turnover of $100 million. This how to do green in the 21st Century.

Bright idea

Plumen: the bulb that looks better naked
We all want to do our bit for the environment, but sometimes doing the right thing can feel like a drag. That may be about to change with the recent launch of the Plumen low energy lightbulb.
The Plumen 001 bulb uses 80% less energy than a traditional incandescent bulb and lasts eight times as long. So it's got the eco-stamp of approval - just like a standard CFL (low energy bulb) - plus it has two winning features: it is much better looking and it gives off a warm glare-free glow. So appealing is this bulb it can be hung up without a shade. 
As with many eco-innovations, however, it comes at a price: £20. But this doesn't seem to have put people off as the bulbs are currently sold out at the Design Museum Shop. Existing bulbs come with screw in fittings, but the bayonet version is coming this month. 
Designed by Samuel Wilkinson with concept and design direction by Hulger the bulb has been short-listed for Best Product in the Brit Insurance Designs of the Year 2011

Low energy bulbs just got interesting

D is for Danish

'Fonts and furniture' for sale at the Modern Danish Warehouse
Here's a date for your diary: The Modern Danish Warehouse pop-up shop is back for a second year from 5th - 20th March. 

 On sale will be vintage delights such as tables, chairs, sideboards, desks and sofas ranging in price from £100 - £1,500. This year there is a back to school theme with some original pieces by Arne Jacobsen for a school in Copenhagen which he designed. 
"It is still possible to get great pieces that were designed for schools in the 1950s and 1960s for a good price", says the pop-up's proprietor Nina Hertog. "It was a time when great efforts were made to make fantastic furniture, believing that the quality of your surroundings would improve learning and overall quality of life".
Let's just assume that a generation of Danish school kids haven't been left sitting on the floor...
This year also sees a collaboration with Copenhagen shop Playtype (a type foundry which is part of the Danish design agency e-Types). So if you are mad about type - like me - you can pick up t-shirts, coffee mugs, posters and decorative letters in Playtype's range of bespoke fonts.

Yves Behar interview

The $100 laptop for the developing world: to date 2 million laptops have been produced and distributed

I had the privilege of talking to the multi-award winning industrial designer Yves Behar recently.

He had some really interesting things to say about how to live a more ethical life, but without feeling like you are giving too much up. He talked about how the consumer has more influence today than ever before and why we should be making the most of our online voice.

You can read the full interview here at The Independent.

 Clever Little Bag for Puma: 80 million pairs of shoes shipped every year, packaging waste reduced by 65%

Yves Behar holds up the $100 laptop which recently won the IDSA Design of the Decade Bronze Award


Hung up

There's a welcome explosion of colour next week in the form of two exhibitions devoted to so hot right now graphic art and limited edition prints. 

St Jude's in the City exhibition of prints, paintings and St Jude's fabrics runs from Wednesday 10th until Sunday 21st November at The Bankside Gallery, SE1. 
With Love by Christopher Brown at St Jude's in the City

Summer Red Form by Peter Green at St Jude's in the City

Outline Editions' latest collection of graphic art Into the Forest kicks off on Thursday 11th November at a temporary gallery on Berwick Street, W1. Featuring artists including Anthony Burrill, Klaus Haapaniemi, Kate Moross and Beyond the Valley.

I  Like It by Anthony Burrill at Outline Editions

Stripe Land by Anthony Burrill at Outline Editions

Get switched on

Anglepoise Type 1228 desk lamp from Heal's

The clocks may have gone back but despite the dark mornings and evenings there's no need sink into early onset SAD. 

The brighter solution is to invest in some decent lighting and the easiest way is with table and floor lamps. I wrote a piece about this in Friday's The Independent

Jielde lights from Caravan

Hector table light from Geoffrey Harris

Baxter floor lamp from Habitat 


Design meets art

Not for everyone: Esperanca light by Campana Brothers for Vessel Gallery

It's always interesting to see what's going on at the sharp end of design. By which I mean cutting edge, on the fringes, not the kind of thing you come across unless you are really looking for it.

This week the Frieze Art Fair hits London and alongside it are lots of other contemporary art events vying for attention. One I stumbled upon is called Super Design, which is neither art or design, but something a bit more Super.

The show is devoted to the very 21st Century phenomenon design art where objects traditionally thought of as being from the school of design merge with ideas usually associated with works of art

... and their value launches into the stratosphere. 
Quite literally at the sharp end of design art: Origami Mirror Chair by Philip Michael Wolfson for The Apartment Gallery

Whether this marriage actually improves the design, or enhances the art, is another question.

In his fascinating book 'The Language of Things', Deyan Sudjic (Director of the Design Museum) makes an interesting point about the curious paradox of utility and value. That in actual fact we value the things that could be considered to be slightly useless - as in without utility, rather than without purpose - above the useful.

Think of Ferrari (hardly the practical option, but gets attention) versus Volkswagen; or a pair of Manolo Blahnik shoes (expensive, hard to walk in, but so beautiful) versus the plimpsoll. 

"Usefulness is inversely proportional to value", he says. "The more useless an object is, the more highly valued it will be."

In other words, if you can't actually sit on the chair, it's probably really, really expensive. 
Definitely in the look, but don't sit category: Reverb Wire Chair by Brodie Neill for The Apartment Gallery

Something to bear in mind perhaps if you are thinking of visiting either show, both Frieze and Super Design (all images here are from the latter) run until Sunday 17th October. 

For a concise review of the Sudjic book click here.

Drawn to this

Anorak Magazine

The latest issue of this illustrative magazine for kids is out now. 

This magazine is one of those things - a bit like the Lisa Jones Studio cards - that appeal to adults as well as children, although probably a bit more to adults... who then buy it for their children. 

It's a good system. Well, it needs to be, because without an incentivising cover mounted freebie plastic giveaway toy, there's less chance of a child actually picking it up in the first place. Sigh.

More cool happenings

Half way through the London Design Festival - still loads to see this weekend. This time I'm looking at what's on in the centre and west of town.

Oiva Toikka birds at Vessel 
Just completely love these birds, always have. Such beautiful colours and appealing shapes. They are timeless. Vessel Gallery is celebrating 50 years of Finnish artist Oiva Toikka's work for Iittala with an exhibition of his glass bird Art Works (new designs for 2010 pictured). Go before they fly off back to Finland.

Lucienne Day at Heal's
The ever-popular textile designs Lucienne Day produced from the 1950s to 70s have been re-interpreted for sale at Heal's this week. Three of her landmark designs: Calyx, Helix and Sunrise will be available on a series of furniture and accessories. Go if you're hooked on retro prints. 

Kit Kemp at Contemporary Applied Arts 
Continuing the craft theme is a very tactile exhibition at CAA. Interior designer Kit Kemp has commissioned lighting, tableware and furniture from craftmakers to be used in a domestic setting. Rest assured it's a cut above knitted lampshades - we're talking high end materials and pleasing organic forms.

RCA at LDF 
Among the shops and galleries which make up the Brompton Design District are a couple of rather distinguished guests: the Victoria & Albert Museum and the Royal College of Art. This year, the former is the hub of the design festival with on-site talks and installations, and the latter is presenting seven shows on how design exists to inspire and improve our everyday lives. Definitely worth a visit to South Kensington.

Moooi showroom in London
Never one to undersell itself, the Dutch interiors company Moooi has just launched its first UK showroom in some style. If your idea of good design is a giant horse lamp then you can pay them a visit... I'm not sure whether I really like this stuff, much of it is very look at me, but when shown together it certainly has an impact. Whether these pieces have a longer story, behind the shouty headline, is another question.

Etch light production line at Tom Dixon
Round the corner at Portobello Dock is Tom Dixon's new shop where this week his team have been making the Etch light on the premises. Go if you're interested in seeing how things are made - ie before they are wrapped up in nice packaging and put on the shop floor - and you can then buy one on the spot.


Cool happenings

Where to begin?

Here are some edited highlights of things happening in Shoreditch and Clerkenwell during the London Design Festival this week.
Sky Planter by Boskke
At the Old Shoreditch Station cafe/bar is a dramatic installation by Boskke and Thorsten van Elten. The ceiling is covered with Sky Planters (as featured on this blog) and the floor and walls have been taken over by giant cups and saucers, pigeon lights and other quirky objects. All are for sale in the adjacent shop No-One .


Edition Paumes at Ella Doran
Ella Doran will be launching the new book by Edition Paumes called London Family Style which snoops around the houses of 18 creative families in the city. A must for curtain twitchers across the capital.


Donna Wilson at SCP
East London stalwart SCP will be showcasing new products from its autumn/winter collection, including textiles and tableware from the prolific Donna Wilson. SCP has produced a handy map of the shops which make up the Shoreditch Design Triangle here.


Matthew Hilton at The Tramshed
The Tramshed is a new venue in East London and is this week hosting a broad selection of high-end design from big hitters including Studioilse, Matthew Hilton, Autoban, Ercol and Benchmark. Go to see what's going on at the sharp end of design, but not if you're expecting a bargain.


James Brown prints at Curate40
Curate40 Minimart is a smaller selling exhibition of illustration and print - so now - from up and comers such as the bold illustrator and printmaker James Brown. This show is one to bring your wallet to.


Lizzie Allen wallpaper at Curiosity London
Pop-up shop Curiosity London will be selling items by 17 hot young designers such as the talented screen-printer Lizzie Allen who will showcase her latest work. Again, bring your wallet.

Tent London at the Truman Brewery
Last, but by no means least, is the design show Tent London which is the place to visit for inspiring contemporary and vintage ideas. It's the daddy of the East London shows and has a big digital section.

Look out for the Lab Craft exhibition - curated by Max Fraser and designed by Tomoko Azumi - which explores craft in a digital age.

And if you're still on a craft tip and interested in things that are made not maufactured check out Origin in its new venue at Old Spitalfields Market.