TumblogWritings, musings and generally lighthearted banter

May

16

package – akaoni

In case you haven’t guessed yet – I judge a book by its cover. Yep. I unabashedly admit that I will buy a more expensive mayo, or what-have-you, because it looks good. I appreciate, and am happy to reward, good design… plus that mayo reminds me of English mayo which I have a particular soft spot for (and probably a few soft spots from, but I digress.)

So when I first saw this packaging by Tokyo design agency Akaoni, I thought, yes. I love the simplicity, the bold and playful designs, the kraft coloring…

…and when I searched for the source of the image that I had seen I discovered something even better! The images were from a blog called Creative Roots, which explores nations through art and design – graphic design, photography, architecture… You can search by continent, by nation, or simply follow the stream. It’s definitely worth a look.

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May

15

inspired palette #9 – not your standard blond Scandinavian

I am so happy when people really go for it. Whatever it is. This apartment in Stockholm is a prime example (and it could be said, a primary example, but I’m not going there tonight.)

In the redesign of this turn-of-the-century apartment, Swedish architects Tham & Videgård Hansson take their inspiration from the changing seasonal colors in a nearby park. They create a veritable parquet playground of hues, merging and mixing, converging and contrasting, from one room to another. The oversized parquet floor and wall panels move through electric shades of green, yellow, orange, red, and pink, to the calmer browns, grays, and black. What an extraordinary vision to dream this up.

They say the client hoped for a design that was not your “standard blond Scandinavian” interior. I’d say they hit the nail on the head.

Images courtesy of Dezeen.

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Apr

20

this teepee

I love it so.

Image courtesy of Crush Cul de Sac.

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Apr

14

fabulous fauteuils – the leather butterfly

 

…more like butter.

From CB2.

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Apr

13

a marvelous mill in marseille

Alliteration aside, I am mesmerized by the transformation of this old mill into a spectacular collage of color, texture, and kitsch. Designer and owner, Mitri Hourani takes as his maxim Antoine Lavoisier’s quote “Rien ne se perd, rien ne se crée, tout se transforme” – or “”Nothing is lost, nothing is created, everything is transformed.”

While harkening back to one of the major rules of physics, this idea serves to inspire the designer to use found objects and reinvent them to have a new life. The result, a dramatic and ebullient display of clusters of light, layered tapestries, and creative kitsch.

All images courtesy of Marie Claire Maison.

 

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