Thursday, 11 February 2010

Helen Storey's Wonderland

Just been looking out for ephemeral designs in line with my studio project, and found this. tis a wee bit AMAZING! Professor Helen Storey, in collaboration with Sheffield University's Chemistry department, addresses environmental and societal issues with her soluble garments and textiles. Throwaway culture is no longer relevant, as on contact with water, these garments dissolve, being made of completely natural materials. The process of 'disappearance' is as much part of these designs as their presence, with the dyes used creating patterns in the water, all down to scientific binding of the dyes, creating a well timed process.

from http://www.helenstoreyfoundation.org/wonderland/1.htm
The Disappearing Dresses are the result of a process that began 2 years ago when Helen began talking to scientist Professor Tony Ryan OBE, who is a polymer chemist at the University of Sheffield. Using the symbols of the dissolving dress and other works that have arisen as a result of the collaboration, Wonderland shines light on the wider and much greater issues of sustainability and ethical living. A work perhaps vulnerable to cynicism, it demands and suggests intelligent change through brave collaboration and experiment.





http://www.showstudio.com/projects/wonderland/movie/
This video shot by Nick Knight shows model Alice Dellal being submerged in water clothed in a fully biodegradable garment, and it dissolving revealing her body within 10 seconds.

Storey, still working with Prof. Tony Ryan, is now working on furhter products based on their research:

The disappearing bottle - inspired by Helen's original concept of a plastic bottle that would have an intelligent relationship with its contents. By using a specially developed polymer to make the bottle, once empty it can be dissolved in hot water - when the solution cools down it makes a room-temperature gel - seeds (encased in a pepper-pot lid) planted in the fertile gel grow from the waste.

Water purification products: In the third world the most readily available source of power is human muscle. The water purification products use reverse osmosis and human energy to create clean from contaminated water.

Free Feet: This is a 'second skin' for the underside of the foot; a running shoe with no uppers. It is moulded from a polymer and has adhesive patches at the heel, ball of foot and big-toe. The commercial potential is four-fold (1) medical device for people with sensitive and swollen feet who cannot wear conventional shoes (2) orthopedic device to encourage good posture through effectively walking barefoot (3) foot protection for people who normally do not wear shoes and suffer from skin damage and infection as a result (4) fashion. This product is being developed in collaboration with Terraplana Ltd.


Here's some more images of the soluble textile:













(This image by Nick Knight)

WOWSER!!!

Sunday, 7 February 2010

Blooming love Nendo!

holy moles I am very much enjoying today's findings! This Oki Sato is a bit of a lej by the looks of it. Clever man. Today has been a rather inspirational day yaaaay.


Canvas: A restaurant made of a sheet of canvas. To change an old house into a restaurant was not an easy task, given a very small budget. After deciding to use a 200 meter sheet of canvas ---which was very reasonable, We wrapped the entire building, inside and outside, including tables and chairs. Small remaining pieces of canvas were used for cards and matchboxes as well. This was done for to control costs, and also to maintain a total image. (neno's website)

It's all you really need isn't it?! looks like a cosy atmosphere, clean, and there would be food. So... restaurant... done. would be cool if people could paint an ongoing mural inside....





This 'silhouette chandelier' is so pretty! Made by crossing six semi-translucent black fabrics, this design lets the outline of a flat chandelier imitated by the rhinestones, to appear three dimensionally. Really like the unusual take on things.

Nendo's concept


Before posting the concept, just wanted to show this lantern making technique nendo has come up with, this collection of them for an exhibition at New York's Museum of Arts and Design is beautifully subtle. Like the way they used white stickers on the floor around exhibits to make them seem to melt into the surrounding space.

'Smash' is a specialized long-fibre non-woven polyester that can be manipulated into different forms through hot press forming technology. Because it is thermoplastic, light and rip-proof, but glows beautifully when light passes through it, we wanted to create lighting fixtures in the style of vernacular Japanese chochin paper lanterns with it.

The structure of standard chochin consists of thin strips of bamboo wrapped around a wood frame and strengthened with vertical stitching. Japanese mulberry paper pasted over the frame completes the lamps, and gives them their characteristic glow. But we realized that Smash’s particular properties would allow us to shape it like blown glass into a seamless one-piece lantern. It is impossible to completely control the process, so each fixture takes a unique form as heat is added and pressurized air blown into it. As in glass-blowing, we can intervene during the production of each piece, resulting in a collection of objects whose infinitely varied imperfections are reminiscent of the infinite formal mutations of viruses and bacteria in response to environmental changes, and a far cry from the standardized forms of industrial mass-production.

http://www.nendo.jp/en/

Nendo's website states this as their basic concept. The ! is what all design strives to create. no idea what ! is, but i like it.



Giving people a small " ! " moment.
There are so many small " ! " moments hidden in our everyday.

But we don’t recognize them.
and even when we do recognize them,we tend to unconsciously reset our
minds and forget what we’ve seen.

But we believe these small " ! " moments are what make our days so
interesting, so rich.

That’s why we want to reconstitute the everyday by collecting and
reshaping them into something that’s easy to understand.

We’d like the people who’ve encountered nendo’s designs to feel these
small " ! " moments intuitively.

That’s nendo’s job.

Oki Sato aka Nendo's mossy walls

Tokyo based company Nendo, involved in architecture, interiors, product, graphic, furniture and event design. found great information about it on designsponge:
[about: This project involved renovating an old wooden house on the Shibuya River in Tokyo's Ebisu neighbourhood into a live-work space. The house had accumulated some strange and wonderful features -an inner courtyard, an oddly long hallway, a tiny room- from a series of earlier renovations, so we decided to build on these earlier features, but also to "acclimate" the space to the new owner's [Oki Sato] lifestyle. The hallway became a study, and the small Japanese-style room a studio. Veins of moss pattern the riverbank outside the windows, so we used similar veins of dry moss on the interior walls to subtly connect existing spaces with newly-renovated ones, and the house’s interior environment to its exterior one. Most wallpaper imitates nature through a two-dimensional representation of it, and cladding the walls entirely in moss would simply have been too much. We wanted something in-between, so we applied the moss in a pattern that looked like wallpaper, creating an ambiguous texture that’s neither artificial nor natural. The same pattern appears on the cable outlet, and on the door frames and door handles of the office, further synthesizing the moss pattern with the space.]

CURB: the natural media company








Have just come across this advertising company, CURB, who utilise 'clean advertising'- so all natural materials, organic processes which do not damage the environment, overall a transient nature to the campaign. Stamping into snow, sand, growing moss, carving logos inot crop fields, turf, glowing bacteria, I love it all!!! it's just so much more interesting and clever, and much nicer to trees than a poster :) check the website: http://www.mindthecurb.com/

Growing things!




My current final year project concerns natural growth, how nature adapts to different environments, and how it can regenerate from decay of other materials. Have ben experimenting growing crystals, lichen, and rust on fabric. Lichen is currently rotting in my kitchen.. not too successful.. or hygienic... Rust gives fantastic colouring and looks very organic, at the moment though the crystal growing is giving the best results! I feel like a child doing experiments again! Tis fun and they are shiney so what could be better?!
The bottom photo comes from a collection I acquired after visiting the School of Life Sciences within Dundee University. The lovely helpful people there let me use the labsa to grow crystals and then use their superduper microscope/digital camera which is connected to a pc to allow instant capture of a microscopic image. So tis the babies I grew up blown up to 100 times their actual size! awww I'm so proud. myy prreecciiooouuss...