MAKER

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etsy:

We want this for our next camping trip:

imprecise:

Third year industrial designer David Suhami designed the ‘Animal pocket knife’. He developed the toy during his studio course at Shenkar College of Engineering and Design in Tel Aviv, Israel. The piece is inspired by the swiss army knife that is offering different tools for every occasion. The animal pocket knife is nothing but a funny interpretation of this little helpful tool, combining the idea of the army knife and a jungle safari in Africa. You can put together up to 81 different combinations such as giraffe, antelope and a rhino.

81 notes

simko:

D’espresso designed by Nemaworkshop…

When Eugene Kagansky, the owner of D’Espresso on the Lower East Side, decided to open another coffee bar a block away from the New York Public Library, he told his designer, “Let’s do a coffee bar that looks like a library, but would be more interesting.”
So Anurag Nema, the founder of nemaworkshop, a Manhattan design firm, did something interesting: he flipped the coffee shop on its side.
Glazed tiles printed with images of books create the illusion of bookshelves tilted sideways, running along the ceiling, down the rear wall and onto the floor. Another wall is covered in herringbone-patterned oak flooring. And the spherical glass lights jut out horizontally from behind the bar, rather than hanging from the ceiling. (via)

I adore the clever concept and try to swing by this spot whenever I’m in the neighborhood.

simko:

D’espresso designed by Nemaworkshop

When Eugene Kagansky, the owner of D’Espresso on the Lower East Side, decided to open another coffee bar a block away from the New York Public Library, he told his designer, “Let’s do a coffee bar that looks like a library, but would be more interesting.”

So Anurag Nema, the founder of nemaworkshop, a Manhattan design firm, did something interesting: he flipped the coffee shop on its side.

Glazed tiles printed with images of books create the illusion of bookshelves tilted sideways, running along the ceiling, down the rear wall and onto the floor. Another wall is covered in herringbone-patterned oak flooring. And the spherical glass lights jut out horizontally from behind the bar, rather than hanging from the ceiling. (via)

I adore the clever concept and try to swing by this spot whenever I’m in the neighborhood.

(via dpstyles)