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Showing posts with label Designers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Designers. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 13, 2015

Housing Works Design On A Dime Event 2015

I attended the Design on a Dime opening night party to benefit Housing Works at the Metropolitan Pavilion.  This was the eleventh year for the event where 1600 attendees came together to get a look at inspirational room vignettes created by more than 60 top interior designers while shopping for new high end merchandise discounted up to 70% off retail. Yes shop too...  you could feel the high energy in the room. I would stop to chat knowing that the person I was talking to was anxious to shop and glare at all the design. Once the bell rings, all bets are off. All the proceeds from the event go towards Housing Works building their newest supportive housing development, the Hull Street Residence.

Some of my snaps from the event:



Mingled with friends old and new: Rebecca Reynolds & Ashley, Tamara Stephenson, Jonathan Legate, Stephen Fanuka & Tyler Wisler, Jennifer Flanders. 

The opening night had a fab party vibe, totally mobbbed! Celebs like Andy Cohen from Bravo and Ryan Serhant from Million Dollar Listing were also abound. Below are some images of my fave one-of-a-kind vignettes decorated with donated merchandise collectively from over 400 charitable home decor brands: 

















Byron C. James



















image credits: Felix R. Cid


To get a daily dose of design, find MoD Design Guru on

Tuesday, May 13, 2014

Designer Tips: Spring 2014 Trends to revamp your home

Spring has finally sprung and I was honored to be asked my opinion among award winning designers by LP General Contracting, Northern California's expert for new construction and restoration on what are some catchy Spring 2014 trends to warm up and make your space unique! I humbly say thank you LP General Contracting for the incredible feature!! 





Read the article to get some great tips from designers Kerrie Kelly on how to mix old with new, Landfair Furniture's belief on how a room should reflect who you are and my own tips on how to have fun with Texture and Pattern! 


To connect with LP General Contracting, 
see their WEBSITE and FACEBOOK



To get a daily dose of design, find MoD Design Guru on



Wednesday, November 20, 2013

MoD Must Haves: Luxuriant porcelain dinnerware by Daniel Levy

MoD Must Haves
stylish, tactile, novel 
for porcelain lovers



Beauty and craftsmanship sums up the porcelain work by Daniel Levy. I have met Daniel and he takes pride in his beautiful work! Based in NYC, his fine porcelain dinnerware and accessories are all hand-made with colored porcelain slips and glazed and finished with multiple layers of 22 karat gold or platinum. Yes, the real stuff and it is applied on the thick sides of his latest pieces (see above image). Love it! His work is more than dinnerware, its art...I can only imagine how stunning a table would look with his creations adorning the table! Thanksgiving is coming up!!

See the Vine:



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Friday, April 26, 2013

Design and Charity: Design on a Dime 2013




Rio Hamilton for Niedermaier


In one word, Epic!....describes the ninth annual Design on a Dime charity fundraiser supporting Housing Work's programs for the homeless living with and affected by HIV/AIDS.  Last night was the opening reception and I was able to peruse each designer's vignette at the press preview before the big reception.  I have to say they were all amazing...one designer vignette after another showcased bold, classic and daring designs. Around 64 designers participated creating rooms with donated furniture and accessories that sold 50-70% off retail. Amazing right? There are definite steals! This show runs thru the weekend so get your shoes on and dart down to the Metropolitan Pavilion on West 18th street! Sale open to the public: for info click here. This years proceeds goes toward their newest housing development, The Hull Street Residence in Brooklyn, N.Y.. 

Check out some of my FAVES.....and my Design On a Dime Pinterest board where you can see more amazing rooms!!

Friday, March 29, 2013

today's ANGLE: Franklin's O’More Designer Showhouse





....an attitude, a point of view, a design perspective from Interior designer Kathy Sandler of Sandler Design Group and creative author of her amazing blog Live the fine life
You can follow her on Twitter and Facebook

Today's city slant:

Franklin's O’More Designer Showhouse,Tennessee


The Berry Cottage
(picture taken under construction)

Interior designer Kathy Sandler is working on an exciting and unique project benefitting her almamater, O'MoreCollege of Design.  Kicking off with a Preview party on April 4th, of which Kathy is Co-chair, O’More College of Design and Traditional Home magazine are presenting the O’More Show house in downtown Franklin, Tennessee - about 20 miles from downtown Nashville. Seventeen leading interior designers - all O'More alumni spanning four decades have been selected to participate in the project at Berry Cottage.  How amazing is that?  Guests of the Preview party will get a first look at The Berry Cottage, a 4,000 square-foot transitional Shingle style home, an opportunity to meet the participating designers and talk with Traditional Home editorial staff with cocktails and Southern hors-d’oeuvres in hand. Mmm mm. RSVP HERE to purchase your Preview party ticket. The house is open to the public April 4-21. Tickets are $20 at the door.

Friday, March 1, 2013

AUGMENTED REALITY: EPFL + ECAL

on the MDG RADAR in New York City


get digitally INTERACTIVE 


Eyebeam Art & Technology Center unveiled Gimme More: Is Augmented reality the next medium?, an award winning project by EPFL + ECAL LAB   whose core mission is training, research and technology. Something not to miss and is still going on thru Saturday, March 2. The public is confronted  with more than just any exhibition. With digital technology, an object can tell a story, reveal information and force conversations between body and space. 
Artists are questioning the prospects of what makes the value of an object, its identity, and our relationship with it. There are some intriguing ideas here, certainly projects that demonstrate how the importance of our body determines the placement of virtual information. Take a peek at some of the images I took below.


TEXTUR by CEM SEVER


I met the artist, Cem Server and he demonstrated how the motion of your body controls the location of digital data. I really enjoyed Textur and how it turns the user's body into an antenna that collects the surrounding flows of digital information. 

He questions, "Are we aware of the virtual stream of information submerging us? Are we in tune with the content?"

Thursday, February 21, 2013

3D PRINTING: NERVOUS SYSTEM

3D printing, a new construction method has become a buzz word over the past few years. You can make almost anything from aerospace parts, to jewelry to products for home design. The process is as follows: you enter a CAD drawing and the printer produces thin layers of materials, fusing them together turning your creation into a three-dimensional object. Voila!



Jessica Rosenkrantz and Jess Louis-Rosenberg of Nervous System design company are creating some awesome affordable lighting, jewelry and housewares using 3d-printing. All inspired by nature with complex and unconventional geometries. I was amazed to learn that on their site you can create your very own custom cellular jewelry and sculptural design using their Cell Cycle design app. Click HERE.  





(all images via n-e-r-v-o-u-s.com)

Connect and learn more on their 
WEBSITE, FACEBOOK & TWITTER


Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Axor Starck Shower Collection:Tailor-made bathroom design


(1) Juicy Salif lemon squeezer for Alessi, 
(2) Phillipe Starck, 
(3) Hudson Hotel

Phillipe Starck creates the functional and the fantastical. He tries to change perspectives and one’s angle of thinking. He is one of the most fascinating architects, interior designers and product designers in contemporary design today.

"I like to open doors to human brains" - Phillippe Starck

In 1990, Starck changed the industrial design market. Objects were no longer simply functional. Objects and furniture were anthropomorphized- he attributed human or animal characteristics onto objects and furniture with a sense of humor and irrationality. Like his iconic Juicy Salif lemon squeezer for Alessi. (1) It generated many discussions about its meaning and design and now is shown on permanent collection at the MOMA in NYC.

In 2000, Starck transported guests into a theatrical, dream-like world in his utterly cool Hudson Hotel design in NYC. This building is a must see! The exterior of the building is blank with a small neon door.(2) Classic Starck play of proportions. Once through the neon door, the guest enters a luminous glass tunnel with an escalator that ascends up to a magical, surreal lobby! (3)


So, it is no surprise that when Phillipe Starck collaborated with Axor, the Hansgrohe AG designer brand he would think of the bathroom differently, a new angle. The bathroom is not just a room to wash yourself. Phillipe thought of it as a room of pleasure or a room to rest, a "salle d'eau" or room of water.






The Axor Starck shower collection was shown at the imm-cologne trade show. It is a complete system of showers, mixers and accessories that turns the shower into a personally designed spa. I was blown away by the power of the rainfall: the aesthetic, the pulse and the luxurious feel of the water was extremely overwhelming ;yet, calming! 







At the Axor display, we were able to meet with Phillipe Grohe, who heads the Axor brand. He explained to us that the overhead shower format can take on the basic principle of the square into smaller shower areas. Depending on the size of the bathroom, the stainless steel rain shower can be mounted in three different ways- flush-mounted, with ceiling connector and wall mounting with shower arm. The waterfall spout is multi-functional and the system is modular. The squares can line up like a mosaic and piece together in multiple formats. This flexibilty provides unlimited freedom to create individual bathroom solutions! 



What is also interesting is how the rain zone is blended with air, providing a more powerful shower experience. You can control the water flow  depending on the type of shower experience you want - just like being in a spa, but in your home. This sophisticated collection was tailor-made to create a new aesthetic, a new territory and a new control for well-being and bathroom design!! 
Thank you again Axor for sponsoring BlogTour Cologne!!  Stay tuned for my personal interview with Phillipe Grohe!! Thank you Phillipe!
(product and profile images given by Axor press)

Friday, January 4, 2013

BiTTT 2013 Lecture for Architects and Designers






Networking group for Women in Design called BiTTTBring it To The Table, developed by Lana Lawrence of Anthony Lawrence-Belfair, provides its members with a place to share resources, experience and make meaningful connections in the design industry. 

On Tuesday January 29th, BiTTT is hosting a lecture with guest speaker Lloyd Princeton of Design Management Company, an Agent/Expert for Architects and Designers. He will educate designers on "how to determine the best way to charge for their design services and incorporate it into a solid letter of agreement, with confidence."

As an architect/designer myself, this lecture sounds very rewarding! 

Location: ALB Design Center 53 West 23rd Street, 9th Floor
Date: Tuesday, January 29th, 6:00pm-8:00pm
Cost: $30.00
Register: click HERE. 



Thursday, December 6, 2012

Mod Must Have: John Houshmand's Glass Cube Table design

MOD MUST HAVES
stylish, modern, unique
for furniture lovers



You all know that I'm a John Houshmand lover after my two part interview series. Well, he just surprised me with a new design inspired by his .oo98 bronze cube table design this morning. I really love it! A wood slab appears to be floating within its glass cube. The lines are clean and significant. With no sign of connections, John totally defies gravity. And oh my, the hidden drawer! Bravo!

Monday, December 3, 2012

Layers in Art: Victor-Raul Garcia


 
I came across a new abstract artist named Victor-Raul Garcia from Lima, Peru. I really relate to his work because he finds beauty in the dimensions between layers of paint. He uncovers and scratches what's beyond the surface. Although this sounds pretty deep, he describes himself as "an autodidactic artist who doesn't take himself too seriously."




His layered process adds and reveals mystery to each canvas. He says, "Complexity and Depth can actually be soothing and gentle if interpreted correctly (both by the artist and the viewer)..."




I find myself travelling thru each band of gray or color he dictates.  Where is he taking me? What are his inspirations?

Victor adds, "my inspirations are a vast array of images I witness and/or research daily .......from a religious scene on a stained glass window in a church to  the cracks, rust and moss left on a sidewalk; from the overlapped and torn layers of old billboards left in subway stations to the foto of a vintage brooch; from a stack of fabrics at Fortuny to the microscopic imagery of an element......."








You can follow Victor-Raul Garcia on his WEBSITE & Facebook.


Thursday, November 29, 2012

Mod Must Haves for lighting lovers


MOD MUST HAVES
stylish, modern, unique
for lighting lovers



At first I was drawn to the differential textures of rough against smooth...

Sapi Chandelier by Eva Menz Design  SOURCE


Then a closer look.....




Sapi Chandelier by Eva Menz Design  SOURCE


The chandelier by Eva menz design is composed 
of several hundred bone pendants. Wow, pretty 
amazing how the light bounces off each jagged edge!


Sapi Chandelier by Eva Menz Design  SOURCE


Eva Menz Design explores any material and specializes 
in sculptural pieces that are magical and spatial!

Friday, November 23, 2012

Designer Spotlight Part 1: John Houshmand's reclaimed furniture design



John Houshmand 
Shazam Glass Low table with Spalted Maple Microslab #0187.1

John Houshmand is an innovative designer and furniture-maker who designs unparalleled sculptural furniture composed of reclaimed wood, glass and steel. He is dedicated to the eternity of trees and celebrates nature by integrating all its knots, cracks and wormholes from Black walnut and elm trees. Every one-of-a-kind piece emphasizes trees' beauty and infuses nature into interiors. A John Houshmand piece is a statement to any space. He has a New York City showroom but all the magic happens on his 900 acre farm in Upstate New York. His philosophy is simple, “We allow trees to do the talking. We simply listen.”

Read on to learn more about John’s stunning work. He has given Mod Design Guru an exciting, witty and thoughtful interview, so detailed that I decided to break it up in two parts. One of my favorite interviews thus far! Below he takes us behind his designs and gives his thoughts on sustainability for his furniture-making process. Part two of the interview will showcase the architectural features of his Mexico retreat, Tierra Adentro. Its amazing!


Interview with John Houshmand - Part 1:


Can you describe the magic in your designs that marry rustic and modern and defy gravity?

Oddly enough my greatest inspirations are musicians and composers. I play spontaneously composed and arranged music, and it is in that world that I get the greatest hand-to-god connection, and I look for that vibrational resonance in my 3-D creativity as well as. So the music of Keith Jarrett and Pat Metheny, Coltrane, Brad Mehldau, and others at that level are my constant companions. If I can use that standard as a way into the making of a static (or not so static) object, then I might get more fairy dust onto a piece than if I approached this as a design effort. 


Shazam Glass Low table with Black Walnut Microslab #0187


Black Walnut Dining Table with thick Acrylic legs#0023.3


Black Walnut Dining Table with thick Acrylic legs#0023.3


Black Walnut Desk with Acrylic legs #0184


Take us behind the design of your Tattooed Acrylic and Wood table. What was the inception of the idea? 

The tattooed designs started with a collaboration with Rockwell Group for a hotel in Asia. The call out was for literally "tattooed" wood, and everybody thought laser etching was the way. But the tests created a black micro-groove in the wood. When they asked us to go to beige and flush, we shifted to mechanical etching and a proprietary colored fill. Worked great! Then we said let's do it on 2" thick acrylic. Looked seriously amazing! And the clincher was when we said, "Let's go back to the laser, and groove it 1/2" deep, then fill with black, and get "curtains" into the matrix of the acrylic."
 Viewed on-axis you see the graphic. Viewed off-axis you see this wonderful inner world inside the acrylic slab with curtains of  black resin. We are going to try it with different colors and get the "aurora" table...



Tattooed Custom Etched Graphics




Solid Oak Outdoor table Dining Table  with 
Tattooed Custom Etched Graphics #0240



Tattooed Custom Etched Graphics



Solid Teak Outdoor table Dining Table  with
Tattooed Custom Etched Graphics #0241



Tattooed Custom Etched Graphics


With the shift in open plan living, will we see more designs like the console with ebonized and gray wash on Black Walnut?

So many of our pieces are really sculptural and as such are meant to be viewed in the round. We have designs on the books that reinvent different pieces, and the use-ability of these pieces. Often, access from both sides or all round is a new approach but one that gives new use as well as great visuals. Also we have envisioned hospitality uses, such as hotel suites where armoires are not against walls, mini-bars are corner mounted into tonsu-like units, and such. Let's get multi-dimensional here... It brings new uses, new interactions, and great design opportunities.


Console Cabinet with Ebonized doors and 
Gray wash and Black Walnut doors #0087.9



(all images courtesy of John Houshmand)


How did sustainability become a priority in your furniture making process?

I’ve gone the full circle from unhappy urban consumer to bored large-scale functionally monastic designer, manufacturer, and farm owner. Our culture is really quite ill when you turn the TV on, visit the mall, and spelunk the minds of many western semi-individuals. And the design world as a safe haven from that is a misnomer, as we are all still feverishly trying to make more stuff. Stuff is business, and business is profit margins. Can we have a rich life with fewer things that really mean a lot to us? What are the RELATIONSHIPS by which we acquire the stuff of our lives? It is really simple from a certain perspective: know the true necessity behind what you gather around you in your life. If we all owned HALF of what we owned, and made it last twice as long (our work will last hundreds of years at least), there you have an elegant calculus. Add to that the basic tenets of sustainability (proper materials, minimal radius, reusable/cyclable, low energy consumption, etc) for as many things as you can, and it is a start. Forget most hype, nonsense marketing, and green-washing. Almost nothing is very green: car, toaster oven, production foodstuffs, plastic anything, electronics, you name it. We are fooling ourselves. I am not advocating being a luddite, but let’s get real and stop the bullshit. At least ACCEPT that this is true, and maybe the mere consciousness of that alone will put a good worm in the brain, and little by little we will find ourselves wanting less, valuing the stuff of life, and getting an intuitive sense of how to make this world right. Good relationships, good food, good music, travel, study and love for the entire time you are on this planet, and an insistence to make this place better when leaving than when you came, that is sustainability. I have often wondered why millennia (yes millennia!) of human lives are spent in some deluded religious obsession with heaven or hell in the afterlife when it is about now and here. This is heaven or hell, depending on what you and I do. Start now. 



To connect with John Houshmand, 
you can link to his WEBSITE, BLOGFACEBOOK, and TWITTER.


Stunning work! 
Thank you John for an amazing interview! 

Part 2 of the interview of your gorgeous Mexican retreat 
Tierra Adentro to be posted on Sunday!!