Clever Stuff

very nice cutlery Rob. Simple, functional and I like how the serving fork bears slight resemblance to a pitch fork.
 
Yeah, that light is by Philippe Starck ...fun but gimmicky.
 
My answer to those nice kitchens:
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I know that the accessories are kinda old and out-of-date in terms of desing and fashion but, it is expensive to buy new ones. Oh, and that table needs a glass and some new chairs...

I can give you more info about this kitchen if you want!
 
Very nice Giannis. I like the colour of the wall tiles ...they make the whole kitchen very warm.

Those white chairs are very similar to a famous one by Vico Magistretti.
 
I don't think i was clear! This is my kitchen Rob! Costed me a nice 15.000eur!

Oh, and those chairs are around 15 years old!

Tomorrow morning i'll clean the kitchen and i will take many more photographs. Promise!

:t-cheers:
 
I don't think i was clear! This is my kitchen Rob! Costed me a nice 15.000eur!

Oh, and those chairs are around 15 years old!

Tomorrow morning i'll clean the kitchen and i will take many more photographs. Promise!

:t-cheers:

Oh so it's your kitchen? I thought it was just a random kitchen. Very neat, I love the orange tiles.

:t-cheers:
 
[QUOTE/]I know that the accessories are kinda old and out-of-date in terms of desing and fashion but, it is expensive to buy new ones. Oh, and that table needs a glass and some new chairs...

I can give you more info about this kitchen if you want![/QUOTE]

Very Nice job!

Yes, more details please
 
The Milan Furniture fair starts in a few days (Salone Internazionale del Mobile). Although it deals mostly with domestic and office furnishings, it is also an important meeting place for many of the world's designers working in all fields of Art, Design, industrial production technology, high and popular cultural analysts, trend spotters, entrepreneurs, sociologists and anthropologists.

Here is a very intersting product.

Countach Table



The designers Reed Kram and Clemens Weisshaar

“Interesting” and “growth” are fitting words to describe the Breeding Tables, which were conceived at the 2002 Milan furniture fair in response to the torpor the designers saw on display. At the time, Kram and Weisshaar were not even thinking of doing furniture; they happened to be in Milan for a project completely unrelated to the fair. “We went in, took one look around, and became quite depressed,” Weisshaar remembers. “The furniture seemed to be trapped in a rut, essentially unchanged for 10 years—no one was integrating technology.” Depression soon turned to inspiration. “We sat down at the Cadorna station and decided to grow products right then and there.”

Kram and Weisshaar began customizing Rhino—the programming language beloved of industrial designers—through algorithmic modeling to produce subtle iterations of a basic table shape. “We ended up adapting Rhino to allow it to act like an interactive system for genetic selection,” Kram says.

According to Weisshaar, “The program serves as a hyperextension of the designer’s hand, allowing us to imagine possibilities we would not be able to achieve on our own.” Indeed, creating 1,000 distinct tables would break the back of any designer. But the software acts “like a kind of digital sweatshop,” constantly shooting out proposals. From the initial lot of iterations, titled the 0 Series, Kram and Weisshaar weeded out the aesthetic runts, allowing only the “fittest” to advance to the next generation.

As in the computer-driven research phase, the production phase for the Breeding Tables was based on a software mutation. By designing software to push past conventional manufacturing routines into applications for customized forms, Kram and Weisshaar directed laser-cutting and steel-bending machines to shape their tables in ways no one had thought possible for a machine. “We recognized that there was a gap between the latent abilities of flexible, modern machine tools and the tasks they are generally given,” Weisshaar says. Most highly digitized laser-cutting machines are capable of extracting unique pieces from each bit of material, yet they are instructed to do only simple repetitions. “The intelligence within the machine serves the Henry Ford–logic of increasing efficiency, but their real potential remains unused.” Once cut, formed, and shaped, the tables are passed off to highly skilled technicians who finish them by hand.

Full article
 
Very Nice job!

Yes, more details please

So, here we are. A bit late, but worth wait :D

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This is the kitchen/ cooker itself. Don't know the word in english...

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small overview.

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the refridgerator. Costed 2.500eur. Worth it. Next to it the oven and the microwaves.

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this is a cake. This (i don't know how it is called in english) working surface is made of quartz. total of 5.000eur and four persons to carry each piece of it.

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another little secret of mine :D

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my old chairs. Must be 15 years old and more. Will end up in the fireplace sometime next chrismas.

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A little piece of decoration. Lighted shelves.

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the dinning table. It is from wenge wood, but i put on this white piece of cloth, because i work on it.

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from another angle.

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the art corner. all these are supposed to hang from the walls, but i have got bored of them and i want something new. i will spend money on this later though..
--
all the appliances are from siemens. the lower part (brown) is from wenge wood and the rest is beige *if only i new how it is cold in english*
 
Very Nice Giannis!:usa7uh:

Lovely interpretation of contemporary styling without making it look cold.

Have you noticed how some people manage to make their homes look like Superman's North Pole pad?

Also..yummy cakes... is the one in the oven made with fruits?



To answer your question , in the states we say stovetop or range for the 'cooker'. I have a Bosch gas (LP) , Miele electric doble oven and a Sub-Zero fridge in my kitchen ( but the style is Frech country meets 21-st century ) and they will be busy baking NSL's B-day cake in brief.:banana:
 
Very good Giannis, I like the materials you have used, The quartz bench top is great ...and even more durable than granite.
 
Very Nice Giannis!:usa7uh:

Lovely interpretation of contemporary styling without making it look cold.

Have you noticed how some people manage to make their homes look like Superman's North Pole pad?

Very true. The orange tiles in combination with the white bench and cabinets contributes to the warmth. Very nice kitchen. The cakes look great too. Yummie yummie.:D
 

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