Living in a unique home: four places that can be rented
Snøhetta designed a chair for Nordic Comfort Products (NCP) made from recycled ocean debris, old fishing nets, and scrap metal.
Design studio Stackabl and Maison Gerard explore the creative possibilities of reusing materials. They draw on both antique collecting culture and recent recycling inventions. Together they developed an innovative system for designing bespoke furniture and lighting without waste.
Following the food, beauty, and fashion sectors, the home goods market is keeping up with the vegan trend and finding ways to avoid the use of animal-based materials. Paris-based agency NellyRodi has singled out the desire to create a vegan home as a separate trend, which has every chance of becoming one of the most significant in 2023.
Snøhetta designed a chair for Nordic Comfort Products (NCP) made from recycled ocean debris, old fishing nets, and scrap metal.
Design studio Stackabl and Maison Gerard explore the creative possibilities of reusing materials. They draw on both antique collecting culture and recent recycling inventions. Together they developed an innovative system for designing bespoke furniture and lighting without waste.
Designer Bob Hendrikx proposed his vision of ecological ritual devices: his coffin, created from mycelium, completely disintegrates in the ground in a couple of years, unlike traditional wood and velvet-covered ones, which take more than ten years to decompose.
Following the food, beauty, and fashion sectors, the home goods market is keeping up with the vegan trend and finding ways to avoid the use of animal-based materials. Paris-based agency NellyRodi has singled out the desire to create a vegan home as a separate trend, which has every chance of becoming one of the most significant in 2023.
Innovative trends in furniture design are clearly visible when studying objects that have won various international awards. We present current objects that have recently won prizes in European and Asian competitions.
Scientists have long known that visiting museums is good for health: it lowers blood pressure and cortisol levels, and improves mood and well-being. But what about online galleries? A new study by the Max Planck Institute for Empirical Aesthetics has confirmed that even viewing art online positively affects our well-being.