Explore free Divi layouts, templates for stunning website design. Download Divi layouts for a perfect blend of creativity and functionality. #DiviLayouts #WebDesign
Discover premium Divi plugins & modules at DiviGrid. Create stunning websites with the Elegant Themes’ Divi theme. Unleash your creativity with dynamic
There are as many ways to organize an office space as there are offices in the world. When there’s no longer any room to stuff stationery in desktop organizers,
With our exposure modules, we want to give the greatest focus to what you choose to place in them, but without compromising the creative possibilities.
the structural system features identical square elementary modules whose varying angles nestle into each other, allowing you to build your shelving unit upwards and outwards.
When Studio E.O founder Erik Olovsson enlisted a graphic designer, Kyuhyung Cho, to collaborate on a storage system, it was safe to wager that the upshot would be animated.
Lasercut Modules: Modularity exists all around us in our daily life (see lecture). Developing a module (a brick) is fundamental to anydesign process to help focus the intention and solvability. A module can serve not only as a high fidelity finished product but also …
BUILD by Movisi is beyond compare, modular, multifunctional shelve that allows you to bring your creative self to the fore.
Tout simplement génialement geek ! La photo du produit résume tout. Chez SDesignUnit. Via Anh Phan
Cardboard Stackers Isn’t it great to make wonderful play things with stuff you have around the house? Isn’t that what they used to do for toys? These cardboard stackers are both fun to make and play with afterward. What is great about today’s project is that you have an activity to do with your kids...Read More
Make Your Own QuaDror Modules: I recently stumbled across this new structural joint in an article on a design blog I follow. It wasn't entirely clear to me how it worked so I decided to try to build it. &am…
So, did you ever think you should or could be an artist or designer with or without some basics? I guess not! If you are an aspiring artist, a Grannie or a Mom or Dad doing some home schooling, the…
Konnex by Florian Gross is a new shelving system currently being produced by Germany design company Müller Möbelwerkstätten. It won the Interior
Varios diseños para tu cúpula geodésica de cartón. Fáciles de montar y reutilizables. Perfectos para montajes expositivos y eventos.
Boxetti collection. Boxetti réinvente une collection complète qui vous permettra de réaménager vos petites surfaces de vie en des lieux agréables,
This awesome lounge chair is a perfect chair for all adventures. Pack House is designed well to provide your creative adventures. The design allows you to do all things only with one chair, like listening to music, reading, drawing and also writing. Pack Horse is a new way to do all of them without a table
Not much is known about the Dutch printmaker MC Escher, but his familiar mind-bending artwork, Relativity, has been reproduced countless times in popular culture. You know the one. It inspired that...
Modular furniture is a recommended thing that you can add to your kids' bedroom. Kids' bedroom needs the best organization for their toys, dolls, and books. Modular furniture can be a solution to save their bedroom space.
A Cleveland, Ohio-based company is turning debris from demolished buildings into attractive and flexible office furnishings.
Trigora | mobile Stadtmöbel Raum der Kulturen 2017 Berlin Buckow Entwurf von modularen, mobilen Stadtmöbeln und Ausführung in Workshops mit einer Gruppe junger, geflüchteter Männer Mit d…
A lesson in modularity, balance, and composition; in a box. Archiblocks is a construction game from French maker Cinqpoints. This Bauhaus edition is inspired by the eponymous school of art, architecture and design. 27 blocks of PEFC lime-wood, naturally dried and hand-sanded to perfection. Soothing woody sounds as the blocks connect. For rainy days, busy minds, and the creatively curious. Designer Laurence Calafat Maker Cinqpoints Material PEFC-certified lime wood sourced from sustainably-managed forests Dimensions Box: 8.6 × 11.4 × 1.57 in. / 22 × 29 × 4 cm Origin France
Explore elod beregszaszi's 571 photos on Flickr!
The NV01 modular bookcase from Noir Vif can be adapted to fit in any space, piecing together like a giant jigsaw puzzle.
presented during tokyo design week 2015, japanese architect kengo kuma has has designed a set of simple triangular-shaped wooden pieces called 'tsumiki'.
Les designers italiens Plato Design ont récemment lancé une campagne Kickstarter pour leur lampe D-Twelve qui explore la modularité, la versatilité et la pe
Collections of lines Taking a Line for a Walk This was fun to stitch and it was interesting to try to create the same kinds of lines in the original drawing - the cartwheel shapes were the most challenging to complete. Taking a Line for a Dance This sample was more interesting to stitch, as I think that the shapes I drew were more interesting. Stitching lacks the same kind of spontaneity that can be achieved with a pen or pencil and curved lines can become quite 'jerky' if you lose concentration! Mark Making This sample was created with different parts of a paintbrush and black ink. I quite like the effect created by the dry brush where the hairs has separated into two 'prongs'. This sample was created with black ink and a toothpick. I didn't like the different effects I achieved at first, but looking back at it a few days later could see some potential for lines to stitch, as the toothpick made quite fine lines on the page. These thicker lines were created with a natural sponge and black ink, used by dragging the sponge across the page and by dabbing the paper. I can't draw much inspiration for stitching from this at the moment - maybe the lines are just too thick? This sample was created with a foam 'wedge' artists' brush. I don't really like any of the thicker lines, but some interesting effects have been created by using the side and end of the brush and dabbing at the paper. These might become interesting patterns to stitch in the future... I used a cotton reel for this sample, which resulted in some interesting patterns when the end was used. I particularly like the effect of overlapping the prints. The above effects were created with a lolly stick and a pipette - I tried to recreate some of the taking a line for a walk/dance shapes from earlier in the chapter to see how they would differ. Using ink and a pipette meant that some of the lines were thicker or narrower, depending on how much ink escaped from the end of the pipette! The final sample was created by using a twig that I found in my garden. Using a natural material gave a more dynamic feel to the lines, as the twig wasn't a uniform shape or width, like some of the other instruments used. Mark Making The crayon made lots of different types of marks on the page - thinner ones by using the tip and thicker, softer ones by using the side. Being soft, I was able to make quite 'fluid' lines with the crayon that flowed across the page. I used a soft 6B graphite pencil and a carbon pencil to create the marks in the above picture. The 6B pencil created quite soft, gentle lines, but the carbon pencil was quite 'scratchy' and I was able to achieve more 'spiky' marks, as well as softer, curved lines. I used charcoal to create the lines in the first picture above. The marks are quite thick and dark, but I was able to achieve different effects by using the edge of the charcoal stick or the sharper edge. The second set of lines were created by using an 8B pencil. I was able to create thicker, softer lines or thinner ones by using either the side of the lead or the tip. The lines in the pictures above were created by using black pens. For the first sketch, I used a very fine tipped artists' pen and was able to create very fine lines that would transfer easily into stitching. I quite like the 'scribble' in the lower left hand corner as it is quite dynamic and energetic. I also liked the effects created by the brush felt tip pen. These marks were thicker, but I was able to create different effects by using varying pressures and different parts of the nib. The brush felt tip also felt comfortable to use and I think there is quite a lot of potential for ideas to stitch in this sketch. I tried stitching some of the marks I had made with the toothpick, sponge brush and felt tip. I used zig zag stitch to create some of the thicker lines, both with the feed dogs up and down on the machine. I preferred the effect created by using free machine embroidery, as this gave a more free 'artistic' feel. Ialso went over some of the stitching two or three times, as this gave the stitched marks more energy and impact. Although I preferred the thinner lines when drawing, I found that I enjoyed stitching the thicker lines more when sewing! Lines with Emotion Stitched Lines with Emotion This is my sample of lines with emotion, using my drawings above as a design. Some of the lines were easier to stitch than others (the curved or more simple designs). For others, I had to make an interpretation of the original sketch,as the lines were too complicated to follow exactly. I don't think that this really made a difference to the final effect, as long as the emotion I wanted to convey was still present. I think that 'anger' and 'anxiety' were the most effective samples. I sewed over the lines in 'anxiety' a few times, and this gave the stitching a stronger, more effective result. My least favourite was 'excited' as it was difficult to recreate the sponinaety and flow of the original sketch.