Archive for October, 2011

My tree bookshelf is done!

Hooray! My bookshelf, the tree, is done and super beautiful hanging in my lounge! Thanx to Des and Marius!!
Remember my bookshelf research?

Photobucket

Photobucket

Update: as so many were asking for the specs, here we go

Post-it watch

The post it watch is super silly, but funny.

Last week in instagram

Photobucket

Yummy tapas lunch at Fork on Long Street.

Photobucket

Walk in Table Mountain National Park.

Photobucket

Agulhas. Most southern tip of Africa.

Photobucket

Lighthouse Agulhas.

Photobucket

Short visit in Napier.

Photobucket

Real beer – an amazing one-man-show.

Photobucket

Photobucket

World traveller.

Photobucket

Tuna for lunch.

Photobucket

Photobucket

Kalk Bay.

Photobucket

Slangkop Kommetjie.

Photobucket

Photobucket

Western Cape National Park.

Photobucket

Photobucket

Cape Cobra.

Photobucket

Stevenson gallery Cape Town.

Magi – for your magazines

Magi is a practical solution for the storage of magazines. Its compact proportions and integral handle, allow it to be easily moved and placed against any wall or beside a chair or sofa.

Happy weekend!

pic found here

the past weeks via instagram

Life is busy as usual… I’m working on great projects where I get to travel the Western Cape a lot; a few instagram shots from the past 3 weeks.

Photobucket

Photobucket

Photobucket

Photobucket

Photobucket

Photobucket

Photobucket

Photobucket

Photobucket

Photobucket

Photobucket

Photobucket

Photobucket

Photobucket

Photobucket

Photobucket

Photobucket

Photobucket

Photobucket

Photobucket

Photobucket

Masterpieces Pattern Sheet

1. Choose your favourite artwork, find a suitable spot and attach the pattern sheet there to the wall or to a board with appropriate dimensions.
2. Check whether you have sufficient nails and hammer in each of the numbered dots of the choosen pattern a nail through the poster.
3. String a thread or yarn from nail to nail in order of the numbers on the poster.
4. Tear away the poster – smaller sections are removed easily with a pair of tweezers.
5. Take a few steps back and enjoy your own “Masterpiece”.

via swissmiss

Mokena Makeka talks design

We don’t just make things pretty. We make things work better. That is design.

The World Design Capital 2014 title is going to be announced in Taipei on 26 October at 6am local time. We talk to Mokena Makeka about it. Mokena Makeka is an award-winning architect who started Makeka Design Lab which aims to create a sound African aesthetic.

UPDATE: on October 26th, Cape Town won the bid World Design Capital 2014! YEAH! Proud to live here.

How are you involved in Cape Town’s World Design Capital 2014 bid?
I am bid committee member and one of two official spokespersons. I am a passionate advocate of design and have founded a new museum to celebrate design, innovation, leadership and art, called MoDILA. I also serve on the Cape Town Design Network.

There is a lot of positivity and optimism amongst Capetonians about the bid. Do you think there will be a lasting effect, especially on the design community, even if we don’t win?
Designer’s have been and always will be ahead of the curve. We are a community that sees this bid as part of process stretching as far back as 1994 to locate design as a solution to our country‘s problems. Back then, various TV shows and magazines started to pay attention to design- we were resolute and knew that society would catch up to the power of design. Whether we win or lose, designers will stay the course. If we could survive the dark ages of an ignorant yesteryear we can face anything. Designers are up to the challenge and will put this city on the global map, this is an unstoppable train. Losing is not in our vocabulary, because every problem has a design solution or outlook.

If we do win, what’s the next step, what will happen?
Hopefully government will invest in public private partnerships to advance and use design to address social, spatial and delivery challenges. Design will be used to interpret and understand our challenges not merely find solutions. Design thinking at a broader level will encourage a more open and socially intelligent society. The state must use the private sector and the creativity found outside of government structures in real partnerships. The public should demand higher standards of service delivery using design and quality as a foregrounded concern. The task increases for us all, should we win, because only through the projects and processes we ever and it’s impacts, can we prove that design is necessary to transform our lives. Marketing design is a small component. Design must actually be present not spoken about in what we do. We must be an example to ourselves and others.

What is something close to your heart that you would like to push in 2014?
Modila is a centre of excellence for design education and celebration of our ingenuity in dialogue with global excellence. Through our outreach programs and the desire to create a temple for design excellence and innovation, Modila seeks to become a global platform for the knowledge economy and high impact entrepreneurs. It will form a key aspect of 2014 and beyond. We intend to host a design Olympiad.

What do you think Cape Town has to offer in terms of design that is unique?
Our eclectic, bohemian, and rigorous design community. We are blessed with world class talent that the public has barely accessed. The potential for change through design and Cape Town designers in particular is vast. But until design is used as a filter to determine service delivery, and the state apparatus builds excellence into its procurement policies with standard and uniform pricing for design services this potential will remain untapped. The cheapest quotes will predominate in our service delivery mechanisms. And this encourages mediocrity and fruitless expenditure in the long term and serves short term interests. Short term competitiveness can easily make us uncompetitive in the long term. Our designers can turn this city around within  200 days, if design thinking facilitates and provides solutions.

Believe it or not other cities have done this. We are unique in that we can achieve change if designers are located properly in the hierarchy of decision making. We don’t just make things pretty. We make things work better. That is design.

by Antonia Heil

Before – Ernest Hemingway

found here

Conceal wall bookshelf

Seen on many interior-blogs, here you can buy the conceal wall bookshelf.

thomas davisthomas davis