Design Quarterly

Design Quarterly

Design Quarterly featuring great design, architecture, fashion, graphics and innovation from across the globe.

 

Horizon

Horizon is differentiating from conventional welcome trays with several unique aspects. The concept of Horizon is making a welcome tray with completely sustainable materials. Besides that, it also has functional aspects. Horizon is also offering a different tea brewing experience with glass tubes. It also becomes different with the unique body design. The body of Horizon has a vertical wall that has a stand for glasses. The function of this stand is holding glasses and saving the glasses from the dust. All you need to do when you meet with Horizon is brewing a tea and enjoy!

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Creator C-500

In a small kitchen, efficient use of space is of paramount importance. Pots and other utensils occupy a great deal of extra space due to their long and fixed handles, making the kitchen congested and messy. And this is a collapsible handle designed that allows the cookware to be neatly stacked and become almost ‘invisible’ in the kitchen, thereby increasing the utilization rate of kitchen space. After the pot handle is folded, we can have more space in a crowded kitchen and the pots can be placed more freely: stack them on top of each other or place crosswise with other kitchen utensils.

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Agape

agape is a new set of dining elements designed to facilitate interaction when sharing a meal. The way each element complements the others intentionally brings out food while beautifying its display. The angles of the pieces ensure their fit with one another for safe storage and help to scrape food from the borders of the bowls. The multipurpose pieces work well individually or in combination with others. agape crisscrosses the line between tradition and modern-day functional table objects by reinterpreting classical elements to suit today's lifestyle.

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Tri Chapter

Tri Chapter tableware set is a drinking collection for people’s daily break time. Inspired by 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968), mutuopia tries to bring the power of tranquility to people’s drinking rituals. Pulling away from the time & space currently inhabited, let people experience a magical journey from bud to neuron. Triangular and circular shapes are being played in both two-dimension and three-dimension to build sharp yet mellow forms with sleek lines and sinuous surfaces. Discretionary concerning about ergonomics, mutuopia makes this set functional, durable and as well as delicate.

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Pepsi Homemade

Homemade allows everyone to craft a Pepsi where and when they want with quality ingredients and no artificial sweeteners, blending flavor and sparkling water to their preference. The design language of the pods, bottles and packaging is clean, light and joyous. The Pepsi globe recurs in the shape of the pods, the simple logo treatment and in graphic silhouettes that resemble bubbles. The font of the logo has a hand-scribbled, human feel that emphasizes the homespun quality of the product.

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Acacia

The "Acacia" honey dipper is the result of a research into the sweet world of honey and mathematical structures generated by 3d software. I designed an object suitable for the use with different kinds of this delicacy. The hexagonal structure of the honeycomb forms an empty sphere joined on a conic stem to compose a single steel object. "Acacia" was designed to sweeten hot drinks or accompany side dishes with the desired quantity of honey.

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