Sunday, August 21, 2011

Float

float 
(verb)
1.to rest or remain on the surface of a liquid; be buoyant:
2.to move gently on the surface of a liquid; drift along:
3.to rest or move in a liquid, the air, etc.:
4.to move lightly and gracefully:
5.to move or hover before the eyes or in the mind:  
One of my favorite things to do when I have a free afternoon is head over to my local Room and Board store and window shop.  My sofa, the Dublin, is from there, a product of window shopping after a couple glasses of wine to free the inhibitions and the purse strings.  Times being what they are, and owing to the small footprint of my house, I haven't had the pleasure of buying much more from the store.  However, I never fail to find something new for which to pine every time I go.

At the store last Friday, it struck me how many pieces, whether tables or chairs, captured some sort of idea about floating, levitating between or over something else, whether that be a frame, a base, or the floor. 

There's the Zane chair, for example.

It would be difficult for an image to capture the sensation of floating from the Zane.  In person, however, the chair really does give the effect that the seat and back float inside the frame.  This effect becomes especially true when the chair is viewed up close and from above.

There's also the Stafford cocktail table.


Recalling perhaps a warmer approach to the modern kidney shape.  I can't help think of the Jetsons when I see this table.  Just retro enough, but graceful, and with an elegant simplicity.

Then there's Mies van der Rohe's classic Brno chair.



The "float" in this chair is an experiential one.  The chair has just enough give to remind you of it's tubular construction and extend the notion of comfort even down to the act of sitting down.

Another modern classic, Saarinen's end table, also conveys a sense of levitation, with its spindly frame sliver-thin surface.


The table top almost looks like it could have risen from a melted pool at the base.  It's lightness gives it an air of timeless sophistication.  This piece has been knocked off maybe dozens of times, never anywhere near as good as the original.

All of these pieces struck me as having something in their compositions or in their forms that evoked a lightness, perhaps even of being.  What better feeling to bring into a home!

(Thanks to Dictionary.com for definitions.)

Thursday, August 11, 2011

Good News For IHG

http://www.hotel-online.com/News/PR2011_3rd/Aug11_IHG.html  The attached link is to some good news for IHG.  Hopefully, a sign of good things to come.

Tuesday, August 9, 2011

Design Foundations - The Beginning

For my first post, I am offering something simple, yet deceptively dense.  Definitions.

design
(noun)
1.  an outline, sketch, or plan, as of the form and structure of a work of art, an edifice, or a machine to be executed or constructed.
2.  organization or structure of formal elements in a work of art; composition.
3.  the combination of details or features of a picture, building, etc.; the pattern or motif of artistic work: the design on a bracelet.
4.  the art of designing: a school of design.

5.  a plan or project: a design for a new process.

foundation
(noun)
1. the basis or groundwork of anything: the moral foundation of both society and religion.
2. the natural or prepared ground or base on which some structure rests.
3.  the lowest division of a building, wall, or the like, usually of masonry and partly or wholly below the surface of the ground.
4.  the act of founding,  setting up, establishing, etc.: a policy in effect since the foundation.
5.  the state of being founded.
 
Thanks to dictionary.com for these definitions.