The Best of ICFF 2019 (Including Our Milk Stand!)
Here it is, our huge yearly round-up of favorite products and designs (including the ones from our Milk Stand pop-up shop!) at ICFF 2019.
Another #NYCxDESIGN week has come and passed and we’re still taking in all the cool new products and designs we saw at ICFF 2019. After scouring each and every row, we’ve rounded up some of our favorite pieces from this massive show that we think you should know about.
Photo by Hanna Grankvist
But first, we have to give a special shoutout to our Milk Stand popup shop! You might have noticed the eye-catching, topographical design of our booth as you passed by. It was designed by Michael Yarinsky, an architect and interior designer based in Brooklyn. An experiment long in development, Michael Yarinsky Studio has been trying to find novel ways to soften the hard edges of architecture in form, material, and use of space. In this experiment, Michael wrote code to simulate the behavior and form of a rumpled bedlinen. This height field is then expressed in topographical drawing and physical relief giving the feeling of a monumental scale. The drawings are expressed in a field of dense fine lines and from a distance have the feeling of soft shading. The reliefs in plywood make the drawings tangible and tactile.
Photo by Hanna Grankvist
Photo by Hanna Grankvist
This year the Milk Stand housed our 15 independent designers + makers who came from all over to showcase their latest collections.
beroep|tech’s modern jew...
Another #NYCxDESIGN week has come and passed and we’re still taking in all the cool new products and designs we saw at ICFF 2019. After scouring each and every row, we’ve rounded up some of our favorite pieces from this massive show that we think you should know about.
Photo by Hanna Grankvist
But first, we have to give a special shoutout to our Milk Stand popup shop! You might have noticed the eye-catching, topographical design of our booth as you passed by. It was designed by Michael Yarinsky, an architect and interior designer based in Brooklyn. An experiment long in development, Michael Yarinsky Studio has been trying to find novel ways to soften the hard edges of architecture in form, material, and use of space. In this experiment, Michael wrote code to simulate the behavior and form of a rumpled bedlinen. This height field is then expressed in topographical drawing and physical relief giving the feeling of a monumental scale. The drawings are expressed in a field of dense fine lines and from a distance have the feeling of soft shading. The reliefs in plywood make the drawings tangible and tactile.
Photo by Hanna Grankvist
Photo by Hanna Grankvist
This year the Milk Stand housed our 15 independent designers + makers who came from all over to showcase their latest collections.
beroep|tech’s modern jew...
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