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L´Étagère en Bois, by Lucien Gumy, first-place winner

With a background in carpentry, designer Lucien Gumy says, “I always try to find not only simplicity in design, but also a new way of thinking.” Gumy designed this interlocking solid wood shelving unit so that it can be assembled without nails, bolts or screws. The prototype was created for the designer’s diploma project at Switzerland’s University of Art and Design, Lausanne.
by Holly Marder
“I played with horizontal and vertical assembly methods until I achieved a method that requires no screws or glue, and can be dismantled," says Gumy. "I took this process and repeated it at all the intersections.” The size of the unit can be adjusted by mixing elements of different lengths.
by Holly Marder
Tilt, by Tina Schmid, second-place winner

Tina Schmid's prototype is about visual illusion, as the simple graphic becomes a three-dimensional object. What looks like a cube is multipurpose and can be folded out to become a clothing rack. The product is made up of a solid system of rods with jointed nodes that can be rotated as required. Schmid is a recent graduate of the industrial design program at the University of Applied Sciences in Darmstadt, Germany.
by tina-schmid.de
CMYK Lamp, by Dennis Parren, third-place winner

Dennis Parren’s colorful lamp explores the mysteries of light and color. The lamp is made up of LED lights that cast an array of lines and shadows in cyan, magenta and yellow onto its surroundings.
by dennisparren.nl
Dear Disaster, by Jenny Ekdahl

Jenny Ekdahl’s Dear Disaster cabinet is inspired by the contradictory love-hate relationship that humans often have with Mother Nature and its sometimes terrifying yet wonderful events.


“My greatest source of inspiration has always been contradicting relations between technology and nature,” says Ekdahl, who graduated with a master's degree in fine arts from the School of Industrial Design at Sweden’s Lund University. “I’m intrigued by their transformations — natural behaviors transforming into mechanical functions or dreams transforming into reality,” she says.

The cabinet design represents water and earth, contrasting elements symbolic of nature itself.
by Holly Marder
Ekdahl wanted to translate natural attributes through pattern and structure into a piece of furniture that touches humans on an emotional level. Small, curved wooden chips all over the surface of the cabinet can be moved, creating a soothing and intriguing wave of motion.

“My interpretations of natural disasters are used as a metaphor to describe the importance of emotional and poetic experiences in design for today and for the future," says Ekdahl.
by Holly Marder
Beames Chair, by Eric Chang and Johnny Hu

Taiwanese design duo Eric Chang and Johnny Hu are the masterminds behind the innovative Beams Chair. Inspired by the H-beam structure of San Francisco’s iconic Golden Gate Bridge, the pair crafted this lightweight structure using two types of wood (plywood and multiplex) to ensure a stable design. Weighing just 3 kilograms, it's a stylish, modern seating option.
by Holly Marder
Chang and Hu have known each other for 10 years and both graduated from the Weissensee School of Art in Berlin this summer. Together they plan to develop their E & J Design Studio in Berlin.
by Holly Marder
Pilu, by Leoni Werle

This contemporary desk and floor lamp is by Leoni Werle, a graduate of the University of Applied Sciences in Aachen, Germany. This prototype is made up of a solid oak base with an aluminum shade. The sturdy design of the base and the use of a one-directional hinge allow a seesaw-like, smooth movement between two positions.
by Holly Marder
The starting point for the Pilu was Werle's own search for the perfect adjustable desk lamp. “I found that the designs I had seen looked rather unattractive, with visible wires and joints," she says. "I wanted to create a lamp that was adjustable, but a practical and attractive lamp that will provide an indirect light source."
by Holly Marder
Fanions, by Linn Kandel, Dimitri Bahler and Ismael Studer

Developed by design trio BKS, this striking collection of three rugs is fuss free and plays with the optical illusion of the traditional rug fringe. They're made of pure wool felt, a comfortable and durable material that lends itself well to their graphic aesthetic.
by Holly Marder
BKS comprises three independent industrial and product designers: Dimitri Bähler (shown), Linn Kandel and Ismaël Studer. The trio graduated from ECAL, the University of Art and Design in Lausanne, Switzerland, in 2010. As a collective design firm, they work in Neuchâtel, Switzerland; Stockholm, Sweden; and Paris.
by Holly Marder
Invader, by Maria Bruun

Danish designer Maria Bruun, a graduate of the Danish School of Design, created this long-legged storage unit with a clean and simple aesthetic. The stackable storage modules vary in size and function to enable the user to customize the display and storage.

The idea for Invader developed out of Bruun's interest in individual ways that bring about the feeling of home. “I realized that 'home' is made up of the things that people own: their pictures, books and souvenirs,” Bruun says. “I discovered that through these collected items, people tell stories about their past, their present and their dreams for the future.”

The modular system is composed of flexible elements of maple and steel. “People's needs are continually changing, so the unit was designed to be flexible enough to grow with the individual, with stackable elements that fit into one another and can be added upon as needed,” says Bruun.
by Holly Marder
Shingle Shelves, by Hanna Krüger

Inspired by the shingles of a roof, Hanna Krüger’s wooden unit is composed of layered shelves with raw leather shingle-shaped sliding doors. By opening one, you close another. “I wanted to design a shelf with sliding doors that can layer above each other like the shingles of a roof," says Krüger. "[I wanted it] to have open and closed spaces at the same time.” The doors are crafted from leather that will darken with exposure to light over time; the rest of the structure is made of crude maple.

The young designer trained as a cabinetmaker and studied product design at the Kunsthochschule Kassel in Germany.
by Holly Marder
The Royal Family, by Ellen Heilmann

Ellen Heilmann’s design is a collection of three American nutwood stools, each topped with a cushion upholstered in emerald-green cotton. Together they form a modular system; each part can be used separately as seating or as a table. The collection has a uniform aesthetic, while each piece has its own individuality, much like a family.

Heilmann is graduated from the product design program at Germany’s Offenbach Academy of Art and Design.

Did you attend IMM Cologne this year? Please share your photos below.
by Holly Marder

Comments

Svietka Rivilis how strange that i think first place winner is Ikea wanabe....really dont see anything original or pleasing in his design. Do like (not love) the leather doors and the 3 stools have fantastic wood(but hate the chosen dark top). Sadly, that's about it. Israeli designers r much more original and colorful I must say.
4 months ago · ·
vacahaven Who remembers Lincoln logs? Shelving is lovely, clean,; However if prize is based on originality, I'm not sure why the shelving won first prize. Possibly in the interlocking?
4 months ago · ·
greenchids i like the lamps and the stack-able cabinets
4 months ago · ·
masnis No screws? No glue? That is engineering genius! And to think those shelves can hold the weight of many books...impressive! I love the second place winner design as well. That is a clothing rack that would not only fit in my tiny laundry room, but would also look super cool.
4 months ago · ·
in3interieur Wonderful fresh design comes to us all the time. There is even mention of overkill, especially in magazines, on websites and at fairs. If these designs are called visionary, what do you call the designs of Gerrit Rietveld, Gio Ponti, Mies van der Rohe, Eames, etc, etc? We may need a new category of product development with a new name.
4 months ago ·
K.O.H. Construction Corporation I like the Beames chairs. They're a lot harder to build than you would think.
4 months ago · ·
t_architecture (formerly Tinman Design) shelving won, folks, because it can be assembled using NO screws or other forms of attament and can easily be modified to fit various sized spaces NOT because it is outrageous in form or texture or looks like nothing else before, as too many designers think they need to be in order to be good. Of all the things here I saw, this clearly is the one (except maybe that tilting lamp) that would benefit the most people in their daily lives!
4 months ago · ·
sclawson The Dear Disaster cabinet is phenomenal!! This is art in furniture at its best. Also, the adjustable tilt light makes such good sense.
4 months ago · ·
alibonelli I personally love the Tilt (laundry hanger) and The Royal Family (stools). Please do a follow up when all of these designs are available for sale!
4 months ago ·
Sharon McLeod Those rugs and the 'shingle shelves' are terrible in MY opinion!!! Ugh.
You'd always be running around the rugs flipping those stupid things back to where they're supposed to be.
4 months ago ·
lffisher My dad built an etagere EXACTLY like the winning design about 25 years ago. No nails, screws, or glue. It has stood the test of time all these years. He was even able to open up the center of it in order to accommodate a large 35" 75lb TV.
4 months ago · ·
celtickathy My dear husband of 42 years, so far, built exactly these shelves for our first home in 1973. They too were very easy to disassemble and were moved to our second home and the first apartment of our son. Great ideas never fade, they are ever around us.
4 months ago ·
sfguurl I think the felt rugs are stunning. They don't yell, but whisper as they sit on the floor, adding beauty and warmth to any room (and cold toes are grateful too!) I also appreciate the tilting lamp for the simplicity in use. It's so cleanly designed too. The Dear Disaster cabinets look beautifully made and would be a constant reminder to me of shade, shadow, texture and form. Sometimes I'm sure everything would line up, others I'd make quite random forms, all according to my mood. Congrats to all who were mentioned!
3 months ago ·
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