By Craig Nakano
Ray and Charles Eames started their experiments in molded plywood back in the 1940s, but the couple’s famous molded arm and side chairs never were made in anything other than fiberglass or polypropylene because the curves of the seat couldn’t be manufactured in wood.
Now, 62 years after its initial release, the Eames Molded Side Chair has conquered that technological divide: The piece has just been reissued in walnut, white ash or santos polisander (a species of sustainably harvested Bolivian rosewood), thanks to a newly developed process for creating pliable wood veneers.
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By Lisa Boone
Wanted Design 2013, the independent home furnishings show that ran concurrently with the International Contemporary Furniture Fair in New York this month, reported an increase in visitors this year: More than 10,000 people stopped by the Terminal Stores building in Chelsea to check out emerging talent from around the globe.
From the packed opening night reception May 17 that drew lines around the block (exhibitor Evan Crane joked that he struggled to get his father into the show) to the ICFF floor at Javits Center, the positive buzz was strong.
"I like how they put together big names with...
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At the 2013 International Contemporary Furniture Fair, the annual May expo that is the heart of New York Design Week, one big trend was pieces meant to bring family and friends together: foosball sets, ping-pong tables, chess tables and party-ready vinyl music stations. Here's a sample of the fun and games spotted at ICFF and related events.
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By Craig Nakano
We hear it from the owners of A. Quincy Jones houses all the time: "The house just feels good."
In organizing and designing "A. Quincy Jones: Building for Better Living," the new exhibition on one of L.A.'s beloved residential architects, the Hammer Museum wanted to convey that idea -- how Jones was a master at shaping space, turning architecture into an experience and making a space "just feel good." But how? How to convince museum-goers when you can't move a house into the Hammer?
Jennifer Dunlop Fletcher, the guest curator behind the show, offers a hint at the partial answer in this video...
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By Lisa Boone
When the group Yarn Bombing Los Angeles extended an open call for granny squares in November, the group was hoping to collect enough of the traditional crocheted pieces to cover the facade of the Craft and Folk Art Museum.
After The Times reported on the plans and word spread, the collective was bombarded with an astonishing 15,000 granny squares from 50 states and 25 countries.
"We couldn't be more surprised or happy with the outcome," said the project's organizer, Arzu Arda Kosar.
Now that the squares have been installed, Kosar said the group is left with a surplus of squares. What to do...
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By Lisa Boone
New York Design Week and the 2013 ICFF -- the International Contemporary Furniture Fair, the nation's most important expo for modern home decor -- that wrapped up this week will be remembered more for its cheerful mood than cutting-edge designs.
Although designers continued to push boundaries with materials (recycled refrigerator plastic, thermo-formed Corian) and explore 3-D technology, the new looks were more about color, luxurious finishes (copper was king) and a sense of fun (look out, Jonathan Adler).
"Right now, people are more tempted to take a risk and buy something that makes them...
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Say hello to an old friend. The rattan chair is back, wearing different looks these days: some earthy and old-school, some sleek and styled for a new generation. Some aren’t even rattan but rather metal versions that play with the familiarity of the form. As part of The Times' Summer-by-the-Numbers package, here’s a sampling of what’s on the market now or headed your way soon ...
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Think of them as hand-held water fountains: Little pieces of sculpture that happen to be functional (and in one case, cleverly upcycled). As part of The Times' Summer-by-the-Numbers package, we present five modern riffs on the old watering can.
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Looking for design ideas specifically for the kitchen? Or the kids' bedrooms? Or space-crunched bathrooms? The L.A. at Home team has been developing Home Inspiration galleries where you can click through, see different types of rooms and borrow inspiration (and perhaps a shopping resource or two) from real Southern Californian houses, condos and apartments. Today we're starting with the living room.
HOME INSPIRATIONS PHOTOS: The living room
Bookmark L.A. at Home and look for more Home Inspirations galleries featuring other rooms of the home in the days and weeks to come.
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By Alissa Walker
Los Angeles artist Ana Serrano creates vibrant neighborhoods filled with color and complexity, yet she produces them out of the most humble materials: corrugated cardboard, construction paper, glue and paint.
These worlds will be on view starting this week in "A Daydreamer's Street," an exhibit at the Vincent Price Art Museum in Monterey Park.
Inspired by real-life blocks around L.A., Serrano's cityscapes celebrate the vernacular structures that instantly feel familiar to most Angelenos: the hand-painted signage, the concrete block, the barbed wire fences.
PHOTO GALLERY: Ana Serrano show at...
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By Jeff Spurrier
Growing coffee isn’t hard. It’s the time-consuming extraction of the beans that defeats would-be backyard growers.
Every season when the coffee bushes hidden in the shade of the Wattles Farm community garden in Hollywood start to produce cherries, one of the gardeners volunteers for the process of peeling the shells, removing the fleshy pulp along with the interior parchment, and washing and air-drying the tiny beans within.
“They’re very enthusiastic in the beginning and are still enthusiastic at the end because the coffee is very good, but they swear they’ll...
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