Mixing styles adds a little color to industrial salvage. This store is awesome. Too bad it’s in the Netherlands.
https://www.bintihomeblog.com
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Mixing styles adds a little color to industrial salvage. This store is awesome. Too bad it’s in the Netherlands.
https://www.bintihomeblog.com
Someone made a good point about I blurred the mailing addresses- sorry about that!!
In other news, I got about half of the pay for postage painting packed and an early WIP.I'll be at work until 1 and I'll post updates tomorrow for that guy.
In the meantime, you guys should check out @bekkathyst and all their beautiful mineral lots and witchy kits if that's your jam!
Nature et Decouvertes, le Marais
Why isn’t there a period 🩸 store in every city? #shorts
I don't have periods, but this person is amazing for helping with info and showing her period logs of like washing her diskk (blood is blurred) on YouTube. She seems soooo nice, caring, kind, informative, helpful, and just plain cool. She developed a brand of menstrual disks (like cups only different shaped). If I still had periods, I'd try her disks. They seem like they would work and be more comfortable than cups, for my body type.
55
Before 10 tonight.
We went to this store in the boat town, that was really neat. It was small inside, but had stuff from slime to mini chess sets, terrarium building stuff to glass fused pictures, and even custom furniture.
But where it really shined, was the outside, it's still in development but it's beautiful, there's going to be a mino river flowing through a completely edible garden, with flowers in back, and because the owner's house is right behind it, we got to see there, and there's a whole like, canopy made of grape vines.
Also, I made another flower arrangement a few days ago, I think I posted the first one too, but if not, I'll post them both.
Arthur Ashe 2 piece combo
DOPEmuseum
10 years iPhone Cover
The Opium Eyewear Flip Flop Pop-Up Shop - Mumbai
Addicted To Retail (ATR) presents: //The Flip Flop by Renesa Architecture, Terminal 2, Mumbai International Airport, Maharashtra, India.
The new pop-up store designed by Renesa studio offers a clear spatial interpretation of the brand’s product identity at the Mumbai airport. Opium, a well-known premium lifestyle eyewear brand houses unique spatial elements set against a grid of time and space vividly illustrating Renesa’s bold design ideology.
In a retail space stacking multiple products, the ‘ways of display’ determine an impression of the space to a great degree. Thus, the intervention sought to conceive a visually attractive space, articulating the functional moments.
Starting with the arched entrance, framed by a stark neon sign of the brand, customers are guided through the one-way design that animates and illuminates the pop-up store. For a person passing by, the dialogue created between the design and store is that of an interactive component that invites the customers to delve into the store.
The design centers around a distinct and iconographic product presentation that allows different levels of interaction based on the client’s needs. Defined by its gridded pattern, the shelving units delineate themselves through the flip-flop. Each pair of glasses sits on its own mini stage exaggerated through a neon green accent. These shelves give the monotonic space a richer way of extension, allowing the customers to speculate the space and products with interest.
The process followed a grid of 8x4 inch tile that extends to the walls, flooring and furniture. The idea was to create a captivating store that conceptually references what eyewear does; tint or enhance the image.To incorporate this notion, the modules were repeated arbitrarily throughout the space to create complexity.These modules while curving in to the store were broken by neon green, mirror and collapsible shelves to create the illusion of recesses or volumes looming out from the walls. Thereby, articulating the language of design not only through repetition but also through recourse to everyday store typologies.
The curved line to which the design adapts and configures develops seamlessly continuing on to the cashier desk unit. The desk conforms to the homogeneity of the design centralizing and distributing the circulation of the store space by being located in the middle. Flanked on either sides by mirrors, a semblance of movement is created that emphasizes each display in a symmetric perspective.
The project is not merely about designing an optical store, it is to createan ambience in which public space and private space are deconstructed and placed in the same field to maintain a strong visual character. The result is an eccentric experience through a simple vision of color blocking.
(Retail Category – 2019-2020)
130 sq. ft.
Photographer - Niveditaa Gupta
(https://niveditaagupta.myportfolio.com/)
Clients - TEAM OPIUM
Mr.Ronak Sheth, Ms. Vidhi Sheth , Mr. Mudir Shaikh.
Design Team -
Renesa Architecture Design Interiors, NEW DELHI, INDIA.
• Sanjay Arora - Founder| Principal Architect
• Sanchit Arora - Studio Head Architect| Concept Design Head/Sketches/Graphics.
• Vandana Arora - Interior Designer| Decor Head
• Virender Singh- Studio Technical Head.
• Akarsh Varma - Architect
• Jagdish Bangari - Architect / Graphics.
• Aayush Misra - Architect
• Prarthna Misra - Architect / Graphics
• Tanushi Goyal - Architecture Intern.
• Navdisha Kukreja - Interior Designer Intern.
• Ayushi Gupta -Architecture Intern.
• Anushka Arora -Architecture Intern // Text
• Contractor - Mr.Ajay Kumar // Design Realm Studio.
• Lighting Consultants - White Lighting Solutions.