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The Designers of Tomorrow: All the Home Innovations You Must Know | Israel today

2022-07-07T10:42:43.752Z


From organic olive clay to climbing ropes that have fallen out of use and become a spectacular rug for the home • The innovations that will affect the future of the home space, from exhibitions by graduates of the Department of Product Design and Industrial Design


Exhibitions for graduates of design schools, including Bezalel, Shenkar, HIT and the Kibbutzim Seminar, are especially happy days for design enthusiasts and those who live to be the first to know and adopt new technologies, designs and products, just before everyone knows and consumes them as well.

The final project of the graduates of the tracks of industrial design and product design are projects that are mostly inspiring, raise a question and make it possible to come in contact with large solutions to the small (but important) problems of life.

We have chosen for you the designs that we have kept an eye on.

3D Printing - Amit Yadlin, Department of Industrial Design, HIT Holon Institute of Technology

Ceramic tools in three-dimensional printing that are in fact an interpretation of the traditional manual shooting technique.

The tools were created using a 3D printer, with the help of a parametric computer code, samples of different shots are printed, in a ceramic material and give an innovative look to the ancient shooting technique.


To ceramics in three-dimensional printing, Amit Yadlin - Industrial Design Holon Institute of Technology


Friendly brokerage - Aram Amir Inn, Department of Industrial Design, Bezalel

We are at a time when robots are passive partners in our lives, yet they run alongside us and create a different kind of communication culture than we are used to.

Studies show that children who grow up in homes with virtual assistants, such as Alexa, learn to speak in imperative language.

Assuming we are all going to live with robots, it is important to shape our lives accordingly to artificial intelligence based robots that will become more and more involved in our lives.

The project offers a character who envelops the voice assistant Alexa, and mediates in a friendly way between the user and the artificial intelligence, thus allaying the fear of the technological future and helping us make friends with him.

How we choose to shape our lives alongside artificial intelligence, Aram Amir Inn, Photo: Yossi Roth

Ecological design - Nitzan Tabib, Department of Industrial Design, HIT Holon Institute of Technology

Kraft technique developed by Nitzan Tabib, uses the properties of synthetic ropes to design a variety of products, including a rug with a place for supports, lampshades, baskets and hats.

The technique was inspired by the traditional Yemenite basket weaving craft, and is adapted to Israel of 2022.

Rug with headrest made of recycled ropes, Nitzan Tabib, Industrial Design Holon Institute of Technology



Making Order in a Mess - Barkat Tzriker, School of Design - Faculty of Arts, Kibbutzim Seminar

In Barkat Tzriker's project, no new material or advanced technology is used.

The project presents a type of thinking that should benefit those who suffer from a mess.

Zriker has developed a series of furniture that is placed in different places in the home space and ensures that it will not be possible to create a mess around them.

The items are designed and designed to contain only certain items, so for example library shelves designed diagonally and only books can fit in them, and not all kinds of other items.

The functional design eliminates the need to activate thought when putting things back in place.

7 LAW & ORDER is a series of furniture that forces the user to maintain order throughout his home, Barkat Tzriker, Photo: Barkat Tzriker

Organic olive clay - Yagel Tiram, Department of Industrial Design, Bezalel

Olive oil is one of the staples of Mediterranean cuisine.

We enjoy its taste and its health benefits but less remember that after the production of the oil about 80% gaff (fruit waste) remains.

In Israel alone, about 2,000 tons of gaff are produced each year, and in the Mediterranean basin about 2 million tons.

The plague is considered a polluting waste, and after the olives are crushed and crushed, the oil presses find it difficult to get rid of it.

Adraba, Yagel Tiram's final project, adds value to the material, from a circular economy approach and by force methods, it creates from the extraction of organic olive clay that allows the creation of shaped receptacles.

Tools, beyond being designed, tell a story of craftsmanship and locality.

The waffle turned into organic clay, Yagel Tiram, Photo: Yossi Roth

A new technique for ceramic processing - Jasmine Sandro-Brown, Department of Industrial Design, Bezalel

SHPRITZ is a new technique for processing ceramic material using controlled spraying of water streams.

The combination of the erupting water energy and the rotational motion during the clay processing produces a geometric collapse and inhales amorphous shapes in the vessels.

Control of the technique allows for countless changes of shape and texture by simple manipulation.

An encounter where power, water, movement and cycles drain into a joint creation of niches and textures.

The combination of the erupting water energy and the rotational motion during the clay processing produces a geometric collapse, Jasmine Sandro Brown, Photo: Yossi Roth

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Source: israelhayom

All life articles on 2022-07-07

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