Wednesday, 13 August 2014

Broken the Rules.


Lounge Chair.













This is a design of lounge chair from a Korean designer Jung Myung Taek.
Along with his fun personality he created this piece of art and named it Ducking Lounge Chair because it's shape is like beak of a duck.

Actually I feel it is not comfortable for us to rest.
Undeniable it is really a design that attracted my attention.


The Crooked House.



This is "a little crooked house" called Krzywy Domek as a local name.
It located in Sopot, Poland,
is home to many popular shops, restaurants, and even a radio station designed by
Jan Marcin Szancer and Per Dahlberg.



The Basket Building.















The Longaberger Company in Newark, Ohio might just be a strangest office building in the world.
Dave Longaberger wanted all of the Longaberger buildings to be shaped like baskets,
but only the headquarters was completed at the time of his death.

Shoe hat.

The high-heeled Schiaparelli shoe hat was created in 1937 in collaboration with Salvador Dali.
The idea came from a photograph taken in 1933 by Dali's wife Gala, 
showing the artist wearing a woman's shoe on his head and another one on his shoulder.

Lobster Telephone.













This piece of art was created by Salvador Dali in 1936 and was named The Lobster Telephone.
For DalĂ­, telephones are sinister messengers from "Beyond" while the lobster is sexual.
With a lobster telephone, you can dial up a dream
.



Cupcake Car.















The Cupcake Car, designed by artist Lisa Pongrace is a car which made up of fabric,
wood and sheet metal that cost up to $25,000. 

The Cupcake Car was originally conceived as a rolling art installation for the
bohemian-themed Burning Man event held annually in Black Rock Desert, Nev.


There are some others weird building such as houses that the designer has broke the rules in their designs.


The Spaceship House.














This is a weird house called ''The Spaceship House" in Chattanooga.



Teapot house.



The Teapot Dome, a strange house in Zillah.
It was built in 1922 .



Toilet House.



The Toilet-shaped house, in Suwon (South Korea).







 Paul Poiret called himself as the ‘King of Fashion’. He was born in 1879 in Paris and apprenticed to an umbrella maker.
When he still young, he used leftover scraps of umbrella material to make dolls’ dresses and sell some his sketches to a local dressmaker.
After a while he started to sell designs to large couture houses in Paris. 

He employed the language of Oriental to develop the romantic and theatrical possibilities of clothing.
He led a fashion renaissance that introduced free-flowing dresses, replaced tight corsets with brassieres, and added a new standard of artistic value to his fashion plates.


These are his designs.



http://alexandrahighcrest.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2010/03/Lot-79-silk-gown-Poiret-ca-1912.jpg




http://image.glamourdaze.com/2012/09/Paul-Poiret-harem-Dress-1911.jpg











No comments:

Post a Comment