Kids, you might want to get mom and dad’s permission before you go out and make a sled out of their Stingray Chair.
Quite possibly the world’s best-looking (and most expensive?) sled.
|
||
|
Kids, you might want to get mom and dad’s permission before you go out and make a sled out of their Stingray Chair.
Quite possibly the world’s best-looking (and most expensive?) sled. Sled:
Cigarette in hand, with unblinking bespectacled eyes, the gloriously crotchety Poul Henningsen expounds on his philosophy of light. This short (mostly) black-and-white film provides a candid look into the mind of genius, all the while being surprisingly entertaining. It’s like listening to your wrinkled grandpa tell stories of a better time and place, when people didn’t make crap and actually gave a damn:
While Henningsen doesn’t mince words, he is extremely eloquent and at times manages to be (unintentionally?) poetic and deep. It’s clear that living with the cold, dark winters of Denmark had a profound influence on Henningsen and his lighting:
Henningsen goes on to explain his original PH lamp design and how he begrudgingly designed the Louis Poulsen PH5 Pendant to accommodate modern incandescent bulbs:
Later after a switch to full color film and while sharing a bottle of port, a ruddy Poul sits down with his friend, artist Svend Johansen, to talk about the various colors of light. Henningsen asks Johansen questions, then ends up answering them himself. Apparently the editors got bored with the two old drunk guys and cut ahead to “the story of the incandescent light bulb.” In this segment, Poul breaks out the magic markers and explains light bulbs and the spectrum à la Bill Cosby picture pages. Poul then explains why fluorescent lights suck so much:
And with a cigarette dangling from his mouth, he brilliantly clarifies this using a piano … and then a psychedelic montage with the PH5, PH Artichoke, and others (hit play below):
Through all this, Henningsen always comes back to the quality of light and with his obsession to create flawless lighting. He finishes with a poem by Otto Gelsted, “Poem for a PH Lamp”: Light, you who form all we see Part 1
Part 2
Part 3
Thanks to Louis Poulsen for making this great film available.
Our favorite is the uber-cheesy love song devoted to the Series 7. Series 7 Love Song
Fritz Hansen Series 7 – 3D
Fritz Hansen – Making of Series 7
Excuse me while I wipe the drool off my keyboard. Yesterday Matt over at Dekobogas reminded us of the Mini/Airstream/Fritz Hansen collaboration that debuted a few years back. It’s definitely worth a revisit.
I’m not sure how much one of these would run … but considering they’re using Jacobsen Egg Chairs for lawn furniture … I’d say they’re out of my price range.
And another video:
We don’t really speak French, but this is a cool video of the Arne Jacobsen Egg Chair. It sort of makes you feel like you’re a Danish gnat or something, coming in for a landing on a massive blue runway. |
||
|
Copyright © 2013 Danish Design Blog - All Rights Reserved - Managed by: Discern Marketing |
||