From materiality to novel forms, product designers are leaning into the dark and mysterious with bold, brass, and brazen home furnishings.
Ceramicist Virginia Sin and quilt maker Haptic Lab debut modern quilt coat designs featuring a single ceramic button.
Designed for Mutina to celebrate a decade-long partnership, the collection is a new, playful take on ceramics as furniture.
Designed by Kelly Wearstler for Serax, the new Zuma collection of plates and glassware is versatile, meant to be mixed + matched in color, pattern + shape.
Pani Jurek's collection of BARVA VASES combine vibrant color spots, wavy lines, and textures that echo strokes of a painter's brush.
Whether you need light or a pop of color (or three!), the Spot On Desk Lamp by J Schatz will inject a ton of personality into your space.
For this DMTV Milkshake, ceramicist Bob Dinetz shares how he combines modern shapes with an experimental approach to color and glaze + more.
'Together over time' is an exhibition by avant-garde designer Savvy Studio's Rafael Prieto with work that strikes a delicate balance between fragility and robustness.
Italgraniti designed an exhibition space to evoke the spatial qualities of a hamlet with "display devices" that aid visitors in learning about the objects on display in serene environments.
Launched in 2020 by In Common With + ceramicist Danny Kaplan, eight geometric lighting designs have been added to the first six pieces of the Terra Series.
Artist Sheree Hovsepian captures, crops, and brilliantly echoes the body in her new assemblages of photography, ceramic, wood, and string.
Made in Situ is an exhibition by French designer Noé Duchaufour-Lawrance at Demisch Danant centered around nature and materiality.
Designer Natascha Madeiski's flaming star lighting collection brings together Memphis, Tennessee + the Memphis design movement.
Most phones look and feel the same but the OPPO Find X5 Pro's all ceramic organic design is purposefully novel and requires 5 days to sculpt.
Tune in to this week's DMTV Milkshake episode to hear what ceramicist Bari Ziperstein says about defining success in the art world.