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06 Jun 07:48

Industrial Style Desk Lamp With Ikea Fas

by Jules Yap
Raquel.abe

eu quero eu quero


Materials: Ikea Fas lamp, Ikea Antonius basket insert (as a mold), teak batten strip, threaded rod, bolts, wing nuts, washers etc.

Description: I needed a pair of bedside lamps for our bedroom. I'd been looking for them everywhere, but didn't find the right pair. So after some internet inspiration, I decided to make them myself.



I bought two Ikea Fas clamp spotlights to use in my lamps. Then I bought some teak batten strip and some screws, wing nuts, washers, threaded rod, fork joints etc. to make the arms for my lamps.


The base was made with concrete using Ikea Antonius basket insert as a mold. I did some rewiring with the cords to move the switch where I wanted it and glued a piece of felt to the bottom of the concrete base so that it wouldn't scratch my bedside tables. After that they were ready for use!

I'm happy to say that they work really well and I think they were worth all the time and effort. :)


See more of the industrial desk lamp.

~ Minni S., Finland More hacks on IKEAHackers.net


04 Apr 21:36

Professor portador do vírus HIV é exemplo de coragem e engajamento

by Nicolas Gunkel
“Antes de continuarmos, posso lhe pedir um favor?”, interrompe educadamente o professor argentino Jorge Beloqui, com uma voz calma e um carregado sotaque portenho. “Não me chame de senhor. Me chame de você.” Logo percebo que não se trata de...
18 Oct 15:17

Vertical Loft / Shift Architecture Urbanism

by Fabian Cifuentes

Architects: Shift Architecture Urbanism
Location: Rotterdam, The Netherlands
Design Team: Oana Rades, Harm Timmermans
Photographs: Rene de Wit

Contractor: JWK Bouwteam, Gerrit Kooiker, Ijzendoorn
Construction: B2CO, Richard Fielt, Ede
Installations: Installatietechniek Fred vd Pol & Zn., Ede

This so called do-it-yourself dwelling in the centre of Rotterdam is part of a bold experiment initiated by the municipality to revitalize dilapidated urban areas. Run-down pre-war dwellings are renovated on the outside and brought back to their monumental appearance, while the interiors are stripped bare. The empty shell dwellings are primarily bought by enthusiastic young people who transform them according to their specific needs, desires and budgets. Real estate developers have picked up the initiative and a new demand driven market of urban housing has been generated in recent years. The result is a growing number of contemporary custom-made dream houses within the uniform old fabric of the traditional nineteenth and early twentieth century city.

Our dream was to create a vertical loft: a house without walls where all three floors are stitched together into one continuous space. The interior of the new house is organized by one oversized closet that connects all floors. It functions as a storage device for the whole house. This piece of XXL-furniture, measuring 10 meters in length and 9 meters in height, replaces the load bearing middle wall of the original house. Its modular system integrates kitchen appliances, bookshelves, wardrobe, and a walk in closet. The introduction of a central void reinforces the presence of the closet. The void enables diagonal views through the house in which the closet is experienced in its full height. It also makes daylight penetrate far into the 14 meter deep house. Two steel stairs in the void make the bookshelves accessible and create a vertical circulation along and through the closet.

The extreme makeover of the house is combined with a selective preservation of elements of the old casco. Industrial materials such as the phenol coated multiplex of the closet and the polyurethane flooring are balanced by the longitudinal brick wall that is left bare, the stained glass and the original doors that are restored and re-used. The roughness of the wall, full with traces of the past, tells stories about the continuous makeovers that the house has undergone in the last hundred years.

Vertical Loft / Shift Architecture Urbanism © Rene de Wit Vertical Loft / Shift Architecture Urbanism © Rene de Wit Vertical Loft / Shift Architecture Urbanism © Rene de Wit Vertical Loft / Shift Architecture Urbanism © Rene de Wit Vertical Loft / Shift Architecture Urbanism © Rene de Wit Vertical Loft / Shift Architecture Urbanism © Rene de Wit Vertical Loft / Shift Architecture Urbanism © Rene de Wit Vertical Loft / Shift Architecture Urbanism © Rene de Wit Vertical Loft / Shift Architecture Urbanism © Rene de Wit Vertical Loft / Shift Architecture Urbanism © Rene de Wit Vertical Loft / Shift Architecture Urbanism © Rene de Wit Vertical Loft / Shift Architecture Urbanism © Rene de Wit Vertical Loft / Shift Architecture Urbanism © Rene de Wit Vertical Loft / Shift Architecture Urbanism Plans 01 Vertical Loft / Shift Architecture Urbanism Situation 01 Vertical Loft / Shift Architecture Urbanism Section 01 Vertical Loft / Shift Architecture Urbanism Cross Section 01

Vertical Loft / Shift Architecture Urbanism originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 15 Oct 2012.

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10 Oct 19:53

Roda de temperos

by noreply@blogger.com (ANDRÉ Montejorge)
Raquel.abe

Curti!

Legal demais este porta-temperos giratório, o Ferris™ Deluxe, da marca britânica Kitchen Pro. O seus sistema de busca por ervas e especiarias é ágil, prático e ainda garante um visual cheio de estilo para sua cozinha. Cada "rodinha-gigante" mede 30 cm de largura x 35 cm de altura x 30 cm de profundidade e vem com 15 potinhos com temperos selecionados com 2 opções à escolha: Spice Market e India Spice Market. Para saber mais informações, outros modelos e preço, clique no link após as fotos. "Giratoriamente legaus"!   Link