Find images by browsing the photo gallery by category. Add them to your Pinterest boards. Access the press kit to download the image or view project details.
Create a media account
Record Numbers for its Birthday: The 15th Pure Talents Contest at imm cologne Shows an Up-to-Date Cross-Section of the Young, International Design Scene
imm cologne 2018, Koelnmesse
Ruthless reduction of form: With the bench Molly that is made of screwed together curved powder-coated steel pipes, the Berlin-based designer Marcel Pasternak presented a statement of no-frills design at the Pure Talent Contest of imm cologne.
Photo credit:
Pasternak/Koelnmesse
Record Numbers for its Birthday: The 15th Pure Talents Contest at imm cologne Shows an Up-to-Date Cross-Section of the Young, International Design Scene
imm cologne 2018, Koelnmesse
Formable light: The lamp Varjo (Finnish for "Shadow") created by the Italian designer Umberto Garcia is made up of a system that is spanned between the ceiling and the floor comprising of six differently sized non-fixed rings, which elastic textile straps run through.By moving the rings the shape and the light transmission of the shade that is formed by the straps change.
Photo credit:
Garcia/Koelnmesse
Record Numbers for its Birthday: The 15th Pure Talents Contest at imm cologne Shows an Up-to-Date Cross-Section of the Young, International Design Scene
imm cologne 2018, Koelnmesse
Creatures made of concrete and metal: With his outdoor furniture family Nocturnal Beasts, the Israeli designer Yohay Alush has set out to create a new space for teenagers. The beasts come to life at night. A hybrid of the street materials concrete and metal in the form of mythical wild creatures. They amplify music played on a mobile phone and provide pedal-powered light and a heat-emitting bench. Music, light and warmth – that’s all it takes to generate social energy.
Photo credit:
Alush/Koelnmesse
Record Numbers for its Birthday: The 15th Pure Talents Contest at imm cologne Shows an Up-to-Date Cross-Section of the Young, International Design Scene
imm cologne 2018, Koelnmesse
... the sun passes in the south: Bringing light into enclosed spaces as naturally as possible – this is Berlin designer Sofia Souidi’s objective with her lamp Gradient. It projects a rectangle of light on the wall whose colour, brightness and shape varies imperceptibly, reflecting the time of day and current weather conditions – almost as if the sun were moving past the (non-existent) window.
Photo credit:
Souidi/Koelnmesse
Record Numbers for its Birthday: The 15th Pure Talents Contest at imm cologne Shows an Up-to-Date Cross-Section of the Young, International Design Scene
imm cologne 2018, Koelnmesse
Firmly strapped: Liga - teamwork by the French designer Matthieu Muller and Pierre-Alexandre Cesbron - is a series of metal storage furniture, comprising of a box, a bedside cabinet and a coffee table.The two-piece lid is fastened using a full-perimeter nylon strap that serves as a joint and can be folded open separately to grant access to the closed interior of the piece of furniture.
Photo credit:
Muller, Cesbron/Koelnmesse
Record Numbers for its Birthday: The 15th Pure Talents Contest at imm cologne Shows an Up-to-Date Cross-Section of the Young, International Design Scene
imm cologne 2018, Koelnmesse
Cell-elasticity: In order to find a new approach in the competitive seating furniture section, the Japanese designer Hiroyuki Morita experimented with nylon ropes cast in latex for his chair Cellastic.Here the elasticity and traction of the materials as well as the structure of the nylon ropes play an essential role, whereas the pattern based on the so-called cell sequence reminds one of the molecular structure of organic cells.
Photo credit:
Morita/Koelnmesse
Record Numbers for its Birthday: The 15th Pure Talents Contest at imm cologne Shows an Up-to-Date Cross-Section of the Young, International Design Scene
imm cologne 2018, Koelnmesse
From a work tool to seating furniture: Originally used as a harvesting tool for sorting grain, Temi presents such an ergonomic and mature form that the Japanese designer Hiroyuki Morita wanted to retain the shell as a seat perfectly adapted to match the human body.With its simple construction and reduced use of material - bamboo, leather, steel - the resulting stool Temi has an absolutely forward-looking appearance.
Photo credit:
Morita/Koelnmesse