Showing posts with label design. Show all posts
Showing posts with label design. Show all posts

April 11, 2008

Plasvale pegs



designed by the two Brazilian Taciana de Abreu & Marcela Albuquerque, Plasvale pegs won an iF award in the home product design categorie on the the 2004 editon of iF Product Design Awards.

Besides the more traditional peg-clipping function, Plasvale pegs can also be used as a hook, without the need for a spring.

via: ARCOWeb

March 10, 2008

pegs in fashion design


Sandra Backlund's "in no time" Collection

merci mafalda

January 10, 2008

Vespertilium clothes-peg


For people that are Halloween fanatics or for those that simply love bats (and yes, there are a few that do), here are the Vespertilium pegs.

"Inexpensive plastic Vespertilium clothes-pegs would tell your neighbors that your laundry is Halloween-ready."

December 12, 2007

"Clip" by Paul Sandip


Made entirely from recycled plastic and with two sets of jaws, the cloth line clip designed by Paul Sandip is a very interesting and clever alternative to ordinary plastic clothes pegs.

"Cloth line clip is one of the few rare objects whose integrity, practicality and sense of purpose has remained intact over the years. Although various shapes and materials have been explored, none have an emerging brilliance of a perfect match of form and function.

"Clip" is the manifestation of my imagination of a world with interesting artifacts which not only look good but also have a definite function to perform. I call it - utilitarian design. The basic aim of my design was to create a single piece product with recycled plastic with no metal components.

Its dual jaw design not only creates interest in it but also doubles up its life. If one jaw is damaged, the other jaw still remains functional.

In the ordinary clips, the clamp and hinge goes parallel to each other where as in this case the area (surface) which is holding the cloth and the area (cross section) which is acting as hinge is perpendicular to each other, which acts as a stiffener.

The product is a single piece injection molded component in recycled plastic. Lesser in price than the existing ones due to reduced number of components."

more of Paul Sandip's cool designs at differential design

November 14, 2007

‘clothes peg iconography’







"a daily, mundane, banal object, which we all seem to posses, though we rarely look at. the ‘silent servants’..... an object so basic yet so useful,that has the quality of serving many functions in addition to it's original one. it can be used to hang stuff, to hold, to fasten, endless number of uses, almost as versatile as the office clip."

originally posted by designboom