Your living room is where you share the story of who you are. So our living room furniture helps you do that-with lots of ways to show off the things you’ve done and the places you’ve been. And plenty of comfortable seating-because sharing it all with your favorite people is the best part, so, Furniture for Living Room must be help you. Here are 2 supporting objects in Furniture for Living Room to create your brighter living room and many more. First is the Living room lighting and it will illuminate the possibilities. Its amazing the difference a lamp can make. But the right living room lighting, you can have a space that’s perfect for doing everything – from reading a book to hosting game night. And that means you can create a new room every night – just with the flip of a switch. Second are TV Stands and TV Cabinets on your Furniture for Living room. Your living room might lot of fun and entertain. Tv are lot more fun these days. Gaming, movies, internet browsing.. but do you ever feel like all the wires, satellite boxes, DVDs and remote controls are taking over your home? Happily, because many TV stands and TV cabinets are there to cut the clutter and get things organized. They give you space for everything.
Plastic patio chairs with stackable. Do you kow that the chairs also called a relax chair because we place in the outdoor, like patio ? This chairs also make we feel better and have the strong ingredients because we need it to relax our body and mind. We can think what we do and learn from other people and then share with our family. We can also drink a coffee or tea to accompany our day. Stackable can mean this cahir have a back that make our back body will relax .
Now, we will talk about it with some patterns or colors that we will have. In the first for plastic patio chairs with stackable, we will know the chairs with the back with a shaped like ski board and then have two place for put our hand in the two sides. The next style, we will see at the square shaped for the back and have a flower pattern that made from some hole and it can be beautiful like we think before.
The plastick patio chairs with stackable can be popular now and you can be one of the young people that buy or promote to your friend. Pick the colorful chair or colorthat you like.
Singapore’s new national sports stadium lays claim to the world’s largest free-spanning dome, measuring 310-metres across, and its roof can be opened or closed to suit the tropical climate .
The design team – a group of engineers and designers from Arup, DP Architects and AECOM – created the Singapore Sports Hub on a 35-hectare waterfront-site in Kallang, south-east Singapore.
The team designed the vast domed structure to become the state’s national stadium, as part of a complex of buildings that also includes an indoor stadium, water-sports centre and a museum – known collectively as the Singapore Sports Hub.
Related story: New images of Zaha Hadid’s modified Tokyo Olympic stadium design
It was named sports building of the year at this year’s World Architecture Festival.
Up to 55,000 people can be seated beneath the curving canopy of the 310-centre roof.
“A dome roof is a very iconic architectural and structural form,” said project architect Clive Lewis.
Photograph by Christian Richters
Responding to the tropical climate, panels within the roof can slide open and closed to shelter the pitch and auditorium from heavy rain, or to keep the space cool in high temperatures.
According to the team, the roof is left open when the stadium is not in use, helping to keep the grass pitch in good condition.
Photograph by Christian Richters
The moving roof sections are made from translucent ETFE plastic, chosen for its strength and thermal properties.
Photograph by Christian Richters
The panels are supported on metal rigging that arches over the pitch, connecting to a framework that covers the auditorium on either side of the stadium.
Air-conditioning is piped into the structure beneath rows of red plastic seats.
Photograph by Poh Yu Khing
A lightweight skin of metal sheeting clads the steel frame, weighing just 8,000 tonnes – a relatively streamlined mass for the large-scale structure.
Photograph by Arup/Franklin Kwan
“For the national stadium we wanted the cladding to express the form and geometry of the structure below, which we achieved through the articulation of the super lightweight cladding systems,” said Lewis.
Photograph by Christian Richters
A lattice of arching metal beams criss-cross over the exterior of the dome. Bulbs integrated into the metalwork light the stadium at night.
Photograph by Arup/Franklin Kwan
The ends of the beams meet the ground beyond the facades, creating a double-layer structure and framing a covered walkway that rings around the stadium.
A gap in the water-facing end of the stadium is left open to the air to frame the city’s skyline.
Photograph by Arup/Franklin Kwan
The stadium is used for a range of sports activities including athletics, cricket, football and rugby, as well as music concerts.
Carousels of amputated human body parts perform choreography to a score of dramatic music punctuated by the sound of pneumatic pumps in an installation by British artist Peter William Holden in London .
Peter William Holden presented three Dance Machines named Arabesque, Vicious Cycle and SoleNoid β as part of Merge Festival, a series of arts events currently taking place around London’s Southbank area. The sinister-looking machines act out dance routines on spotlit-platforms in a darkened room off Borough Road.
Vicious Cycle
The Leipzig-based artist designed the mechanised sculptures, made up of life-like limbs mounted on steel frames, to perform ritualistic movements to well-known classical music by Sergei Prokofiev and Johann Strauss.
Related story: Applause Machine by Martin Smith
“I have attempted to create work which falls somewhere between conventional notions of pictorial art and a kind of performance,” Holden told Dezeen.
Vicious Cycle
The kinetic sculptures are driven by pneumatic air pumps which sound each time the limbs move. The cabling, steel frames and air valves of the works’ construction are left exposed.
In a piece influenced by Mary Shelly’s Frankenstein, named Arabesque, human-scale arms and legs skewered on metal rods react to music by Strauss.
A circle of prosthetic legs flex at the knee, kicking in time to the music, while four pairs of arms severed at the elbow, flop back and forth in the centre of the platform.
Arabesque
“The limbs, translucent and livid, bare their internal robotic mechanisms to the gaze of the viewer. The wiring is an aesthetic expression, deliberately integrated into the installation to bring chaotic lines of abstract form to contrast with the organised symmetry of the body parts,” said the artist.
As the compressed air pushes the parts into motion the air valves “exhale loudly” and the metal frames clack.
Arabesque
“This combined with the rattle of relays and the tandem clattering of pistons produces a hyper-modern accompaniment to the music of Strauss,” he said.
On another circular base, eight black and white tap-shoes perform a rhythmic dance in SoleNoid β. The heel-toe movements of the shoes and the sound of tap-dancing are synced using a computer.
The final work, named Vicious Circle, is inspired by the artist’s interest in the Industrial Revolution.
“It is a brutalist robotic structure and it is a representation of some of the fears I have with technology,” said Holden.
SoleNoid β
Rubberised hands attached to metal-framed structures that appear like decapitated bodies rise and fall in time to Prokofiev’s Dance of the Knights.
“The motion of the machine reminds me of the relentless movement of progress as the machine moves to its predetermined program, ignorant of its environment and unwilling to stop if anything gets in its way,” he said.
“Though paradoxically it is possible to see beauty within its movements, reminding me that technology is a double edged sword and we, humanity, have the possibility to decide which direction it will take.”
Merge Festival takes place in venues across the capital until 19 October 2014.
Dezeen Watch Store: Scottish design studio INSTRMNT has launched its debut collection of timepieces exclusively at Dezeen Watch Store, following a successful crowfunding campaign on Kickstarter (+interview).
INSTRMNT 01 watches were developed by Glasgow-based designers Pete Sunderland, 22, and Ross Baynham, 24, who met while studying at Glasgow Caledonian University.
The collection was financed through a campaign on crowdfunding platform Kickstarter, which saw the duo beat their initial £20,000 goal by more than £73,000.
“We both love watches. INSTRMNT 01 really did come from us saying “I love this watch but I hate X about it”, so it was almost selfish,” Baynham told Dezeen Watch Store in an interview.
“We thought, ‘we’re designers, we love watches, why don’t we make the watch that we want to wear?’ Why don’t we make the watch that is perfect for us?'”
INSTRMNT 01 in gunmetal/tan
“Personally, I thought Kickstarter would detract from the value of the brand, but actually it’s totally been the opposite,” Sunderland said. “It has added so much value. It was amazing, we were completely wrong about it.”
INSTRMNT 01 watch features a 3 o’clock date window, sapphire crystal lens and is available in three colour combinations: gunmetal/tan, rose gold/brown and brushed/black.
INSTRMNT 01 in rose gold/brown with 3 o’clock date window
Its stripped-back aesthetic is influence by industrial equipment from the 1950s, and the stark white face features a gauge-like index.
INSTRMNT 01 comes in separate parts and a tool that can be used to assemble it
“I just love the sparseness of them, the white space and numbers that start 00, 01, 02,” said Sunderland.
“It comes from amp meters, volt meters and their dials. We love them and collect them,” added Baynham. “The watch comes ‘exploded’ so you get pins, the casing, strap parts and a tool, which are nicely laid out. It’s like an instrument that you put together.”
INSTRMNT 01 features a Swiss-made Rhonda 585 movement
The case is built from PVD-coated steel and is connected to a premium Spanish leather strap by smoothly curved lugs.
“If you look at the watch head-on, the lug looks straight, but as you turn it to the side, you see a Bézier curve that’s at a very exact degree we decided on over a long period of time,” Baynham explained. “We liked that idea of doing it in a way that was almost mathematical and we think it turned out nicely weighted.”
INSTRMNT 01 is made to suit men and women
Read the full interview with Pete Sunderland and Ross Baynham on the Dezeen Watch Store blog »