Culture Dice furniture changes function depending on how you "throw" it

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Swiss studio Kosmos Architects has designed Dice, a multifaceted piece of oak furniture that can be used as a stool, a coffee table, a lamp or a footrest.

The five-pronged furniture piece weighs 10.5 kilograms and has a "warm" oak wood frame characterised by subtle chequerboard patterns.
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Dice functions as a stool, a coffee table, a lamp or a footrest
"Throw the dice, and this project will take a new shape depending on how the user rotates it," said Kosmos Architects, which named Dice after the numbered cube often used in games of chance.

Two of the furniture's legs are wide enough to support it, while two others are slimmer and rounded. The fifth leg features a triangular lamp at its tip made of plastic and protected frosted glass, which can be removed via a small button and charged using a USB socket.
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The furniture can be suspended from the ceiling

When tipped on its various sides, Dice can function as a stool, a coffee table or a footrest.

The furniture can be attached to a rope or similar hanging material and suspended from the ceiling to provide lighting or simply positioned as a floor lamp.

Kosmos Architects chose this asymmetric design to "unite the qualities of four different basic furniture typologies".

"We made the lamp removable so that there are no electrical cords and to make the object independent," architect Leonid Slonimskiy told Dezeen.

Dice was CNC-milled from a stack of solid oak pieces with a multi-axis milling machine.

"The robotic arm cut away pieces of wood with a rotating drill until the shape got smoother, and then we manually sanded and oiled the piece," he explained.

"Dice combines new technologies and handcraft."
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Dice features subtle chequerboard patterns

"The furniture has a clear purpose but is supposed to be interpreted by the owner," continued Kosmos Architects.

"It is a sculpture and at the same time a pragmatic piece of furniture."
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Kosmos Architects also created a "carry-on bag"

Kosmos Architects has also created a silver "carry-on bag" for Dice, which mimics the shape of the furniture and helps to make it portable.

Dice was unveiled during last month's Milan design week at Fake/Authentic Gallery. Dezeen has rounded up 10 other projects presented at the festival that explored the future of furniture design.

Previously, Japanese studio Torafu Architects created multifunctional furniture – also called Dice – for both children and adults.
 
What an abomination. It's Globohomo: The Furniture, absolute trash ascetics based on postmodern retardation and minimalistic nonsense. There are many traditions of actually good furniture design the world over that elevate furniture to art, and none of it looks like this. Why would you want to buy this trash if you aren't part of the laptop caste?
Kosmos Architects has also created a silver "carry-on bag" for Dice, which mimics the shape of the furniture and helps to make it portable.
Because of course it does. MUST CONS00M MORE PRODUCT FOR MY FURNI
 
I'm a bit of a fan of functional art pieces, but this aint it chief.

I get what they're going for with the design but it looks nowhere near functional other than the light. The surfaces are just too small and short for the consistently using it for the other purposes. The carry bag is just pompous wank, and tells you all you need to know about the thinking behind the product tbh. It's a self important attention piece you drag with you to show off to other rich folk so they fawn over just how cool and DEEP it all is yadayada.
 
I can use a milk crate as a stool, coffee table, or foot rest. It doesn't mean I'm going to do it or it's going to work well as any one of those things. That doesn't even factor in that I can steal a milkcrate for free. Artfags sniffing their own farts.
Best of all, the milk crate is closer to an actual die than high-art's reinterpretation of it.

You're not expected to buy these art-furniture pieces, they're mostly exercises to get the artist's name out there.
 
Always been a fan of weird novelty furniture shit but this kind of thing isn't really new as they frame it as. Literally any chair or table can double as a table or chair, nobody says this but it's a known truth that any flat surface can be used as either. if this was bigger I'd consider it true table level, not chair that looks vaguely table-esque on one side.
Also it's probably way more expensive than it should be but that's a fucking given at this point.
 
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