02 October, 2013

visualising forms with patterned tiles

Spanish atelier MUT patterned a series of tiles with shapes that look like overlapping pieces of coloured paper. Following the success of Drops, the previous collection of hydraulic ceramic floor tiles exhibited in Milan, EnticDesigns teamed up again with MUT design, to create it’s new collection, this time inspired by one of the most emblematic toys of our childhood ; the kaleidoscope. The multi-coloured pieces of Keidos form a new emotive and playful design collection. Keidos, as with it’s predecessor Drops, breaks with formal tradition, distancing itself from a rigid, modular system that characterised the hydraulic floors at the end of the 19th Century.

Conceptualised to allow for thousands of combinations, the new design for enticdesigns offers as many unique solutions as there are spaces. With their versatile colour palette, Keidos floors allow elegant and inspirational designs for hidden corners and places of reflection. This collection offers customisation without limits due to its different pieces.



Italian porcelain tile manufacturer Refin has just launched its latest collections at 100% Design, London. Amongst the new ranges is Frame-Up, the latest collaboration between DesignTaleStudio, the company's design, production and experimental laboratory, and Studio FM Milano. The Frame-Up collection comprises four new decorative designs: two geometric patterns inspired by the artistic avant-garde circles of the period between the two world wars and the early Sixties, and two reminiscent of the sinuous graphic patterns found in majolica tiles from the Emilia region of Italy around the late 18th century.

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