Chamaikarn Pai Chartsiri

Diseñador de productos textiles se centra en la sostenibilidad y la circularidad

Member since: 2021-09-07

Mi enfoque principal ha sido diseñar para la circularidad y la sostenibilidad para crear mejores diseños para el futuro. Tengo experiencia en el diseño de estampados textiles, colecciones de estilo de vida, textiles para el hogar y decoraciones suaves para hoteles. Mis responsabilidades laborales también incluían la supervisión de muestras de producción, la resolución de problemas y la participación en viajes de abastecimiento dentro de Tailandia, India y Hong Kong. También tengo experiencia en diseño de productos de interiores gracias a una pasantía en Front Design AB, Estocolmo, Suecia. Aplico esas experiencias en mi trabajo independiente desarrollando mi marca textil de estilo de vida, AIKA Atelier, en Estocolmo. Mi formación educativa incluye una Maestría en Diseño Textil de Konstfack, Suecia, y una Licenciatura en Diseño Industrial de KMUTT Tailandia y un semestre de intercambio en Hochschule für Gestaltung und Kunst, FHNW, Suiza, con estudios adicionales en Economía Circular: Gestión sostenible de materiales en la Universidad de Lund, Suecia.
References(6)

Do you believe in what you SEE?

The SEE collection was inspired by everyday surrounding illusions and optical art. The inspiration was interpreted into black and white lines and anaglyph sketches. Prints from the SEE collection offer a surreal vision to urge people to look back and question their visual perception. When viewed through 3D glasses, the anaglyph prints provide yet another appearance in the collection. The concept is also a reflection on our world and society. Depending on our personal views and values, we all see things differently. It is important to try on other glasses to broaden our perspective.

EYES collection

Fine drawings from 18th-century French encyclopedia are the inspiration of the Eyes collection. These two-dimensional hand drawings play with your eyes and appear to be three-dimensional images of marble working and the beekeeping process. In the EYES collection, these images were interpreted from the original drawings into simplified embroidery patterns on linen. Marble Flower, Marble Tiles and Beehive are names of patterns in EYES collection.

Crosswalks, a collaboration project with 99BAGS

The crosswalk and pedestrian movement inspire the flow pattern.The design highlight the aspect of traffic safety through the pattern on a functional reflective bag by integrating crosswalks into textile pattern design. A new reinterpretation of the crosswalks come in flowy hand-drawn rectangular silhouettes and simplified outline. The flowy crosswalks arranged to form a three-dimensional illusion. The white pattern on a grey-ish background offers three different appearances with different kind of lights. The white Flow pattern will turn black when a car headlights flash on the bag.

Marble Flower - Hand printed scarf

The scarf pattern offers a constructive illusion appearance, inspired by marble tile designs from an 18th-century French encyclopaedia and Asanoha, a Japanese hemp leaf pattern. Silky soft touch scarf made of cotton satin. Hand sewn and printed in Japan.

MARINE LIFE : Sea Turtles, Plastic bag and Jellyfish, a collaboration project with 99BAGS

- Duo design canvas bags :: Prints design - Marine Life concept aims to bring attention to the harm of human plastic consumption behaviour to marine lives. The designs subtly tells a narrative about Sea Turtles, Plastic bag and Jellyfish through the patterns. Jellyfish is one of sea turtle food, but they couldnt differentiate plastic bag from jellyfish. The sea turtle life was taken by mistakenly consumes a single-use plastic bag that looks similar to their food. Like many other marine lives, their lives ended by erroneously consuming human waste plastic in the ocean. ... ...

javnvág

A Rug design for Gudrun & Gudrun, in collaboration with Designers Trust. javnvág rug has a unique tactility and warmth. Made from durable Faroese wool in natural shades. The pattern interprets the classic Herringbone pattern as ‘Misshape Herringbone. The project began with the idea of using Faroese wool for interior decoration and ending the yearly burning of unsalable Faroese wool. Similar to Gudrun & Gudruns intention when they started their company. photo: gudrungudrun.com
© 2024 Designers Trust por Timothy Jacob Jensen | DK 41248572 | Hejlskovvej 106, 7840, Hoejslev, Dinamarca

Chamaikarn Pai Chartsiri - Diseñador de productos textiles se centra en la sostenibilidad y la circularidad - Designer at Designers Trust