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Pillivuyt: Brand New and Colorful Enamel

PILLIVUYT 1 - Bronze

Bronze Collection

The white porcelain specialist Pillivuyt has been adding color to collections since 2013 with its enamel ranges. After the Bretagne collection in shades of blue to evoke this coastal region bathed in light and the Éclectique range with its palette of chic grays, Pillivuyt now presents two new collections: Bronze and Teck.

The Bronze collection has a selection of pieces that were a great success in their original white version. Now these pieces have a pretty bronze-brown enamel that creates a fabric-like effect alternating between matte and gloss, giving each piece its unique character.

Teck, French for teak, is a new line of flat dishes with a pattern in relief, available in three sizes and five natural colors: two warm honey and bronze colors, and three mineral and aquatic colors: dark grey, pale blue and white.

PILLIVUYT 2 - Teck

Teck Collection

These new products are manufactured with colored enamels made at the company’s own production site. Fired at high temperature, the colored pieces retain all their resistance.

Based in Mehun-sur-Yèvre in central France, Pillivuyt has been designing and manufacturing porcelain since 1818. It associates its traditional expertise with patented technological innovations, the fruits of its laboratory’s research. Pillivuyt develops elegant and practical lines of crockery and culinary utensils to meet the requirements of professionals and amateurs, while inventing new culinary tools for the future and their uses. For more information visit www.pillivuyt.fr.

Appeal to the Design Conscious Customer with Details and Background

Eva Solo Gravity 6.5 Liter Pot

Eva Solo Gravity 6.5 Liter Pot

By Amber Gallegos

For some customers a can opener that functions is the best option, for design conscious customers it must function and have great form. While not every customer is going to have such a mindset, having knowledge readily available to assist them is the best tool in your arsenal for selling to the design conscious.

The design-conscious customer is most likely seeking kitchenware pieces that reflect a personal aesthetic they carry with them throughout all aspects of their life. For this customer, great design adds to the value of the product.

“It’s got a heart and soul and it’s imbued with spirit,” says Kristina Runske, owner of Minimal in San Fransciso, a design-oriented home accessories shop that offers brands like Menu, Eva Solo, Alessi, Kikkerland and Sagaform. “If these items become our friends and are everyday beautiful objects and they give us great pleasure, then we’re not going to throw the baby out with the bathwater. We’re going to live with them and maybe even give them to the next generation.”

Many customers who seek design in their home products have already spent time developing a collection they want new items to fit in with. New purchases must be something that looks good and reflects who they are as a person, so dialing into their specific design preference will go a long way.

Design Conscious Sagaform vacuum jug

Sagaform Accent Coffee Pot

“They want something that they aesthetically feel looks nice so they want to use it,” says Ingerid Mohn, President of Sagaform, Inc., which won a 2014 Global Innovation Award. “They want to have products that look good and probably also fit in with the other type of design products they’ve already picked up because they might have a collection … and it doesn’t hurt that it looks good when they have guests over.”

“Usually design lovers, this is their everyday life, it’s what they surround themselves with, from their work chairs to their art work on the wall, to tools and items and flatware and dishware that they use every day. It’s a lifestyle,” says Yossie Bitton, Managing Director of Eva Solo North America, a Danish kitchenware and furnishing accessories brand that has been in business for over 100 years.

Bitton suggests presenting design-oriented kitchenware brands like Eva Solo as a cohesive story rather than letting the products be dispersed among other merchandise. When the products are displayed as a big picture, the customer can get a better idea of the product line as a whole and how it will fit into their lifestyle.

Eva Solo +1 Perforated Ladle/Spatula

Eva Solo +1 Perforated Ladle/Spatula

“What we emphasize to retailers when they want to add Eva Solo to their general collection, is to make a good story. Meaning that it’s not being dispersed among things, because then it kind of goes away. So presenting the story, presenting the big picture and trying as much as they can, given concern for space and so forth. That aside, if you create this story, then the different items kind of add on each other and create this very attractive look that customers are naturally going to be attracted to,” says Bitton. “Basically it’s the emotional connection that the customer makes with an item. Sometimes it’s hard to quantify, hard to kind of put a formula around it, but what we found is that when it’s presented in a bigger picture rather than a single here and there, that really creates the impact.”

Part of that emotional connection a customer can make with a product also centers on the back story of the item. Design conscious customers are very knowledgeable and are highly interested in the details of their potential purchase, supplying this information adds value to the product for them.

“Get an idea what they’re looking for, then talk about the history of the product, because then the features are one thing and the benefits, but then talk about the story, create more around the product itself,” says Mohn. “I think it’s making it more of a whole purchase … Talking about the design, talking about how the color is matched, talking about the designer itself. Weave those featured benefits in with the story and romanticize it.”

Sagaform Birdy Carafe

Sagaform Birdy Carafe

Designer kitchenware brands will each have a special and unique design process. Some may have an in-house design team that sticks to the brand’s overall aesthetic, evolving and renewing it over time, like Eva Solo, whereas others may have a team of designers that are called upon for special projects or selected for their exceptional innovation, like Sagaform. Becoming knowledgeable about each line and the specific design process behind it will give retailers the information crucial to making sales with design conscious customers.

“They [Retailers] need to know a lot about the product because this kind of customer is normally sophisticated. They ask questions, so knowledge from the retailer about what they sell, not the superficial knowledge, but more in-depth, is really important because you get those questions,” says Bitton. “On one hand, they’re self-sufficient because they know what they’re looking for, on the other hand, when they require help the retailer and the staff around need to know what they’re selling. They need to know who the designer is, when the design was created, things like that.”

Another important aspect to emphasize with the design oriented customer is the quality and materials that go into the products they are looking for. This customer does not only want the piece to look good on their counter or tabletop, it must also have great function that will last. Demo the products in-store to show how well they work in addition to looking great.

Eva Solo Vacuum Jug

Eva Solo Vacuum Jug

“It’s part of the functioning and the aesthetic of the design of an item. Not lasting actually hurts the design if it’s not superb quality, so there’s emphasis on material and craftsmanship and so forth,” says Bitton.

In addition to this, remember that as a retailer it is your job to edit for the customer. Present a selection for them based on your wealth of knowledge about the products you carry.

“What we do is that we’re editors. We make a selection that we’re users of our self so we’re extremely knowledgeable when it comes to the product and we can advocate for the product, we can demonstrate it,” says Runske, whose design focused shop has been in business for 10 years. “So we’re steering them, we’re guiding them, being a little bit opinionated … you also make selection and focus and highlight things, I think that’s what we can do.”

This story was originally published in the January 2015 issue of Kitchenware News, a publication of Oser Communications Group.

NY NOW Winter 2015 Expects Influx of 400+ New Exhibitors

Geode Oak Cup from De JONG & Co., part of the Emerging Makers debuting at NY NOW

Geode Oak Cup from De JONG & Co., part of the Emerging Makers debuting at NY NOW

An expanded slate of 400+ new and returning exhibitors will be among NY NOW’s 2,800 total exhibitors at a blockbuster winter 2015 edition of NY NOW®, the Market for Home +Lifestyle, to be held January 31- February 4, at New York City’s Jacob K. Javits Center. Along with newcomers positioned within NY NOW’s three Collections – HOME, LIFESTYLE and HANDMADE – the Market will introduce a concentration of newcomers within a NEW! area at the rear of the Level Three exhibit floor.

“New resources are the lifeblood of a tradeshow, and NY NOW will showcase hundreds of new companies this winter,” said Scott Kramer, NY NOW co-director and vice president. “The demand for exhibit space from new companies was strong this winter so we created a NEW! area, which will present some 40 cross-category resources in one central exhibit location.”

Through NY NOW’s successful HANDMADE® Emerging Makers initiative – an “incubator space” for emerging craft designers and makers – several artisans will debut at NY NOW. Emerging Makers introduces the work of emerging craft designers and makers, selected on the basis of design concept, creativity and originality.

Notable among Emerging Makers confirmed for the winter 2015 Market are siblings Ruth and Peter DeJong of De JONG & Co. from Los Angeles, CA, and Summer Moore of the Brooklyn-based LESH. LESH is a line of hand-woven, one-of-a-kind jewelry pieces, which explore new patterns and color combinations. DeJONG & Co.’s handcrafted homewares, such as cutting boards and spice mills, seek to elevate everyday lifestyle through functional, beautiful design.

Wide Ikat Salad Bowl from Tse & Tse Associates, a newly confirmed exhibitor

Wide Ikat Salad Bowl from Tse & Tse Associates, a newly confirmed exhibitor

Other newly confirmed exhibitors, joining a full roster of new companies previously announced for the winter 2015 edition, include: Kesh Beauty (personal care products crafted with 100% organic Argan oils), Krysos + Chandi (Brooklyn based jewelry line), Rice A/S (Danish homewares and accessories), Scout and Honour (home goods, accessories and gifts) and Tse & Tse Associates (home accessories crafted in Paris). Additional resources, concentrated with NEW! exhibitors on Level 3 of the Javits Center, are Bessie and Barnie (dog beds blankets and harnesses), Easy, Tiger (fun cards, shirts and prints) and Georgia, country of the Golden Fleece by Miniatura (handmade miniature books).

In addition to first-time exhibitors, a number of leading industry suppliers will return to NY NOW following an absence from the New York Market. Companies returning to the LIFESTYLE Collection include Aero Pen Int’l, Inc., Gift Wrap Company and Kurt S. Adler, Inc. (Gift); Renditions by Reesa and Silly Souls (Baby + Child); Angelrox and Zsa Zsa Jewels (Personal Accessories); and rareEARTH Naturals and Thompson Ferrier LLC (Personal Care + Wellness). Within the HOME Collection, notable returns include Caleb Siemon/Siemon&Salazar and notNeutral (Accent on Design®); Beverly Furniture, DwellStudio, Gabby, Mariachi Imports and Ro-Sham-Beaux (Home Furnishings + Textiles); and MOTTAHEDEH and The Wine Clip (Tabletop + Gourmet Housewares). The HANDMADE Collection also welcomes a number of returning exhibitors, including Hotchkiss Mobiles and Terra Glassworks (Handmade Designer Maker) and Culture Shock (Handmade Global Design).

All NEW! exhibitors – whether located in the NEW! area or one of the three NY NOW Collections – will enjoy enhanced in-booth signage and directory designations, making these resources easier for buyers to discover. In addition, a special NEW! Preview display, located on the Javits Center North Concourse, will showcase hundreds of products from first-time NY NOW exhibitors.

Related seminars are scheduled to complement these product finds. The NEW! Ideas track recognizes the nation’s growing “Maker Movement,” and offers two seminars related to NY NOW’s “Maker Project”: Susan Szenasy of METROPOLIS will moderate “Modern-Day Matchmaking Redux: Tech Tools For 21st Century Makers,” a look at how technology is fueling a growth in design and how ideas become products. Panelists include Matthew Burnett of Makers Row, Evan Cohen from IndieGoGo, Joanne Domeniconi of The Grommet and Ashley Etling of Red Clay. In a second “Maker Project” session, Erin Andrew of the Small Business Administration, will present “Fostering Small Business Entrepreneurship In Today’s DIY Economy,” focusing on tools and programs available to small businesses creating and selling self-made products.

Malachite 4 Piece Place Setting from Mottahedeh, a returning exhibitor

Malachite 4 Piece Place Setting from Mottahedeh, a returning exhibitor

Also, as part of the NEW! Ideas track, Linda Cahan, visual merchandising and store design expert, and columnist for Gifts and Decorative Accessories, will present “Store Design On a Shoestring: Design Or Renovate?” – trends in store design, and ideas for budgeting and creating a floor plan that works. Attendees will receive a detailed chronological “to do” list designed either for a new store or one in need of renovations. In addition, the NEW! Ideas track is scheduled to include free daily programming – a series of 15-minute seminars presented by SnapRetail, which will focus on a variety of strategies for retailers – from how to get the most out of a store’s website, to effective strategies for Pinterest and Instagram.

The winter 2015 edition of NY NOW®, the Market for Home +Lifestyle, will run Saturday, January 31, through Wednesday, February 4, 2015, at New York City’s Jacob K. Javits Convention Center. NY NOW has staggered show opening dates and locations, with HANDMADE running Saturday to Tuesday, and HOME and LIFESTYLE running Sunday to Wednesday.  Market hours are 9 a.m. – 6 p.m., daily, except Tuesday, February 3, when HANDMADE closes at 5 p.m.; and Wednesday, February 4, when HOME and LIFESTYLE close at 2 p.m.

NY NOW’s comprehensive collections – HOME, LIFESTYLE and HANDMADE, as well as NEW! exhibitors – will encompass 100,000 products in 400+ product categories. Attendees from all 50 U.S. states and more than 80 countries worldwide are expected. Information and registration are available online at www.nynow.com.