This modern, minimal showerhead and bath spout are inspired by The Bell Jar

The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath is one of those books that I dreaded when it was required reading in school but I grew to appreciate later on when it was “leisurely” reading. It is a good book to make you think about the role of women and the expectations society has upon us as well as various mental health issues including sanity (or insanity), depression, pain, etc. While it is indeed a classic, never would I have thought that it can actually inspire a bathroom accessory.

Designer: Annabella Hevesi

This unique concept for a showerhead and bath spout is named after the book that inspired it. The Bell Jar is a showerhead with a hidden cable and a fixed adaptor that can turn it into a calmer and single water spout in case you want to take a bath instead of a shower. The designer says she was inspired by the allegory from the book about the human condition and the main character’s state of mind. The flow of the water that goes through the bell jar design depends on what you need: practicality (showering) or purification (bathing).

So if you need to shower, you lift the showerhead out of the adaptor and you get the usual rain shower kind of flow, giving you a hopefully refreshing and cleansing time. There’s a cable or tube that lets you adjust the shower head to the height that you need. When you need a single water jet to fill your bathtub or if you prefer a calmer water source, you put the shower head back into the bell jar and the single stream comes out of the bottom.

This contraption looks very minimalist and feminine, matching the atmosphere and theme of the book that it’s named after. I may not have a bath to fill up with the single stream but I’d love to have the option for a calming rain showerhead and then a rejuvenating and purifying stream of water.

The post This modern, minimal showerhead and bath spout are inspired by The Bell Jar first appeared on Yanko Design.

This ergonomic shower system uses modularity to help healthcare workers provide care in a handsfree manner!

Healthcare workers always have a lot on their plate and, above all else, the year 2020 has revealed that innovative design is essential to keep up with ever-evolving healthcare standards. Cloud, a modular shower system, was designed by Dongje Park for just that, specifically for caregivers who help the elderly population. Providing baths and showers for elderly patients is the responsibility of many healthcare workers and formed the primary inspiration for Cloud, the complete shower system that you can use with one hand. Cloud is a modular, ergonomic shower system constructed using mostly stainless steel, thermoplastic, and silicone, which can be integrated into either your own bathroom at home or community care sites, like nursing homes or hospitals.

Designed with the user in mind, Cloud is built to be intuitive and easy to understand so that anyone can feel confident when using it. The handheld showerhead comes equipped with a treaded, silicone grip that allows users to easily slip their hand through the handle with open access to the shower head’s interface where the control buttons are located. In order to give healthcare workers plenty of hands-free options for providing baths and other hygienic routines, Cloud comes with three different modules. The first module, a nylon-bristle brush, can be used for heavy scalp washing or for the tough skin that lines the bottoms of our feet. The even rows of silicone bristles on the second module could supply the means for harder-to-reach deep back or scalp massages. The third module, made from sponge or loofa-like material, delivers a cotton-soft deep cleaning for an all-over, gentle cleaning.

In addition to the shower head’s changeable modules, Park incorporated an LED, color-coded temperature control valve, which indicates when the water flow’s temperature changes from hot to cold, vice versa, or anywhere in between. Situated just above the temperature control valve, bottle stations dispense either body wash or hair products with the touch of a button. Park’s integrated soap dispenser only requires users to press a button on the showerhead, which prompts soap to flow down to the user’s chosen module to meet with water and reach the desired amount of suds and foaminess. They say love is in the details and Park kept even the smallest of details in mind with Cloud. When designing his shower system, Park prioritized the user’s intuition in Cloud’s ergonomic handles and seamless product assembly and incorporated modularity into a household product that’s known for predictability and rigidity, ultimately delivering a shower system that even those outside of the healthcare industry can appreciate.

Designer: Dongje Park

Nebia Showerhead Uses up to 70% Less Water: Shower Thoughtful

Carlos Gomez Andonaegui owns a health spa in Mexico City, which doesn’t have a nearby water source. As a result, their water bill would sometimes be ridiculous. Five years ago Carlos thought of a way to reduce his business’ water usage. The result is Nebia.

nebia_showerhead_1zoom in

According to Nebia, its eponymous showerhead uses just 0.75 gallons per minute (GPM), a far cry from the (alleged) standard of 2.5 GPM (The USGS estimates current water-saving showerheads to have a flow rate of 2 GPM). Nebia does this using atomizing nozzles that disperse water as small particles over a wide area, while enveloping users with a mist of water.

Pledge at least $299 (USD) on Kickstarter to receive a Nebia showerhead as a reward.

[via TechCrunch]

Kohler’s Moxie shower head makes it rain music, sticks with you all morning

Kohler's Moxie shower head makes it rain music, sticks with you all morning

Like to sing in the shower? Take a seat on your grandma's old bathing stool -- your own shower head is about to show you up. Kohler's latest water dispersal nozzle, Moxie, features a detachable Bluetooth speaker secured in the shower head's center with a magnet. It sounds like a bad Yakov Smirnoff gag: in Soviet Russia, shower sings to you! The speaker pops off the sprayer when it's time to towel off, and promises to provide up to seven hours of sudsy tunes before needing a recharge. The only thing it seems to be missing is a water powered micro-turbine. Read on for Kohler's official press release.

Continue reading Kohler's Moxie shower head makes it rain music, sticks with you all morning

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Kohler's Moxie shower head makes it rain music, sticks with you all morning originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 17 Nov 2012 00:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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By the Power of Blue

Blue Whales is a flexible showerhead concept based in rubber. It gives the user complete control over the water pressure and flow. Squeezing the showerhead dictates the pressure flow; sensitive areas like the face require a gentle stream where as feet can do with the max pressure. Generally you end up controlling the flow of water by turning the tap mixer, but with this unique blue, you just give a well-calculated squeeze.

Blue Whales is a 2011 reddot concept design winner.

Designer: Kim Sangun

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(By the Power of Blue was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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