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Those same vibrant colors are on full display in the collection's tableware products.
Point Blank (1967)
The cult classic starring Lee Marvin features a slaying beneath the 4th Street Bridge. It was neither the first nor the last bout in the riverbed, but it remains one of the most iconic.
The Mesh Notebook from HAY takes a simple desk accessory and gives it a design upgrade. The flexible cardboard cover of the notebook has been perforated, alluding to the look of mesh fabrics. Available in four soothing colors, each notebook in the series includes an elastic band that can be used to secure loose items within the notebook, and it can also be used as a bookmark.
Also included are a wide range of clothing designs for women and girls.
Linear Stool by Eric Trine, $69 each
We're big fans of the Long Beach, California–based industrial designer's geometric steel planters and Rod and Weave lounge chairs—now he's designed a collection of these Linear stools, available in five colors.
The cotton-covered Asema Notebook from Marimekko features a bold orange and red pattern. Filled with 160 blank pages, this book will inspire note-taking, sketches, and doodles alike. The notebook includes a contrasting striped bookmark to make it easy to keep your place.
The collection includes a Play Tent, seen here in a Lokki print, along with accessories like pillows, poufs, towels, and a memory card game.
TWENTY FIVE LUSK
Restaurant designed by CCS Architecture
This restaurant in the SoMa neighborhood of San Francisco transformed a former meatpacking and smokehouse facility while leaving hints of the warm brick and aged wood beams.
“I want to see more Sill stores,” says Blank (seen here), who was inspired to create her own line of planters after being disappointed with the lack of functional, design-forward options on the market.
Crisp white walls serve as blank canvases throughout to highlight the exquisite wooden features.
A narrow garden and climbing ivy soften and brighten the house’s blank front facade.
Velux skylights open the extension further. A wood stove by Max Blanks warms the area between the living room and kitchen when the sun is hidden.
Entering the property by car, one first encounters the blank wall of the home's storage shed, evoking the Texas sheds and barns Redington loves.
Vintage, one-of-a-kind light fixtures are featured throughout the home. This living room hosted a Target photoshoot last fall, also styled by Emily Henderson.
Martens’s iconic targets punctuating the exterior panel of the Amstelveen Cultural Center.
The bathroom features an Astra Walker A69.10.V2.A shower arm.
Hiller likes to mix and match high and low in her furniture collection as well as in her home. The chair above is from Target’s sale bin and cost a mere $9.
Another bathroom features an Astra Walker A69.48 Icon shower fixture in aged brass.
Bornstein derives endless inspiration from his massive collection of design books. The clip lamps attached at the top shelf provide an easy, and targeted, lighting scheme.
Before breaking off on her own, Tacheny apprenticed with Chicago woodworker John Miller, designed for Blu Dot, and worked on Target’s furniture design team.
A linear modern light fixture by AlexAllen Studio hangs above the center island. Black Windsor counter stools from Target complete the center island’s breakfast bar. The shiny brass faucet and shelf brackets are both from Rejuvenation. The beautiful glazed Moroccan zellige tiles are from Cle, and the countertops are Ceasarstone.
A blank wall leaves the family room for a home entertainment system.
The furniture mix continues in here, with a Target headboard flanked by 1960s bedside tables.
Thanks to its natural color, concrete also serves as a wonderful “blank canvas” for landscaping.
Perry painted the walls white to serve as a blank canvas for her furnishings and art.
The chair and the fireplace in the living area are vintage, and the dresser is from Target.