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Hungry Scissors

Shu To

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Hungry Scissors '24 1 25 9PM - Tadamasa Iguchi
Hungry Scissors '24 1 25 9PM - Tadamasa Iguchi
Hungry Scissors '24 1 25 9PM - Tadamasa Iguchi
Hungry Scissors '24 1 25 9PM - Tadamasa Iguchi

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Designer
Floor area
68 ㎡
Completion
2024
Budget
€3,500 (Budget to make stainless frames)
Social Media
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Accessories

Hungry Scissors which is a project explores "Spatial self-expression"

SHU TO / is a creative studio established by Japanese interior designer Yuki Iwatake in 2012, based in Tokyo and Kyoto. We started as an interior design office, working on a variety of projects including events, showrooms, show windows, stores, offices, residences, furniture, store fixtures, and products. The article about our works was published in FLAUNT MAGAZINE, a fashion and culture magazine based in Los Angeles (2021). From 2024, SHU TO / became a newly creative studio which explores "Spatial" self-expression. This unique hunger for “self-expression” is strongly influenced by fashion culture.

We create pieces of art by fusing multiple elements from interior design, fashion, art, digital, sometimes nature, chemistry, and various traditional culture, while reconstructing beautiful leftover materials from our daily design activities. Through the experimental destruction and harmony of these elements, we create a spatial accent with a intense presence enough to determine the atmosphere.

Especially recent years, opportunities we share our space through a screen are skyrocketing. We expect this concept must be a new style to express ourselves. In our interior design projects, we additionally propose to put the accent on the space which reconstructs the leftover materials in the project or the client owns beforehand.

We started a project “Hungry Scissors" which explores "Spatial self-expression". Its first works ‘24 1 25 were launched in January 2024. We attempted to create them at a live style in order to reflect our sensibility into it at the time.

One day, I was driven by an urge to make like fashion space wear which expresses our individuality even through the screen of our laptop, as if people expressed themselves by wearing fashion. I decided to attempt making spatial accents for self-expression
by fusing multiple elements including fashion, architecture, digital, nature, traditional culture, while reconstructing leftover materials from my daily design activities.

I name those works the date of completion like a diary to record my ideas to explore “spatial” self-expression.

Hungry Scissors