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AT Asia: P-hooks by pyloneer (文房具 BUNBŌGU)

P-hook2.jpg

Tired of clawing at books crammed tightly into your shelves? Struggle no longer: a solution by the name of “P-hook” has been proposed by Kansai-based designer Junji Itosaki of pyloneer. Each box contains a stack of twelve P-shaped hooks. At first sight, their purpose may be elusive, but insert the hooked portion from the top of the spine, and voila!  It even makes a great bookmark!

 
 
P-hook1.jpg

According to the entry on P-hooks in the Japanese stationery weblog Bungu de tanoshii hitotoki (pen-info.jp), Itosaki made a point of creating an environmentally friendly product that’s specifically connected to the Kansai region.  The packaging is literally a matchbox, matchbox production being a local business of Himeji, Hyogo, and the sturdy plastic-like hooks are actually made of paper processed in Osaka.  Both the packaging and the hooks themselves use recycled paper.

P-hook3.jpg

Although the hooks shown here are in black, there are also boxes of multicolored sets, as seen via vivo.va bookstore (who take orders for the product online but seem to only have information in Japanese).

One caveat: P-hooks are apparently only available in the Kansai region.  The pyloneer website names just four retailers in Osaka and Kobe, but I have seen them in two different stores in Kyoto as well.  If you have any plans to travel there, make sure to pick some up!

(Re-Edited from 2007-9-5 - CB)

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Comments (17)

If the books are indeed jammed in so tightly that you can't pull them out with your finger, won't this hook damage the paperback's spine?

posted by bubble on September 5th 2007 at 10:48am
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This is superlame and, like bubble said, probably harmful to books. To remove a book from a bookshelf you should handle it from the center and push the books to the left and right of the book you want back as you grab. At least that's how Ms. Stewart says to do it.

posted by jon on September 6th 2007 at 12:06pm
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Yeah, totally lame. They will harm the paperbacks and seems to be too tight for hard covers. My shelves are so cramped that I even use the upper space, so this little P thingy will be in the way.
I love the designs of Japanese stationeries, but they do have a lot of useless stuff.

posted by Evil Tofu on September 6th 2007 at 3:09pm
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Hey, whatever gets the books out is fine by me! Make stronger spines!

posted by charlenemcbride on September 6th 2007 at 3:39pm
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Japan is chock full of wonderful little gadgets that many westerners don't appreciate. Very little available space in Japan with about 80% being mountainous and the rest being used for human habitation and food/good production.

I lived in slightly less than 400 sq. ft. while I was in Japan and it was considered a FAMILY apartment. Storage was at a premium. Books got shoved in all sorts of places. I would have loved having these then...


書がないね?

posted by dragonbaq on September 6th 2007 at 7:40pm
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love'em

posted by amy on September 6th 2007 at 8:10pm
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If your books are packed in that tight, you need to consider building more bookshelves. Aside from spine damage, I can easily see that device making divots in the top edge of the books' pages.

posted by John H on September 7th 2007 at 4:37am
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Oops, I guess I should have shown how I actually use them, rather than picking a book that I thought would look better with the hook. Yes, they would probably damage some books, but they work well with the thin, folded-in-half-and-bound-with-staples-type booklets and pamphlets that can get lost between larger books (and have large gaps in the middle).

Also, building more bookshelves would be great, but it's an option available only to those who have extra space (see: dragonbaq's comment).

posted by ellie on September 8th 2007 at 6:42am
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total garbage. stupid consumerist crap that will clog landfills one day.

posted by VLADCOLE on August 27th 2008 at 3:35pm
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I like this idea. I particularly like the idea that the design supports an environmentally friendly local manufacturer.

posted by ebrown on August 27th 2008 at 3:38pm
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there's nothing environmentally friendly about this. just because some marketer slaps a green leaf and an "eco" prefix on a product doesn't make it green.

posted by VLADCOLE on August 27th 2008 at 4:14pm
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If you take out the hyphen, it's almost a dirty word! Double-duty strikes again!

posted by K T G on August 27th 2008 at 4:42pm
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So why would you need a pack of 12?

posted by labchick on August 27th 2008 at 4:53pm
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Because "and the sturdy plastic-like hooks are actually made of paper processed in Osaka". Snaps off, right? My advice would be to choose one book from each shelf and prop up some table legs throughout the house.

posted by K T G on August 27th 2008 at 5:47pm
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This is why evolution gave you fingers. Just pull the damn book off the shelf. Cripes.

I'm so sick of cute and clever crap that doesn't really improve life and only takes up space. What's well-designed about that?

Could we please see some design ideas that allow us to buy less stuff instead of more?

posted by Noe on August 27th 2008 at 7:31pm
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i think they look cool and functional. Especially the book mark feature.

posted by souk1501 on August 27th 2008 at 9:36pm
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I love Japanese culture in general, and in particular the dynamism and creativity of Japan's post-war design scene. Their embrace of modernism is (imo) more wholehearted and enthusiastic than ours in the West.

That said, I'm not digging this particular piece. No surprise it's from Osaka -- Osaka's markets are the epitome of hypercommodification. That's one of the down-sides of a highly-enthusiastic design culture: it's almost as if they design new things there simply for the joy of designing them -- with perhaps less regard for the product's actual "necessity".

posted by lightspeed on August 27th 2008 at 10:49pm
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