Tuesday 28 February 2006
By Gilles Roudot,
Tuesday 28 February 2006 à 20:25 :: Furniture
The pieces of furniture are the main characters in this Tableau Vivant.
A small change on the convention of chairs has granted them a life.
This change consists mainly of removing the rear legs of the chairs and
sometimes the addition of feet.
The chairs become dependent on each other and their environment, with which
they interact and exist in numerous ways, creating all sorts of different situations.
Designer :: Lucas Maassen.
website
Monday 27 February 2006
By Gilles Roudot,
Monday 27 February 2006 à 18:26 :: Furniture
Two forms, cut out of one metal sheet, bent for to penetrate each other and to create a dynamics, a visual lightness.
The triangulate form of the carapace provides the object with resistance.
Depending on the angle the shelf takes on a different shape: the side is rather more wired, while the front of the shelf has more volume.
Producer :: VANGE
Designer :: Benoît Deneufbourg.
website
By Gilles Roudot,
Monday 27 February 2006 à 12:18 :: Furniture
The new order for shelves.
Designers :: Patrik Doppler and Rainer Saner (doppler und saner).
website
Friday 24 February 2006
By Gilles Roudot,
Friday 24 February 2006 à 15:33 :: Furniture
The old reveals itself more clearly than the new, because time left out the noise. What at first can look as what you expect it to be can suddenly reveal itself in a different way. We started a new project when we moved our studio from tan old farm in the country to the old fruit deposit factory in Rotterdam. On the attic of the farm the former owner left some furniture. A chair that was stuffed in an attic for forty years and had gathered a million layers of dust. Like clockwork every day a layer of dust was added and eventually the Old got a new shape. If you could polish the top layer of dust you end up with a shiny and new chair, shaped by time.
Designer :: Judith de Graauw (DEMAKERSVAN).
Photo credits Raoul Kramer.
website
By Gilles Roudot,
Friday 24 February 2006 à 14:04 :: Furniture
Industrial production is a big source of inspiration. The Big Miracle of how some industrial products come about is a wonderful phenomenon if you look at it closely. The high tech machines are our hidden Cinderella’s. We make them work in robot lines, while they can be so much more.
In the ‘Cinderella’ project that thought is translated. For making the table we used a high-tech method as our new modern “craft’. Sketches of old furniture are put into a computer that translates them into a drawing that can only exist in a digital world. The table is CNC cut on a three and partly five axes machine. It’s made out of 57 layers of birch multiplex and is finished by hand. It’s about attention and the possibility to make something unique with a machine that is normally used for mass production.
Designer :: Jeroen Verhoeven (DEMAKERSVAN).
Photo credits Raoul Kramer.
website
By Gilles Roudot,
Friday 24 February 2006 à 12:49 :: Furniture
'broken shelves' provide a more natural way of shelving books since they can lean. books of any size find a perfect spot, while the reader can sit among them. A sandwich construction of two steel frames and mdf plates inbetween offer a freestanding shelf family. The steel gets a soft tactile surface by sandblasting and a wax-coating. The black mdf is oiled, which brings out a paper-like feeling. The shelves can be transported as a flat-pack and easily self-assembled.
Designer :: Mareike Gast.
website
Thursday 23 February 2006
By Gilles Roudot,
Thursday 23 February 2006 à 18:41 :: Furniture
A rocking chair from Studio Bility.
Water jet-cut from plywood, aluminium and plexi.
Designer :: Gudrun Lilja Gunnlaugsdottir.
website