New Amsterdam interior by Bo Reudler Studio

Six windows with rustic white wooden shutters feature in this renovated living room by Dutch designer Bo Reudler.

New Amsterdam Interior by Bo Reudler Studio

The residents of the Amsterdam apartment already owned a cabinet from Bo Reudler‘s Slow White collection, a range of furniture made from tree branches, and asked the designer to style the room around it.

New Amsterdam Interior by Bo Reudler Studio

Reudler designed six pairs of shutters to reduce glare from the small square windows, as well as to provide more privacy from the neighbours.

New Amsterdam Interior by Bo Reudler Studio

Taking six irregularly shaped planks from a yew tree, the designer used a mix-and-match technique to create each of the panels. Rather than blocking out the light completely, every panel has a crack allows slivers of light to pass through.

New Amsterdam Interior by Bo Reudler Studio

Knots in the wood created holes in the planks and are positioned in place of handles.

New Amsterdam Interior by Bo Reudler Studio

A table and compass from the Slow White collection were added to the room to complement the cabinet and shutters, alongside the designer’s Bamboo Windsor high-back chair, a candle holder from the Haute Bamboo collection and Equus rug, a horse hide with a cutaway Fleur-de-Lis pattern.

New Amsterdam Interior by Bo Reudler Studio

See more design by Bo Reudler Studio on Dezeen, including children’s furniture shown at Dutch Design Week 2011.

New Amsterdam Interior by Bo Reudler Studio

Photography is by Raoul Kramer.

Here’s a project description from Bo Reudler Studio:


New Amsterdam interior by Bo Reudler Studio

‘There is a crack in everything, That’s how the light gets in.’ (Leonard Cohen)

For a living room interior in an Amsterdam apartment, Bo Reudler Studio designed six Slow White shutters. The high volume of the space was over flooded with light from six small west-facing windows. The brief called for something to block out glare and at the same time provide privacy from neighbours. The clients already owned a Slow White Cabinet. With this in mind they wondered if the cabinet doors could be translated into something larger: this led to the Slow White shutters.

New Amsterdam Interior by Bo Reudler Studio
Template for six yew planks

Using wood as the starting point the aim was not to completely shut out the light but create an interaction with it. By utilising the natural outlines and openings in the wood, each shutter celebrates the material and interacts with the light in a different way. Six planks were selected from a Yew tree native to Western Europe, renowned for its irregular-shaped trunk that produces whimsically shaped planks. The curving natural lines of the planks were mapped like a puzzle to create six pairs of shutters each with their own character. The holes of the knots were positioned as grips for opening and closing. Cracks in the shutters, which are also visible from the exterior, slice the light and admit glimpses of the outside while closed. The shutters bring to the forefront a forgotten building element that was once a common fixture in many homes of the past.

New Amsterdam Interior by Bo Reudler Studio
Shutter layout

The space is furnished with pieces from the studio including the Slow White table and Golden Compass that highlight the distinguishing curves of natural branches, the Haute Bamboo candleholder and Bamboo Windsor chair, a classic Western chair reinterpreted using the inherent qualities of bamboo and rattan. Resembling oversized lace with its graphic fleur-de-lys pattern cut into the horse hide, the Equus rug initiates an interaction with the floor to either hide it or reveal what’s underneath.

The post New Amsterdam interior
by Bo Reudler Studio
appeared first on Dezeen.

Kids’ Furniture by Bo Reudler Studio

Kids’ Furniture by Bo Reudler Studio

Dutch Design Week 2011: best known for his grown-up furniture that would be quite at home in a fairy tale, Amsterdam designer Bo Reudler presents a collection of children’s furniture in Eindhoven as part of Dutch Design Week this week. 

Kids’ Furniture by Bo Reudler Studio

The series is made of solid Dutch oak from a traditional wind-powered saw mill.

Kids’ Furniture by Bo Reudler Studio

It comprises a table, chair, rocking horse, wheelbarrow and doll’s cradle, constructed from basic shapes that retain the curve of each raw board.

Kids’ Furniture by Bo Reudler Studio

The collection will be auctioned on Ebay and at the Klokgebouw exhibition at Strijp-s this week, to raise money for the World Wildlife Fund.

Kids’ Furniture by Bo Reudler Studio

Dutch Design Week continues until 30 October.

Kids’ Furniture by Bo Reudler Studio

See more work by Bo Reudler here and more furniture for children here.

Kids’ Furniture by Bo Reudler Studio

Photographs courtesy of Bo Reudler Studio.

Kids’ Furniture by Bo Reudler Studio

Here are some more details from Bo Reudler:


DUTCH DESIGN WEEK 2011
Kids’ Furniture by Bo Reudler Studio
World Wildlife Fund Design Auction

Bo Reudler Studio presents the Kids’ Furniture series during Dutch Design Week in Eindhoven 22-30 October 2011. The furniture will be exhibited at a design auction and exhibition organised by the World Wildlife Fund to held in the Klokgebouw, Strijp-S.

A wooden furniture series for children. The collection is composed from elemental shapes and basic materials, built in an intuitive, playful way.

The series comprises a table and chair, rocking horse, wheelbarrow and doll’s cradle.

The objects are hand made from solid oak finished with a coating of natural oil and soft colorful footings of woollen felt. The edges of the furniture retain the original curves of the trunk or branch enabling every piece to be unique.

The wood originates from fallen Dutch trees that are sawn in the traditional wind-powered sawmill Het Jonge Schaap situated in the Zaanse Schans, Zaanstad.

The collection was realized with the generous support of Het Jonge Schaap and Jantien Ranzijn & vdr.

Kids’ Furniture by Bo Reudler Studio

Bo Reudler Studio is a product and interior design studio led by Bo Reudler, based in Amsterdam, The Netherlands. Bo graduated from the ArtEZ Academy of Art and Design and is also co-founder of Asylum Collection. The work of the studio aims to charge objects with imagination and meaning,working as storytellers through matter, experimenting with materials, following their hidden qualities to bring out their natural beauty.

World Wildlife Fund Design Auction

The design exhibition and auction organized by the World Wildlife Fund will be held from 22-30 October 2011 in the Klokgebouw on the Strijp-s terrain. Buyers can bid for the products online via e-bay or via auction forms at the exhibition. The proceeds of each sale will be donated to a WWF project as nominated by the buyer. The exhibition is open daily from 12-18:00pm.


See also:

.

Haute Bamboo by Bo Reudler and Olav BruinSlow White Series
by Bo Reudler
More Slow White furniture
by Bo Reudler