Oscar Medley-Whitfield and Harry Trimble at Designers in Residence 2012

In a movie filmed by Alice Masters for the Designers in Residence exhibition at the Design Museum, Oscar Medley-Whitfield and Harry Trimble explain how they turned clay dug from the muddy banks of the river Thames into ceramic tableware.

Wharfware by Oscar Medley-Whitfield and Harry Trimble

Recent graduates Oscar Medley-Whitfield and Harry Trimble produced the Wharfware collection as a response to the Design Museum’s theme of “thrift”.

Wharfware by Oscar Medley-Whitfield and Harry Trimble

‘Thrift for us is essentially making something out of nothing,” says Trimble in the movie. Looking at the museum’s surroundings to see what they could take from the local area, the designers found that the mud under Tower Bridge had the potential to be made into ceramics, and the area had also been home to a thriving ceramics industry 300 years ago.

Wharfware by Oscar Medley-Whitfield and Harry Trimble

Once they’d dug up the mud and brought it back to their studio, they experimented with additives to prepare the clay for firing.

Wharfware by Oscar Medley-Whitfield and Harry Trimble

Above: photograph is by Carol Sachs

“Conventionally, pottery clays are heavily engineered with additives to give them specific properties,” they told Dezeen. “Wishing to keep the clay pure and stay true to the brief, we devised a manufacturing technique of moulding at high pressure.”

Wharfware by Oscar Medley-Whitfield and Harry Trimble

Above: photograph is by Rima Musa

After perfecting the mixture, they formed the shapes in a homemade press, using a car jack to push the clay into its mould. Inspired by centuries-old tableware made in the Tower Bridge area and wanting to maximise space in the kiln, they created the pieces in tesselating hexagonal shapes.

Wharfware by Oscar Medley-Whitfield and Harry Trimble

Above: photograph is by Rima Musa

The Wharfware collection includes three sizes of bowls, a serving plate, a trivet and a fish brick, which pays homage to Terence Conran’s chicken brick steam cooker, explains Medley-Whitfield, while also referencing the clay’s origins in the river Thames.

Wharfware by Oscar Medley-Whitfield and Harry Trimble

Above: photograph is by Rima Musa

Last year Medley-Whitfield experimented with casting copper-bullion bowls as a way for investors to display the increasingly valuable metal at home.

Wharfware by Oscar Medley-Whitfield and Harry Trimble

Above: photograph is by Rima Musa

We’ve already featured two movies by Alice Masters about the Designers in Residence programme – in one, Lawrence Lek shows how his system of bent plywood pieces can be tied together to make furniture and architecture, and in another, Yuri Suzuki explains how he made a radio with a circuit board arranged like the London Tube map.

Wharfware by Oscar Medley-Whitfield and Harry Trimble

Above: photograph is by Rima Musa

See all our stories about ceramics »
See all our stories about Designers in Residence 2012 »
See all our stories about the Design Museum »

Wharfware by Oscar Medley-Whitfield and Harry Trimble

Above: photograph is by Rima Musa

Photographs are movie stills by Alice Masters, except where stated.

Here’s some more information from Medley-Whitfield and Trimble:


Designers Oscar Medley-Whitfield and Harry Trimble Share an interest in sourcing local materials and using bespoke manufacturing processes. Together they experiment with how products can be made to embody local identity and heritage to give economic, environmental and emotional benefits.

Wharfware by Oscar Medley-Whitfield and Harry Trimble

Above: photograph is by Carol Sachs

Inspired by the historic Southwark ceramic industry that thrived in the area surrounding the Design Museum 300 years ago, Oscar and Harry have produced a ceramic tableware range, Wharfware, made of clay dug from the banks of the Thames around Tower Bridge.

Wharfware by Oscar Medley-Whitfield and Harry Trimble

Above: photograph is by Rima Musa

Before the clay could be used it had to undergo an extensive refinement process. The clay is laid out to dry before being soaked to a slip. It is then passed through progressively fine grades of mesh to remove impurities.

Wharfware by Oscar Medley-Whitfield and Harry Trimble

After further drying on plaster to achieve the desired consistence, the clay is ready to be moulded and then fired. A complex testing process was used to find the right composition of clay, sand and firing temperature.

Wharfware by Oscar Medley-Whitfield and Harry Trimble

Above: photograph is by Luke Hayes

The forms of the works were process driven. Rather then using traditional studio pottery techniques unlikely to work with the unpredictable raw clay, Oscar and Harry applied an industrial approach. The moulds were designed to allow the clay to be shaped under pressure reducing the likelihood of warping and distortion.

Wharfware by Oscar Medley-Whitfield and Harry Trimble

Above: photograph is by Luke Hayes

The geometric shapes help the pieces to be easily remove from the moulds whilst also allowing them to tessellate in the kiln meaning more units per firing, bring down overall costs. In creating Wharfware, Oscar and Harry have created a locally relevant product in an innovative and resourceful way.

Wharfware by Oscar Medley-Whitfield and Harry Trimble

Above: photograph is by Luke Hayes

The post Oscar Medley-Whitfield and Harry Trimble
at Designers in Residence 2012
appeared first on Dezeen.

Lawrence Lek at Designers in Residence 2012

In a movie filmed by Alice Masters for the Design Museum’s annual Designers in Residence exhibition, Lawrence Lek explains how he created a modular system of plywood pieces that can be bent into objects including a stool and a pavilion.

Lawrence Lek at Designers in Residence

Responding to the Design Museum’s theme of “thrift”, Lawrence Lek produced a modular system, called Unlimited Edition, which allows the same kit of parts to be adapted into different shapes and sizes.

Lawrence Lek at Designers in Residence

“The pavilion I assembled for the Design Museum is hexagonal in plan and uses six pairs of modules, but you can also make two smaller triangular enclosures from the same pieces,” he told Dezeen.

Lawrence Lek at Designers in Residence

“I wanted to create the shapes from a single cut of the CNC router, in order to minimise costly machining time,” he said. “The pieces can be cut by hand on a jigsaw using full-scale paper templates if no CNC machine is available – that’s how I made the initial prototypes.”

Lawrence Lek at Designers in Residence

The structures are made from plywood, cable ties and leather cord – low-cost and readily available materials which don’t require specialist suppliers.

Lawrence Lek at Designers in Residence

Lek also bent the wood by hand in a warm water bath made out of leftover plywood and waterproofing material.

Lawrence Lek at Designers in Residence

Rather than building in straight lines, Lek was inspired by softer shapes of Rorschach ink blots. “The fluid curves of the Rorschach ink blots make us recall the forms that we typically see in nature – animals, plants, insects, and landforms. I wanted to reflect this in the design of the modules, as objects that appear both artificial and natural, industrial and organic,” he said.

Lawrence Lek at Designers in Residence

The symmetry of the ink blots is also reflected in the plywood, which bends along the axis of its grain.

Lawrence Lek at Designers in Residence

The movie is by Alice Masters and photographs are by X.

Lawrence Lek at Designers in Residence

We previously published a movie about designer Yuri Suzuki’s contribution to this year’s Designers in Residence programmea radio made from a circuit board shaped like London’s Tube map and a set of puzzle pieces that form a circuit.

Lawrence Lek at Designers in Residence

Above: photograph is by Rima Musa

We’ve also featured a pavilion built from polygonal plywood plates and a table with a net-like base of modular bent plywood.

Lawrence Lek at Designers in Residence

Above: photograph is by Rima Musa

See all our stories about the Design Museum »
See all our stories about installations »
See all our stories about plywood »

Lawrence Lek at Designers in Residence

Photographs are by Luke Hayes, except where stated. The movie is by Alice Masters.

Here’s some more information from the designer:


Unlimited Edition by Lawrence Lek

Designer in Residence 2012 Commission at the Design Museum

Lawrence Lek is a sculptor and architect who experiments with processes of natural growth and industrial fabrication through sculptural objects and environments. His work employs modular structures which connect to create larger forms or experiential installations that define the visitor’s awareness of the surrounding spaces.

For the Design Museum’s Designer in Residence 2012 programme, Lawrence has created Unlimited Edition, a series of bent-plywood modules that combine to form objects and environments that users can customize, including a pavilion and seating. Referencing psychological Rorschach tests, which ask subjects to interpret unfamiliar inkblot shapes based on things they already know, Lawrence channelled the element of subjectivity into shaping the organic structures that compose the project.

Throughout the design process, Lawrence constructed numerous maquettes in paper and thin plywood to experiment with form before progressing to full-size pieces. Combining digital design techniques, such as computer controlled (CNC) routing and laser cutting with hand assembly, Lawrence can easily customize the modules to expand or contract. The full-size modules were made from a single cut of standard 8-feet tall plywood sheets, minimizing costly fabrication time. Each plywood module is soaked in water before it is bent and braced in place while it dries.

Working with the inherent symmetry of the material, which bends along the grain of the wood, Lawrence was able to achieve a consistent molding of modules. The shell-like shapes provided rigidity while allowing them to be stacked for transportation and storage. When erected they create uncanny forms, spaces and tool-like objects that invite the user to nurture individual responses within an artificial environment.

During the residency, Lawrence moved into a studio in the White Building, a new arts centre across the canal from the Olympic Park. He is currently evolving Unlimited Edition at two different scales – as a system for site-specific urban installations, and as prosthetic objects that modify both our bodies and mental awareness of surrounding Nature.

The post Lawrence Lek at
Designers in Residence 2012
appeared first on Dezeen.

Movie: Yuri Suzuki at Designers in Residence 2012

In this movie filmed by Alice Masters for the Design Museum’s annual Designers in Residence exhibition, Yuri Suzuki talks about his radio with a circuit board arranged like the London Tube map and his mission to demystify consumer electronics.

Tube Map Radio and Denki Puzzle by Yuri Suzuki

Above image is by Rima Musa

In the movie, Suzuki first discusses how he built a radio from an electronic circuit board by arranging the components according to the lines and stations of the Tube map. Read more about the Tube Map Radio in our earlier post.

Tube Map Radio and Denki Puzzle by Yuri Suzuki

“The printed circuit board is a remarkable invention. Due to the process of the efficiency of the electronics you can see something very complicated, almost like a maze,” he says. “But what if you could replace it with something you are familiar with?”

Tube Map Radio and Denki Puzzle by Yuri Suzuki

He goes on to explain how he adapted Harry Beck’s famous Tube map design into a circuit board that tells a story. “I really wanted to make a design that’s a little bit like a narrative,” he says.

Tube Map Radio and Denki Puzzle by Yuri Suzuki

In the second part of the movie he talks about working with Technology Will Save Us to create the Denki Puzzle kit, a set of redesigned and enlarged electronic components that can be pieced together in working sequences. “If you wanted to make a computer [with them] it’s possible, technically – but it’s going to be huge,” he jokes.

Tube Map Radio and Denki Puzzle by Yuri Suzuki

We’ve featured a number of Suzuki’s other designs on Dezeen, including a set of pens that record and play back sounds and a miniature record player that runs along a track made from vinyl records.

Tube Map Radio and Denki Puzzle by Yuri Suzuki

See all stories about Yuri Suzuki »
See all stories about the Design Museum »

Photographs are by Hitomi Kai Yoda except where otherwise stated.

The post Movie: Yuri Suzuki at
Designers in Residence 2012
appeared first on Dezeen.