Aluminium tables by Katrin Olina and Garðar Eyjólfsson

Tables by Katrin Olina and Garðar Eyjólfsson

Icelandic designers Katrin Olina and Garðar Eyjólfsson have teamed up to design a collection of circular aluminium tables, contrasting raw and uneven sand-cast surfaces with precise laser-cut legs.

Tables by Katrin Olina and Garðar Eyjólfsson

Each solid aluminium table-top is unique and shows the traces of its production. “We wanted to show the rawness of the material” Olina told Dezeen.

Tables by Katrin Olina and Garðar Eyjólfsson

The tables were on show during DesignMarch earlier this month as part of the exhibition 13Al+, which asked five different designers to explore the possibilities of using Icelandic aluminium in design and production. Katrin Olina and Garðar Eyjólfsson also showed designs for a collection of figurines, while other products presented included benches, tables, dumbbells and a rolling pin.

Dezeen spoke to Olina during Dezeen Live at 100% Design last summer, when she told an audience how she translates characters from her imagination into drawings, animations, products and interiors. Other projects by Olina on Dezeen include a rug depicting a fictional magician and a mural dedicated to “journeys without destination”. See more design by Katrin Olina.

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and Garðar Eyjólfsson
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“I use my imagination to create story spaces” – Katrin Olina at Dezeen Live

Icelandic designer Katrin Olina describes how she translates characters from her imagination into drawings, animations, products and interiors in this movie we filmed at Dezeen Live at 100% Design.

Katrin Olina at Dezeen Live

Above: “The Wanderer” ink drawing

The first of five images Olina presents is an ink drawing of one of her creations, a character with an intriguing back story about journeying named ”The Wanderer”. “My culture is based a lot around story telling and I think it is something we carry within us,” she explains.

From hand drawing, she moves on to show a digitally-illustrated animation. ”When I started to use a computer in the nineties it completely revolutionised my life,” she says. “I saw it as a window into the extended mind.”

Above: digitally-illustrated animation

Olina proceeds to show her designs for Cristal Bar in Hong Kong, a bar where every surface is patterned, to demonstrate how she applies her illustrations to interior projects. ”By galvanising the space in this imagery it feels like an extension of the architecture, extending your mind into another space.”

She then explains how her characters inspired a collection of bent-steel furniture. ”With these creatures I see them as letters in an alphabet, they’re like nuances, they’re colours,” she explains, listing examples such as her “book dogs” which she describes as “little shelves that carry your books, never happier than at your feet”.

Katrin Olina at Dezeen Live

Above: Cristal Bar interior, Hong Kong

Finally, she shows a short teaser animation of characters from her forthcoming book, which she hopes to publish next year. “It’s about a girl from the old world who goes on a journey into the new world to find a lost dream and she meets different kinds of characters,” she says. ”I see all these creatures moving in my mind’s eye when I’m drawing them and I wish technology was just more advanced so all these things could be moving.”

Dezeen Live was a series of discussions between Dezeen editor-in-chief Marcus Fairs and a number of designers and critics that took place as part of the talks programme at design exhibition 100% Design during this year’s London Design Festival.

Katrin Olina at Dezeen Live

Above: Friends of Steel and Miklimeir furniture collection

Each of the four one-hour shows, recorded live in front of an audience, featured three interviews plus music from Dezeen Music Project featuring a new act each day. Over the next few weeks we’ll be posting all the movies we filmed during the talks.

We’ve already published a couple of movies from the series so far: in the first IDEO UK design director Tom Hulme encourages designers to be more entrepreneurial and in the second architect and writer Sam Jacob questions whether we could be human without objects.

The music featured in this movie is a track called Don’t Go by east London band Strong Asian Mothers. You can listen to more of their music on Dezeen Music Project.

Above: teaser animation featuring characters from Olina’s forthcoming book

See all our stories about Katrin Olina »
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See all our stories about London Design Festival 2012 »

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– Katrin Olina at Dezeen Live
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Friends of Steal and Miklimeir by Katrin Olina

Friends of Steal by Katrin Olina

Reykjavik designer Katrin Olina has created a range of furniture made of bent steel tubes and a rug depicting a fictional magician.

Friends of Steal by Katrin Olina

Called Friends of Steal, the furniture comprises a stool, table, mirror, book stand and cabinet, all bent from steel in Iceland.

Friends of Steal by Katrin Olina

The rug is manufactured by Danish brand Ege and combines layers of flora and fauna with symbols and creatures derived from Icelandic culture and Olina’s own previous work.

Friends of Steal by Katrin Olina

See more work by Olina on Dezeen »

Friends of Steal by Katrin Olina

Photos are by Glamour Et Cetera.

Friends of Steal by Katrin Olina

Here are some more details from Katrin Olina:


Icelandic graphic artist and designer Katrin Olina has recently released a series of furniture in bent steel as well as a printed rug based on the magician, Miklimeir, a fictional character who has emerged out of her multidisciplinary work.

Friends of Steal by Katrin Olina

Olina’s latest projects consist of a large 18m2 printed carpet produced by Danish manufacturer Ege and a series of bent steel furniture. The carpet depicts the creative performance of the magician Miklimeir that visually flows around the figure of 8. The piece is abundant in symbols and references both from cultural history and Olina’s other works.

Friends of Steal by Katrin Olina

“It all starts with the dangerous black square and the void inside it. It just wants to expand and the imaginary blast gives birth to a creature called Miklimeir. He is seen suspended in mid-air, big eyes and a toothy grin with his hands up in the air in an act of joy. He’s about to break into a song and take up magic gardening to produce creatures from the strangest corners of existence. He then crowns his magnificent structure by the most wonderful puffy flower,” explains Olina.

Friends of Steal by Katrin Olina

The furniture pieces, which Olina calls Friends of Steel, tie into the rug as they derive from the world of Miklimeir. The series consists of the Bookdog book case, the Puffa stool, the Black Lady table, Mirror and the Black Box cabinet. According to Olina, the furniture pieces are basic bent steel structures but each have a particular character, like letters of an alphabet or characters from the visual worlds she’s created. They were produced by a local steel workshop in Iceland and are based on the strict processes of steel bending.

Friends of Steal by Katrin Olina

Olina feels a special affinity for the Bookdog. “As we all know, books, papers and magazines pile up around the home. That is where the faithful Bookdog bares its teeth. He carries your reading material on his back and will follow you wherever you go – the bedroom, bathroom or sofa – never happier than when he’s at your feet,” she explains.

Olina is currently working on a book series that will take readers on a journey into another dimension.

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by Katrin Olina
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