Wooden Panton by Matthias Brandmaier

Wooden Panton by Matthias Brandmaier

Design student Matthias Brandmaier spent three days in the woods carving a replica Verner Panton chair out of a tree trunk using a chainsaw.

Wooden Panton by Matthias Brandmaier

The chair, which weights 30 kilograms, is carved from a single piece of beechwood, but Brandmaier claims it is comfortable to sit on: “Most time was spent on carving the seat and the backrest to guarantee a comfortable chair,” he says.

Wooden Panton by Matthias Brandmaier

Reproducing the form of the classic moulded-plastic Panton Chair in solid wood “seemed a stupid and very uneconomic idea at first,” Brandmaier admits, but he did it in order to explore what would happen when a product is reproduced in a different material.

Wooden Panton by Matthias Brandmaier

“It was meant to be a unique piece of furniture and I planned in advance how to use the rest of the wood in other objects and sculptures,” Brandmaier says, adding that the copyright of the original chair was not a concern to him. “The translation to the material wood is of course very opposite to the thin plastic shells of the 60s and required a very different structural form, from where a new chair evolved. Therefore I did not worry about the copyright.”

Wooden Panton by Matthias Brandmaier

“As this approach seems pretty wasteful on the material, this method of production is of course only possible in a small scale manufacturing, where the redundant wood was used for other objects and sculptures,” adds Brandmaier, who is a student of architecture at the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna. “The Wooden Panton is a single object, which explores the change of forms according to different materials.”

The classic S-shaped Panton Chair, designed by Danish designer Verner Panton, went into production with Vitra in 1967. The chair, featuring a cantilevered seat and made from a single moulded component, has been made of various plastics over the years. It was originally made of fibreglass-reinforced polyester, then from polystyrene and later polyurethane. Today the chair is moulded in polypropylene.

Besides his architectural studies, Brandmaier produces unique pieces of furniture from found objects combined with wood, steel and concrete. See more of his work on his website: www.matthiasbrandmaier.de

A couple of years ago designer Peter Jakubik also used a chainsaw to carve the rough shape of the same Panton chair. See all our stories about chair design »

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Hobby Panton chair by Peter Jakubik

Hobby Panton chair by Peter Jakubik

Slovakian designer Peter Jakubik has carved the rough shape of an iconic Panton Chair into a tree trunk with a chain saw.

Hobby Panton chair by Peter Jakubik

Called Hobby Panton chair, Jakubik’s design seeks to encourage others to create their own Panton chair, simply by arming themselves with an image of the original, a tree and the essential DIY tools.

Hobby Panton chair by Peter Jakubik

More furniture on Dezeen »

Hobby Panton chair by Peter Jakubik

Here’s a little bit of text from the designer:


Hobby Panton chair by Peter Jakubik – designer classic tutorial

Panton DIY Chair created by Peter Jakubik.

Hobby Panton chair by Peter Jakubik

The Chair incites users fabricates their own original fake according to famous chair designed by Verner Panton.

Hobby Panton chair by Peter Jakubik

All what you need is a picture of Panton chair, a tree, DIY tools and passion for designer classics.

Hobby Panton chair by Peter Jakubik

And now we can start manufacture genuine copy of the Panton chair for your holiday cottage or garden party.


See also:

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