Garment by Benjamin Hubert for Cappellini

Milan 2012: a single piece of fabric folds around the moulded polyurethane foam seat of this club chair by London designer Benjamin Hubert.

Garment by Benjamin Hubert for Cappellini

The cover is attached to the chair with Velcro so the upholstery is completely free of stitching.

Garment by Benjamin Hubert for Cappellini

Dressing the sculptural form with the loose upholstery allows the creases to become a feature of the overall aesthetic.

Garment by Benjamin Hubert for Cappellini

The fabric can easily be removed and swapped for different alternatives.

Garment by Benjamin Hubert for Cappellini

Garment was presented by Italian brand Cappellini during last week’s Salone Internazionale del Mobile in Milan.

Garment by Benjamin Hubert for Cappellini

Also in Milan, Hubert launched an armchair with a pleated leather seat for Italian company Poltrona Frau.

Garment by Benjamin Hubert for Cappellini

See all of our stories about Benjamin Hubert here.

Garment by Benjamin Hubert for Cappellini

The Salone Internazionale del Mobile took place from 17 to 22 April. See all our stories about Milan 2012 here.

Garment by Benjamin Hubert for Cappellini

Here’s some more information from Benjamin Hubert:


Garment
Benjamin Hubert x Cappellini

Garment by Benjamin Hubert for Cappellini

Garment is a lounge club chair with a unique approach to the application and construction of textile in the furniture industry. The chair is a study into how to ‘dress’ a piece of furniture defying the conventional rules and construction of typical upholstery.

Garment by Benjamin Hubert for Cappellini

A single piece of textile is loosely folded around a distinctive geometric polyurethane form. This construction and loose cover allows for creases to become part of the character of the chair reminiscent of a piece of fashion and increases the sensation of visual softness.

Garment by Benjamin Hubert for Cappellini

The chair’s construction is ‘stitch less’ as it comprised of a single sheet of textile fixed onto the form with Velcro. The chair is detailed with inverted box pleats reinforcing this relationship with clothing. The cover can also be easily removed and interchanged based on the season or fashion.

Garment by Benjamin Hubert for Cappellini

Garment is the first collaboration between Cappellini and Benjamin Hubert launched at Salone Del Mobile in April 2012.

Garment by Benjamin Hubert for Cappellini

Materials: Folded and stitch less textile cover Moulded Polyurethane foam seat
Dimensions: W700mm x H740mm x D600mm

Garment by Benjamin Hubert for Cappellini

Juliet by Benjamin Hubert for Poltrona Frau

Milan 2012: this armchair with a pleated leather seat by London designer Benjamin Hubert was inspired by sleeves with puffed shoulders on Italian Renaissance clothing.

Juliet by Benjamin Hubert for Poltrona Frau

The Juliet chair features leather stretched over the base to expose the wooden frame underneath, while the seat is covered in squashy leather pleated in a triangular pattern.

Juliet by Benjamin Hubert for Poltrona Frau

Hubert’s was the winning design in a competition where twelve designers were invited to design an armchair to celebrate Italian brand Poltrona Frau‘s 100th birthday.

Juliet by Benjamin Hubert for Poltrona Frau

See all our stories about his work here.

Juliet by Benjamin Hubert for Poltrona Frau

The Salone Internazionale del Mobile took place from 17 to 22 April. See all our stories about Milan 2012 here.

Here’s some more information from Hubert:


Juliet

Benjamin Hubert x Poltrona Frau

Benjamin Hubert has won the international competition to find Poltrona Frau’s Centenary armchair. The armchair for the 100 year old company that will be launched at Salone Del Mobile, enters into its iconic limited edition collection to represent its history and future.

Juliet by Benjamin Hubert for Poltrona Frau

The brief of the competition was to utilise the traditional upholstery techniques under the theme ‘a chair to spend time in’ and judged under the categories of; formal appearance, representation of the given theme, use and interpretation of leather and comfort.

Juliet by Benjamin Hubert for Poltrona Frau

Juliet, the chair awarded winner of the competition, is inspired by the Italian renaissance fashion detail the ‘Juliet sleeve’ a sleeve which tightly fits the arm and has a large de constructed ‘puff’ on the shoulder.

Juliet by Benjamin Hubert for Poltrona Frau

This inspiration was used to communicate the properties of leather upholstery. The outside of the chair utilises the flexibility and tensile strength of leather to describe a fluted traditional timber frame work where the shape of the timber can clearly be seen through the tight leather covering. This is contrasted by a ‘tri-pleated’ generous sitting area with a soft and loose appearance. This deconstructed area is used to describe the comfort of the chair. The shape of the sitting area is ‘wide screen’ to allow the user to sit in multiple positions in line with how people really use and miss-use furniture.

Juliet by Benjamin Hubert for Poltrona Frau

To celebrate Poltrona Frau’s centenary in 2012 the company “selected 12 of the most “promising young designers” from all over the world to compete in the challenge of designing the Poltrona Frau centenary armchair

Juliet by Benjamin Hubert for Poltrona Frau

The 12 designers include: Benjamin Hubert, Nendo, Stephen Burks, Nika Zupanc, Constance Guisset, Daphna Laurens

The 9 judges: Livia Peraldo Matton – Editor in Chief of Elle Decor Italy, Giulio Cappellini – Creative Director of Cappellini, François-Henry Pinault – Chairman of PPR Group, Jean Nouvel – Architect, Vanessa Friedman – Financial Times Fashion Editor, Anne-Sophie Von Clear – Deputy Director Lifestyle Le Figaro, Walter De Silva – Head Designer of the Audi Brand Group, Ratan Naval Tata – Chairman of Tata Group, Thomas Maier – Bottega Veneta

Materials: Leather,Polyurethane foam, Timber
Dimensions: W1000mm x H750mm x D800mm

Broom Chair by Philippe Starck for Emeco

Broom chair by Philippe Starck for Emeco

This stacking chair by French designer Philippe Starck is made of discarded material found in lumber factories and industrial plastic plants.

Broom chair by Philippe Starck for Emeco

On display at the Salone Internazionale del Mobile in Milan last week, the Broom Chair is manufactured by Emeco, who famously created the aluminium Navy Chair.

Broom chair by Philippe Starck for Emeco

The reclaimed polypropylene and discarded wood-fibre can eventually be recycled and turned into a new wood-plastic composite, extending the lifespan of the waste materials even further.

Broom chair by Philippe Starck for Emeco

Emeco first stepped into recycled plastic rather than aluminum with the 111 Navy Chair made of recycled plastic cola bottles in 2010.

Broom chair by Philippe Starck for Emeco

See our other stories about Phillipe Starck and more stories about Emeco.

Broom chair by Philippe Starck for Emeco

The Salone Internazionale del Mobile took place from 17 to 22 April. See all our stories about Milan 2012 here.

Broom chair by Philippe Starck for Emeco

Here are some more details from Emeco:


The Broom chair.

An innovative creator and an environmentally pioneering manufacturer have joined efforts to work towards zero waste. A design collaboration that both avoids and eliminates waste, the Broom chair combines intelligent materiality with beautiful form.

Broom chair by Philippe Starck for Emeco

In the industrial age, most products live only in the present. They have no past and no future. Factories plunder raw materials from the earth to make products that soon end up on the trash heap. This process is still happening every day, all over the world. It is time to stop and think.

Broom chair by Philippe Starck for Emeco

‘The elegance of the minimum comes from the intelligence of the nothing,’ says Philippe Starck. ‘Mies Van der Rohe said “Less is more”, but with the Broom chair we can say “less and more”. Because we choose to make less – less “style”, less “design”, less material, less energy – finally we have more.’

Broom chair by Philippe Starck for Emeco

Broom introduces an entirely new chair material composite, combining reclaimed polypropylene and discarded wood fiber. Made from a compound of industry waste from lumber factories and industrial plastic plants,this material has a three-fold environmental impact. Less energy, less waste and less carbon.

Broom chair by Philippe Starck for Emeco

In most manufacturing there is waste. Ends and pieces of plastic and wood are discarded and thrown away. Imagine a new material that sweeps up this waste, combines it, and makes something strong and smart and beautiful. The result is the Broom chair. It has a past life as industrial waste and a future as a chair in your life.

Broom chair by Philippe Starck for Emeco

‘Imagine,’ says Philippe Starck, ‘there is a humble guy who takes a humble broom and starts to clean the workshop and with this dust of nothing, with this he makes new magic. That’s why we call it Broom.’

Broom chair by Philippe Starck for Emeco

‘Philippe Starck and I have always agreed that it is not about recycling, but about restructuring production,’ says Emeco CEO Gregg Buchbinder. ‘Our aim is to prevent waste from being manufactured in the first place. Instead we use discarded materials to make things that last.’

Broom chair by Philippe Starck for Emeco

Emeco has always been a pioneer of repurposed materials such as recycled aluminum and recycled PET. By exploiting the unique characteristics of the new wood-fiber polypropylene in the Broom chair, Emeco is experimenting with the product’s life-cycle again. Emeco has continuously led the way towards manufacturing with a conscience, delivering restrained products that have a minimal impact on the environment.

Broom chair by Philippe Starck for Emeco

Gregg Buchbinder says, ‘Emeco has used recycled materials in all our manufacturing since the 1940s. The Broom chair is a piece of that evolution. With each challenging innovation in material reuse we inspire people everywhere to join us in our cause for zero waste.’

Marni Chairs and L’arte del Ritratto

Colombian wicker furniture and staff portraits
Marni-Chair1.jpg

Unveiled in a flurry of buzz at the 2012 Salone del Mobile, Marni has created a collection of 100 colorful wicker chairs made by ex-convicts in Colombia re-assimilating into social and professional life. The chairs are constructed from metal frames with multi-colored PVC threads woven around the seat backs and armrests. The style of seat is traditionally Colombian, updated with Marni‘s reinterpretation of the woven pattern to create totally new color variations in line with the Milanese fashion house. They’ve also added small tables to go alongside the chairs either indoors or out.

Along with the new line of furniture, Marni presents “L’arte del ritratto” (The Art of Portraiture), a project by photographer and filmmaker Francesco Jodice featuring portraits of the chairs with Marni employees, technicians, craftsmen and collaborators. During Salone we caught up with Carolina Castiglioni, daughter of Marni founder and designer Consuelo Castiglioni, and the house’s director of special projects, to learn more about the project.

Marni-Chair-Split.jpg Marni-Table-Split.jpg
How long has Marni been involved with other forms of design?

This is the third year we are presenting at Salone del Mobile, but each time we have come with a totally different project. For 2012, since we are a small family company, we loved the idea of portraying people as a family in one big picture in a charity context. The day of the shooting felt like a day off: we had fun. After each shot, Francesco Jodice asked us to freeze for one minute, during which he was filming, creating a living picture, which now is projected on the façade of the store.

Are you working on design projects for the future?

Not for now, but we have recently opened a store in the Meatpacking District in New York for the Marni Edition, a slightly less expensive line. This is a new design concept for us, since everything inside of the space is mobile and transformable, and it showcases work of artists we love.

marni-chairs-portraits.jpg

In the coming months, the exhibition of photographs and objects will be hosted in Marni boutiques worldwide, together with new portraits of members of the Marni team from around the world. The revenues from the sale of chairs will be donated to the ICAM Institute of Milan, a project whose aim is to help children of imprisoned women to grow up in a family environment.


Chair Farm by Werner Aisslingerat Ventura Lambrate

Chair Farm by Werner Aisslinger at Ventura Lambrate

Milan 2012: designer Werner Aisslinger of Berlin and Singapore will present a chair growing inside a greenhouse at Ventura Lambrate in Milan this week.

Chair Farm by Werner Aisslinger at Ventura Lambrate

Shown as part of an exhibition of design from Berlin called Instant Stories, the Chair Farm project envisages furniture that’s grown rather than produced and harvested locally rather than exported globally.

Chair Farm by Werner Aisslinger at Ventura Lambrate

The plant is trained inside a metal mould then released once it reaches maturity.

Chair Farm by Werner Aisslinger at Ventura Lambrate

In October we published a story about a building grown from cherry trees that won’t be completed for 100 yearstake a look here.

Chair Farm by Werner Aisslinger at Ventura Lambrate

The Ventura Lambrate design district is open from 17 to 22 April. Download the free map and guide here and see all our stories about Ventura Lambrate 2012 here.

Chair Farm by Werner Aisslinger at Ventura Lambrate

See all our stories about Werner Aisslinger here, including his Iconograph watch for Lorenz at Dezeen Watch Store.

Chair Farm by Werner Aisslinger at Ventura Lambrate

Photographs are by Nicolo Lanfranchi.

Here’s some more information from Aisslinger:


“Plant yourself a chair …”

Werner Aisslinger presents his plantation chair at the Milan Furniture Fair

Once again in April, the most recognised fair of the furniture industry opens its gates for design aficionados from all over the world. At the Milan Furniture Fair, visitors will witness a small sensation at “Instant Stories”, the special exhibition from Berlin at Lambrate: Amidst the platforms showing the latest in furniture design, a greenhouse is staged. Visitors are confronted with a gigantic box that gives the impression as if it has just fallen from heaven. This laboratory-like stage setup promises to be as spectacular as watching a dinosaur hatch from its egg: A chair is born from a steel corset! The only difference to the egg-comparison is the fact that the shell of the “chair farm” prototype is inside the chair’s structure instead of being outside.

Chair Farm by Werner Aisslinger at Ventura Lambrate

After the removal of the corset, a unique chair is revealed – truly singular, because nature cannot be programmed to deliver a certain result. The chair is no longer produced in the classical sense of the word. Instead, it grows of its own volition in a greenhouse or on a field. When it has reached maturity, the steel corset is opened and removed, revealing a naturally grown chair. The title of the project by this Berlin-based designer, who imagines huge “product plantations” in the future, reflects this utopian means of production: the “chair farm”.

Chair Farm by Werner Aisslinger at Ventura Lambrate

Urban Gardening

Strawberries in winter, pumpkins in spring – everything is possible. But since the early 80s, or since discounters have moved into urban environments instead of staying out of towns, we have been witnessing a contradictory movement: a wish to return to a more primary and genuine way of living. Global markets with their unpredictable mechanisms increasingly intimidate consumers. More and more people are discovering the advantages of buying and consuming regionally grown seasonal products – advantages such as eating healthier, saving resources and being environmentally friendly. People know and care about their CO2 footprint. They want to make their own decisions about which resources they tap to eat, live, travel, etc. This new and different state of mind centers on leaving the role of a passive consumer and becoming an active, mindful individual. Home-grown food is harvested and stored. A new activism is blossoming. At the same time, a re-orientation towards collective living and working spaces is taking place. A good example for this is urban gardening, where residents open and share their garden space instead of having small individual allotments. In Berlin and other cities, project teams have formed which trade different kinds of services – car sharing, sofa surfing and urban gardening are no longer mere fashion statements.

Chair Farm by Werner Aisslinger at Ventura Lambrate

Green Design

People are discovering that life in all its multitude is much too beautiful to wrap it up in sanitized and ready-to-eat packages according to EU and DIN regulations. A cheer to the unconventional and surprising things in life!

This structural change has also influenced the world of product design. Many designers have anticipated the change towards green design or eco-pluralistic design and have recognized it as a chance – one of the most prominent ones being Werner Aisslinger from Berlin. He has been experimenting with new materials and sustainable production methods for years.

Chair Farm by Werner Aisslingers at Ventura Lambrate

Design and Technology

Aisslinger’s first technological experiment with polyurethane foam used in the automotive industry was serialized in 1996 by Cappellini and was added to the permanent collection at the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York in 1998. This was the genesis of the “Juli chair”, an integral part in the world of modern design.

His first synthetic gel-furniture “soft cell” caused a sensation at the Salone del Mobile at the turn of the century. The “soft cell” lounge chairs found an enthusiastic audience with their mixture of medical technology, two-plane TechnoGel, and slightly transparent honey-combed upholstery in space-ship optics.

In the following years, Aisslinger turns to different design worlds: He designs the ideal work space for vitra, builds hotels which live up to their name, and with “loftcube” he creates the true 21st century dacha.

In 2011, Aisslinger achieves another major coup in regard to chair design: The “Hemp chair” is made of natural fibers that are turned into a high-tech composite by using an environmentally friendly water-based binder (Acrodur). The chair is hardened by strong heat and mechanical pressure without producing hazardous or toxic substances. The Hemp chair is lightweight and has a cardboard texture – masking its extreme resilience and durability. This chair received a great deal of attention at the Furniture Fair in Milan last year, clearly standing out with its curved, organic shape and its subtle color among all other designs in the colorful sea of novelties.

Chair Farm by Werner Aisslinger at Ventura Lambrate

Chair Farm Project

The development from “Hemp chair” to “chair farm” was merely a logical consequence in Aisslinger’s work. It is a further development in his three-component master-plan: sustainable production, new materials, and an outstanding simplicity in design.

One of Aisslinger’s main concerns is the cutting edge between aesthetics and everyday culture. He commutes between Berlin and Singapore, where he maintains a second studio. From a bird’s eye perspective, structural connections often seem clearer than on the ground: In an airplane with a view of the Indian Ocean, Aisslinger wondered if food and everyday products will still be decentrally produced and shipped around the globe in the future.

As a matter of fact, tendencies such as “urban farming” and “integrated farming” are not merely the eco-utopian dreams of urban Bohemianism. They are at this moment tested and tried on the rooftops of Paris or Berlin and surpass the output and efficiency of industrial agriculture by a factor of 15. So Aisslinger is convinced that food production in urban spaces – giving everyone the possibility of becoming a passionate producer of agricultural products – will be the future in regard to quality and sustainability. Therefore, he thought about a way to invert production in furniture design back from globalized serial manufacturing to resource-conserving local production. And he came up with the answer: Chair farm is as simple as it is radical. Aisslinger states his intention as wanting to offer design-users a chair that is made with as little resources and as reduced an amount of waste as possible.

Project: Chair Farm
Year: 2012
Designer: Werner Aisslinger
Exhibition: “Instant Stories”, Milano-Lambrate
Location: Ventura Lambrate: “Overlite,” Via Privata Oslavia 8, 20143 Milano
Press Preview: Monday April 16, 15:00 – 20:00
Opening Hours: Tuesday April 17 – Sunday April 22, 10:00 – 20:00
Opening Night: Wednesday April 18, 19:00 – 23:00

Pila and Pilo by Ronan & Erwan Bouroullecfor Magis

Pila and Pilo by Ronan & Erwan Bouroullec for Magis

Milan 2012: French designers Ronan & Erwan Bouroullec present this slender ash chair for Magis in Milan next week.

Pila and Pilo by Ronan & Erwan Bouroullec for Magis

Called Pila, it has a plywood seat and back supported on an aluminium frame hidden under the seat.

Pila and Pilo by Ronan & Erwan Bouroullec for Magis

A matching table called Pilo features cast aluminium connectors between the legs and table top.

Pila and Pilo by Ronan & Erwan Bouroullec for Magis

The Salone Internazionale del Mobile takes place from 17 to 22 April. See all our stories about Milan 2012 here.

Pila and Pilo by Ronan & Erwan Bouroullec for Magis

See all our stories about Ronan & Erwan Bouroullec here and all our stories about Magis here.

Pila and Pilo by Ronan & Erwan Bouroullec for Magis

Here are soem more details from Ronan & Erwan Bouroullec:


Designing both the Pila chair and the Pilo tables was driven by the idea of creating light objects. The plywood seat and back parts of the Pila chair are supported by four very thin sticks in plain wood which are maintained together by a structure in injected aluminium that is almost invisible yet highly solid.

Pilo answers the same quest for lightness and additionally proposes an open system that allows to compose a table that goes with one’s needs and wishes. Pilo is a table reduced to its minimum: solid wood feet that support a wooden top thanks to discreet and strong aluminium connections.

Pilo and Pila comes in natural and stained ash.

MAGIS Salone del Mobile, Hall 20 – Booth C01-D02
New showroom Corso Garibaldi 77, M. Moscova

Pontoon and Maritime S by Benjamin Hubertfor Casamania

Pontoon and Maritime S by Benjamin Hubert for Casamania

London designer Benjamin Hubert will present an upholstered version of his Maritime chair plus a coordinating dining table called Pontoon for Italian brand Casamania at the Salone Internazionale del Mobile next week.

Pontoon and Maritime S by Benjamin Hubert for Casamania

The original Maritime S was launched this time last year and this new iteration is available with leather or Kvadrat textile seat pads.

Pontoon and Maritime S by Benjamin Hubert for Casamania

The oak table has a slender frame with a central bar, stabilised by the distance between the rounded table top and under-frame.

Pontoon and Maritime S by Benjamin Hubert for Casamania

See all our stories about Benjamin Hubert here.

Pontoon and Maritime S by Benjamin Hubert for Casamania

The Salone Internazionale del Mobile takes place from 17 to 22 April. See all our stories about Milan 2012 here.

Pontoon and Maritime S by Benjamin Hubert for Casamania

Here’s some more information from Benjamin Hubert:


Benjamin Hubert x Casamania

Pontoon is an oak dining table designed to work with the award winning Maritime dining chair. The table utilises the geometry and design language of the chair to create a simple and graphic table structure.

The table surface with generous corner radius is supported by slender legs connected together via a central beam. The legs taper to give an elegant silhouette made possible by the height positioning of the central structure to stabilise the slim profile. Pontoon is the second collaboration between Casamania and Benjamin Hubert launched at Salone Del Mobile in April 2012.

Materials:
Oak, natural oil
Dimensions
W750mm x H730mm x L1800mm W750mm x H730mm x L2500mm

Pontoon and Maritime S by Benjamin Hubert for Casamania

Maritime S

Martime S is an extension of the timber Maritime chair Launched in 2011. The new version offers soft upholstered panels inserted into the distinctive timber framework.

Pontoon and Maritime S by Benjamin Hubert for Casamania

The padded areas are available in both textile and leather options and can be simply interchanged or reupholstered as they are connected to the structure via velcro panels.

Materials:
Oak, natural oil, stain Kvadrat Divina MD, Leather
Dimensions W450mm x H730mm

Pontoon and Maritime S by Benjamin Hubert for Casamania

Form Us With Friends by Form Us With Love

Form Us With Friends by Form Us With Love

Stockholm 2012: Swedish designers Form Us With Love present five new projects at the Swedish Museum of Architecture as part of Stockholm Design Week this week.

Form Us With Friends by Form Us With Love

The work on show includes their Bento chair for new brand One Nordic Furniture Company (see our story here) pendant lamps for Design House Stockholm, dividers for Swedish brand Abstracta, a lamp for Swedish firm Ateljé Lyktan and vases for Spanish company Cosentino Silestone.

Form Us With Friends by Form Us With Love

Stockholm Design Week continues until 12 February. See all our coverage here.

Form Us With Friends by Form Us With Love

Photos are by Jonas Lindström.

Form Us With Friends by Form Us With Love

Here are some more details from Form Us With Love:


Form Us With Friends 2012

For the third year in a row, Form Us With Love presents the exhibition concept Form Us With Friends during Stockholm Design Week. This year, Form Us With Love has teamed up with the centre for architecture, form and design, The Swedish Museum of Architecture and created a unique exhibition on the scenic island of Skeppsholmen in central Stockholm.

With the exhibition, Form Us With Love wants to highlight the creative collaborations behind their new work.

A year of intense work has resulted in five projects adding new dimensions to each specific area: lighting, furniture and objects. The exhibition focuses on the story and process behind the projects.

Form Us With Love presents new design for five friends: the Plaid dividers for Abstracta (Sweden), the Plug Lamp for Ateljé Lyktan (Sweden), the Form Pendants for Design House Stockholm (Sweden), the Bento chair & table for One Nordic Furniture Company (Finland) and the Slab Vases for Cosentino Silestone (Spain).

Homage to Joe Colombo

Kartell remasters an iconic chair in tribute to one of furniture’s most innovative Italian designers
Kartell_Colombo_4801_ExhibitionView1.jpg

To commemorate the life and work of Joe Colombo, Italian design company Kartell has reissued his iconic 4801 chair. Designed in 1965, the 4801 was the first of 12 objects that Colombo created for Kartell until his premature death in 1971. In conjunction with the new release, Kartell is hosting “Homage to Joe Colombo”, an exhibition at the R20th Century gallery in collaboration with the Joe Colombo Archives.

Kartell_ColomboExhib_4867.jpg

While Colombo’s work ranged from abstract expressionist painting to architecture, he is best remembered for his mass-produced interior design objects. The “Universale” chair—the first seating element to be made entirely of injection-moulded ABS—is still in production, and his landmark designs have been included at the MoMA, the V&A and Centre Pompidou. His designs often incorporate flexibility and modularity, paving the way for contemporary RTA furniture makers.

Due to the technicality of the 4801, Colombo’s design was never produced as intended with ABS. Instead, multiple pieces of pressed plywood were fastened with metal and glue to accommodate the chair’s non-traditional form. Kartell’s reissue utilizes updated manufacturing techniques to realize the production according to the Colombo’s original vision.

Kartell_Colombo_4801_ExhibitionView2.jpg

The exhibition will feature 10 of the pieces that Colombo designed for Kartell over the years alongside archival photographs of and sketches. Opening today, “Homage to Joe Colombo” runs for two weeks with the 4801 available for $2,790 through Kartell.


Bento by Form Us With Love for One Nordic Furniture Company

Bento by Form Us With Love for One Nordic Furniture Company

New design brand One Nordic Furniture Company will launch during Stockholm Design Week next week with an inaugural collection by Swedish studio Form Us With Love.

Bento by Form Us With Love for One Nordic Furniture Company

Called Bento, the series comprises a chair and three tables with wide bent-wood legs.

Bento by Form Us With Love for One Nordic Furniture Company

“The broad legs are a wink at the tradition of bending wood, but at the same time it’s a bit bold,” says Petrus Palmér of Form Us With Love. “It’s definitely messing with your preconceptions of Nordic design.”

Bento by Form Us With Love for One Nordic Furniture Company

Designed to be ordered online and delivered flat-packed, the furniture is assembled by crossing the legs over the base and clamping in place without fiddly screws or adhesives.

Bento by Form Us With Love for One Nordic Furniture Company

More products by designers including Hallgeir Homstvedt and KiBiSi are planned for later in the year.

Bento by Form Us With Love for One Nordic Furniture Company

Dezeen will be reporting from Stockholm next week. See all our stories about Form Us With Love here.

Bento by Form Us With Love for One Nordic Furniture Company

Here are some more details from One Nordic Furniture Company:


A new furniture brand for the digital generation

Pre-launching during Stockholm Design Week 2012, One Nordic Furniture Company rethinks the furniture industry. With clever digital and design solutions, the new brand is bridging the gap between high-design and flatpack furniture.

Bento by Form Us With Love for One Nordic Furniture Company

One Nordic Furniture Company is a new furniture brand making Nordic design originals. Online thinking is at the core of the brand, with the online store as the main distribution channel.

Bento by Form Us With Love for One Nordic Furniture Company

Online comes first. Our generation is used to buying everything online, why not original design furniture? The brief to our designers include solutions that are self-explaining: no need for screws, tools or manuals. The products have to be easy to assemble and ship without losing the feeling of quality, says Joel Roos, founder of One Nordic Furniture Company.

Bento by Form Us With Love for One Nordic Furniture Company

Through a brand family network, interested customers can influence the direction of the One Nordic collection in both small and big matters; from choosing colors to suggesting the next designer.

Bento by Form Us With Love for One Nordic Furniture Company

To begin with, contributing designers will be from the Nordics, but international names wanting to interpret Nordic design will join later on. Official designers so far are Form Us With Love (Sweden), Hallgeir Homstvedt (Norway) and KiBiSi (Denmark).

Bento by Form Us With Love for One Nordic Furniture Company

One Nordic Furniture Company will present new products during the year. For the pre-launch in February, the first designs presented are the Bento chair and table by Stockholm based design studio Form Us With Love. The name Bento is wordplay with the Japanese slang word meaning ”convenient” as well as the Finnish tradition of bentwood. The intuitive approach is at the core of the playful and modern design. Patents are pending for both the Bento chair and table.

Bento by Form Us With Love for One Nordic Furniture Company

The first edition of the Bento chair and table will be numbered and signed by the designers. 100 black chairs and 50 black coffee tables are available for pre-order.