MT Club Chair by Very Good & Proper

MT Club Chair by Very Good and Proper

Product news: originally designed for a Shoreditch restaurant, this chair by London studio Very Good & Proper has now gone into production.

MT Club Chair by Very Good and Proper

Very Good and Proper‘s MT Club Chair was designed for Shoreditch restaurant Merchants Tavern.

MT Club Chair by Very Good and Proper

The dining chair is constructed from a soft moulded shell with bent plywood legs. It is available in either leather or pure wool and can be customised on request.

MT Club Chair by Very Good and Proper

The chair launched at trade fair 100% Design as part of London Design Festival 2013 – see our roundup of highlights here.

MT Club Chair by Very Good and Proper

Other products that featured at London Design Festival include a glass blown lamp with a digitally created lozenge pattern and a four-tier shelving unit with bulging leather shelves.

Very Good & Proper also designed the furniture for London restaurant chain Canteen and fitted out the interior of its Covent Garden branch.

See more chair designs »
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The Staples Vayder Chair is a cozy, sturdy ride

The following is a sponsored post from Staples about a product we believe in. For the past few weeks, I’ve been aggressively testing this product and the review is based on my first-hand experiences. We agreed to work with Staples because they sell so many different products in their stores, and our arrangement with them allows us to review products we use and have no hesitation recommending to our readers. Again, these infrequent sponsored posts help us continue to provide quality content to our audience.

When I was younger my grandfather told me, “Man was not meant to sit.” At the time I thought his cheese was slipping off of his cracker, but contemporary medicine backs up his claim. Dr. Camelia Davtyan, clinical professor of medicine and director of women’s health at the UCLA Comprehensive Health Program, recently told the LA Times, “Prolonged sitting is not what nature intended for us.”

Score one for gramps.

Today, my job requires me to spend tremendous amount of time seated behind a desk, so I want a chair that’s comfortable, supportive, well-made, easy to use, and not out to kill me. I’ve been testing the Staples Vayder chair ($399) for a couple of weeks and can say, a couple of quirks aside, it meets my needs and looks great doing it.

Vayder Chair from Staples

Assembly

Seriously, this could not be easier. In fact, I hesitate to call it “assembly,” as “snapping a few pieces together” would be more accurate. The chair ships in eight pieces: the seat, the base, the gas lift (or piece that sits between the seat and the base), and five wheels. It also comes with a small pamphlet that explains the three-step assembly process and usage details in English and French.

The wheels and gas lift snap into the base and the seat fits into the top of the lift. The whole process took me less than 10 minutes to complete. I will note, however, it’s not super easy to line up the bottom of the seat with the top of the lift by yourself, so if possible get someone else to act as your eyes and guide you. Also, one of the wheels only went about 95% of the way into my base, but the first time I sat in the completed chair it popped in the rest of the way.

Controls and adjustments

Of course, I plopped down into the Vayder before reading the instructions, and found myself sitting bolt upright. Fortunately, Staples makes it easy to configure the chairs six adjustment options for a custom feel. The control levers are made of plastic and bear icons that suggest their function. Most are easy to reach from a seated position, so you won’t need to move around to change things.

Seat hight is simple enough and raises or lowers the seat. Tilt Lock lets you lean back or forward and lock the seat back into one of four positions. For me, one click backward is perfect. To use it, just flip the lever down, move your back and then flick the lever back up to lock it into place.

The arm hight adjustment is something I kind of laughed at until I’ve tried it. When I was in college, I had a job filing and my chair’s arms were so tall I couldn’t get my arms on them and under the desk at the same time. The arms on the Vayder chair move up and down by several inches, and the armrests themselves also move forward and back.

Other adjustment options include back height adjustment (this is the adjustment you can’t make while seated), which lets you raise or lower the back support piece, and a slide seat adjustment that lets you move just the “bottom” of the seat, for lack of a better term, forward or back.

Finally, the tension adjustment is the most interesting. Both the chair’s seat and back are made of a mesh upholstery that’s supremely comfortable (more on that in the next section). Tension adjustment is completed by turing a cylindrical handle just beneath the seat. Move it forward for firmer feel, backward for more relaxed.

Comfort

This chair plain-old feels good. The mesh upholstery breathes so you don’t get hot as you would on a typically upholstered seat. I’ve got the mesh set to be pretty firm, and it feels great, especially against my back. The wheels roll nicely without making a lot of noise and I’ve never been uncomfortable, even after two weeks of 10-hour days. Plus, it just feels solid.

In conclusion I like the Staples Vayder a lot. It does have some quirks, like that stubborn wheel and the fact that assembly is a hassle if you’re by yourself, but those are minor quibbles. My real-world experience with the Vayder has been great and I look forward to many, many more hours in it.

And look at that, I got through this whole post without making one “Darth Vayder” pun.

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Traffic by Konstantin Grcic for Magis

Product news: industrial designer Konstantin Grcic’s Traffic seating collection for Italian design brand Magis has gone into production.

Traffic collection by Konstantin Grcic for Magis

First shown as a prototype in Milan earlier this year, this range designed by Konstantin Grcic is the first collection of upholstered furniture by Magis. It includes an armchair, a two-seater sofa, two benches and a chaise longue.

Traffic collection by Konstantin Grcic for Magis

Simple rectangular cushions slot into grid-like tubular metal frames. The collection comes in seven colours and the cushions are available in leather and a number of fabrics by textile company Kvadrat.

Traffic collection by Konstantin Grcic for Magis

“The correlation between the three-dimensional line drawing of the metal rod and the geometric volumes of the cushions marks a significant shift from the common connotation of wire furniture,” Grcic said.

Traffic collection by Konstantin Grcic for Magis

Magis president and founder Eugenio Perazza described the collection as “a set of various elements conceived as simple rod cages in which the cushions for the seat, backrest and armrests are easily accommodated”.

Traffic collection by Konstantin Grcic for Magis

This is Konstantin Grcic’s fifth collaboration with Magis – others include Magis 360 family, a range of office furniture including a chair that’s designed to be straddled rather than sat on.

Traffic collection by Konstantin Grcic for Magis

See more designs by Magis »
See more designs by Konstantin Grcic »
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December chair by Jasper Morrison and Wataru Kumano for Nikari

London Design Festival 2013: British designer Jasper Morrison and Japanese designer Wataru Kumano have designed a self-assembly chair with a linen seat and backrest (+ slideshow).

December chair by Jasper Morrison and Wataru Kumano for Nikari

Morrison and Kumano created the December chair for Finnish manufacturer Nikari. The firm commissioned designers to produce a wooden product or piece of furniture for each day of the month as part of its 12 Designs for Nature project, which also featured work by Alfredo Häberli, Martí Guixé and Harri Koskinen.

December chair by Jasper Morrison and Wataru Kumano for Nikari

The chair comprises an ash wood frame and a linen seat and backrest. It is intended to work in a country home, city apartment or hotel lobby, according to the designers.

December chair by Jasper Morrison and Wataru Kumano for Nikari

Morrison and Kumano wanted to create a chair that could be bought in a box and built at home by following simple instructions.

“The core of the design is the seat frame which is already assembled, to which the legs and backrest structure are attached with a combination of screwing and gluing,” Morrison explained.

December chair by Jasper Morrison and Wataru Kumano for Nikari

“It’s a basic but comfortable low chair with a slightly rural character and definite Scandinavian influence,” he added.

December chair by Jasper Morrison and Wataru Kumano for Nikari

The chair was displayed during London Design Festival at Morrison’s temporary Library of Design at his east London shop, alongside his Fionda chair for Mattiazzi and Palma cookware for Oigen.

December chair by Jasper Morrison and Wataru Kumano for Nikari
December chair components

Other products by Jasper Morrison that we’ve featured recently include the Please watch for fashion brand Issey Miyake and an outdoor chair for Spanish brand Kettal.

See all our stories on Jasper Morrison »
See all our stories about London Design Festival 2013 »

December chair in the Library of Design by Jasper Morrison
December chair in Jasper Morrison’s Library of Design

Photography is by Chikako Harada.

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Competition: one Fauteuil Direction chair by Jean Prouvé to be won

Competition: Nest.co.uk is giving Dezeen readers the chance to win a special-edition Fauteuil Direction chair by Modernist designer Jean Prouvé.

Competition: one Fauteuil Direction chair by Jean Prouvé to be won

The Fauteuil Direction metal-framed armchair was first designed by French designer Jean Prouvé in 1951. It features triangular back legs bent from steel to support weight where it’s most needed and wood armrests mounted on a tubular metal frame.

Competition: one Fauteuil Direction chair by Jean Prouvé to be won

The armchair was one of seventeen items of Prouvé’s furniture updated and produced by furniture brand Vitra as part of the RAW collection created in collaboration with fashion label G-Star.

Competition: one Fauteuil Direction chair by Jean Prouvé to be won

These limited-edition pieces ended production in April but the winner of this competition will receive the grey Fauteuil Direction armchair pictured.

To enter this competition email your name, age, gender, occupation, and delivery address and telephone number to competitions@dezeen.com with “Jean Prouve Fauteuil Direction chair” in the subject line. We won’t pass your information on to anyone else; we just want to know a little about our readers. Read our privacy policy here.

You need to subscribe to our newsletter to have a chance of winning. Sign up here.

Competition: one Fauteuil Direction chair by Jean Prouvé to be won

Competition closes 23 October 2013. One winner will be selected at random and notified by email. The winner’s names will be published in a future edition of our Dezeen Mail newsletter and at the top of this page. Dezeen competitions are international and entries are accepted from readers in any country.

Here’s more information from Nest.co.uk:


Part of the recent Prouvé RAW collection from Vitra and G-Star, the Fauteuil Direction chair is a classic item, reinvented for a modern audience.

The Prouvé RAW collection was an exclusive collaboration between Vitra and fashion house G-Star which saw 17 of Prouvé’s designs re-imagined with a fresh colour palette and revised functionality.

Competition: one Fauteuil Direction chair by Jean Prouvé to be won

The Fauteuil Direction balances industrial architectural forms with exceptional comfort, making the best use of Prouvé’s preferred material: sheet steel. Prouvé’s characteristic design principles of championing honest materials and employing a democratic approach to design were closely followed with the re-introduction of the Fauteuil Direction and careful consideration was taken over the colour. Prouvé’s daughter, Catherine Prouvé, helped refine the colour palette of aluminium, charcoal and gunmetal grey – a shade which was a personal favourite of her fathers.

Competition: one Fauteuil Direction chair by Jean Prouvé to be won

Production of the Prouvé RAW collection was strictly limited and manufacture ceased this April. All pieces are now collectable items.

Nest.co.uk is a modern design superstore based in the heart of Sheffield’s city centre. Founded in 2002 by Christian Hawley, the company now operates a successful website selling a large collection of the best classic and contemporary design. The collection includes well-known names such as Vitra, Tom Dixon and Cassina, as well as new and emerging talent such as La Chance, Resident and Areti. With a dedicated team of specifiers, Nest.co.uk also offer support and guidance for design projects – from small-scale residential to large, corporate projects. Go to Nest.co.uk to find out more.

www.nest.co.uk

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Oslo by Angell Wyller Aarseth for Bernhardt Design

London Design Festival 2013: Norwegian collective Angell Wyller Aarseth has designed a wooden lounge chair with a slung seat and back for Bernhardt Design (+ slideshow).

dezeen_Oslo chair by AWAA for Bernhardt Design_23

American furniture brand Bernhardt Design asked Angell Wyller Aarseth to design an armchair that combines the studio’s Nordic sensibility with a link to American heritage.

dezeen_Oslo chair by AWAA for Bernhardt Design_5

The resulting chair features a simple open frame made from solid walnut, a material commonly used in American furniture production.

dezeen_Oslo chair by AWAA for Bernhardt Design_24

Gently curving armrests continue around the sitter to form a backrest onto which a padded sling is attached.

dezeen_Oslo chair by AWAA for Bernhardt Design_6

An additional cushion fastened to the back of the sling provides supplementary support.

dezeen_Oslo chair by AWAA for Bernhardt Design_7

Oslo is the first commercially produced design by Angell Wyller Aarseth, which was formed in 2010 by Oslo National Academy of the Arts graduates, Christoffer Angell, Øyvind Wyller and Simen Aarseth.

dezeen_Oslo chair by AWAA for Bernhardt Design_20

It is available in a range of coloured leather and fabric options and is launching this week during the London Design Festival.

dezeen_Oslo chair by AWAA for Bernhardt Design_19

Bernhardt Design presented a chaise designed by Eindhoven couple Kiki van Eijk and Joost van Bleiswijk at the 2011 edition of the London Design Festival. See more furniture by Bernhardt Design »

dezeen_Oslo chair by AWAA for Bernhardt Design_14

Other launches at this year’s LDF include a collection of wooden bedroom furniture by British brand Another Country and a range of wicker lamps by Swedish studio Claesson Koivisto Rune.

dezeen_Oslo chair by AWAA for Bernhardt Design_15

See all our stories about London Design Festival 2013 »
See Dezeen’s map and guide to London Design Festival 2013 »

dezeen_Oslo chair by AWAA for Bernhardt Design_22

Here’s some more information about the project from Bernhardt Design:


Northern Lights – London, UK

It takes a spark to light a fire. Such a spark was cast one evening three years ago during the 2010 London Design Festival. As part of 100% Norway, Ambassador Bjarne Lindstrom organized a reception to connect Norway’s best home-grown talents with the international design world. While there, three young designers, Christoffer Angell, Øyvind Wyller and Simen Aarseth, met Jerry Helling, President of Bernhardt Design. That chance encounter has now come full circle with Bernhardt Design’s launch of Angell Wyller Aarseth’s Oslo Chair at the 2013 London Design Festival.

dezeen_Oslo chair by AWAA for Bernhardt Design_4

A strong supporter of young designers, Helling is often on the look-out for promising new talent. “There are bright young designers working all over the world, the tricky part is finding ones who are the right fit,” Helling said. “Sometimes, we meet through formal channels like tradeshows and exhibitions. More often, however, a first meeting is more serendipitous – through mutual acquaintances or at cocktail parties such as where I met Christoffer, Simen and Øyvind.”

The trio of young Norwegian designers calls themselves AWAA. They met during school at the Oslo National Academy of the Arts and, as Angell puts it, they “found each other creatively.” As their paths crossed in classes and at exhibitions, they realized they shared the same theories about design – primarily a focus on archetypal purity and structure, the layering of elements, and a passion for classic Scandinavian modernism.

dezeen_Oslo chair by AWAA for Bernhardt Design_21

It was an exciting time for the three young students as they formed a loose collective to explore these shared values and ideas. They soon decided to apply for 100% Norway during the London Design Festival, in hopes of broadening their industry exposure. They were accepted, and were elated when Helling handed them his business card at the Ambassador’s reception.

“Young designers often have this intense passion that can fade with time and success,” Helling added. “Talking with AWAA sparked an interest. You could sense a light burning in them.”

dezeen_Oslo chair by AWAA for Bernhardt Design_13

After meeting Helling, Angell, Wyller and Aarseth sent a portfolio of their work. Helling was impressed and suggested they apply for the 2011 ICFF Studio program at the International Contemporary Furniture Fair in New York. Their Handle Me cookware designs were a critical success, winning an award for best accessories. It was also at the end of ICFF that Helling formally asked them to collaborate on a new project.

“We’d trained ourselves to not get too excited when someone says, ‘We want to work with you’, because we’d heard it so many times before. But Jerry followed through,” says Wyller. “It’s really exciting when someone tells you this great thing will happen, and then it really does.”

dezeen_Oslo chair by AWAA for Bernhardt Design_17

The Oslo chair is AWAA’s first product together to be launched commercially, and it is a balanced mix of the Nordic trio’s design philosophy and Bernhardt Design’s American heritage. When Helling asked them to design an armed side chair, AWAA first delved into the physical essence of an armchair – namely that it is made up of four legs, a seat and back, and arms – to focus on a pure skeletal structure. They then set out to layer comfort onto the structure by adding a sling seat and back that seem to rest upon the frame, like garments on a figure.

dezeen_Oslo chair by AWAA for Bernhardt Design_16

As a result, they have created a light, airy chair that is comfortable and strong, yet visually simple and open. Rather than being made from traditional Scandinavian hardwoods, Oslo is made of solid walnut, giving it a distinctively American sensibility. The Oslo chair may be upholstered in fabrics and leathers from Bernhardt Textiles or in the customer’s own material.

With the debut of the Angell Wyller Aarseth’s Oslo Chair at the 2013 London Design Festival, Bernhardt Design shows that what starts as a spark can become a bright light.

dezeen_Oslo chair by AWAA for Bernhardt Design_18

About Angell Wyller Aarseth

The Norwegian design collective Angell Wyller Aarseth (AWAA) was founded in 2010 by Christoffer Angell, Øyvind Wyller and Simen Aarseth. While pursuing their Masters of Design at the Oslo National Academy of the Arts, the three realized they had complementary ideas about design. They decided to form a loose collective to explore those ideas, while also continuing to work individually as interior architects and product designers.

After exhibiting together at the 2010 London Design Festival (at 100% Norway, a juried exhibition of leading Norwegian design talent), and Design Tide in Tokyo, the collective debuted their first range of cast iron cookware in Paris in January 2011. AWAA subsequently showed a larger range of products at the Salone Satellite in Milan, where they received a Special Mention from the jury, and at ICFF in New York, where they won ICFF Studio for their cookware. In 2012, they presented their collection of seating, lighting and tables at the Salone Satellite in Milan.

dezeen_Oslo chair by AWAA for Bernhardt Design_28

AWAA approach design by analyzing an activity to determine its essential elements to then establish an archetypal object that fulfills those elements. From there, they layer on elements to lend meaning, functionality and adaptability to the object.

Their diverse personal interests and experiences contribute to their designs. Angell is also an interior architect with experience in lighting design, having interned with the American lighting brand Rich Brilliant Willing. Wyller is a freelance designer and has experience with design journalism from his time as a columnist with the Norwegian newspaper Dagbladet. Simen works as a brand strategist and designer at the Oslo-based firm Work.

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Totora Furniture at Maison & Objet 2013: Juan Fernando Hidalgo Cordero’s designs embody the juncture of modernity and tradition

Totora Furniture at Maison & Objet 2013


by Dora Haller Totora is a thick, hollow grass that grows along lakeshores high in South America’s Andes Mountains. This indigenous plant has been used for generations to build everything from houses to floors, hats and even boats. Ecuadorian architect and designer Continue Reading…

Y Chair by Tom Dixon

Designer Tom Dixon launches a flexible new chair for the contract market during the London Design Festival next week. It’s made of glass-reinforced nylon and has a faceted back resembling bunny ears.

Y Chair by Tom Dixon

The one-piece seat and back of Y Chair is made of nylon strengthened with overlapping glass fibres, giving it strength and flexibility. The chair comes in black and white versions with the option of sled, swivel or wooden bases.

Y Chair by Tom Dixon

Dixon will launch the chair at The Dock in London next week during the London Design Festival, which runs from 14-22 September. See our online World Design Guide map of the London Design Festival 2013 for more details about this and over events across the city.

Y Chair by Tom Dixon

Here’s some info from Dixon:


Y Chair – A new silhouette. Super Ergonomic. Hyper-flexible, and Ultra-robust

Our recent adventures in hotel, restaurants, bar and office design got us looking for a chair to withstand heavy use, constant knocks and the daily abuse of the professional world. But we also wanted a recognisable silhouette, an ergonomic shape and a modern attitude.

Not too much to ask we thought. But after much fruitless searching we decided it was time to make our own.

Y Chair by Tom Dixon

Two years of complex engineering, significant tooling investment and intense shape-making later we think we may have got it.

The Y Chair’s expressive form is injection moulded in glass-reinforced nylon which is extremely fatigue resistant – absorbing shock and load through its flexibility. Tested to contract level it will withstand the most demanding environments.

Y Chair by Tom Dixon

The shape of the Y chair is prompted by ergonomics – with lumbar support, space for the spine and a generous brace for the shoulder blades. All adding to its instantly recognisable silhouette.

Product Information:

Available in two shell colour options; Black and White. Also available with upholstered felt seat and back pads. Three base options: Sled, Swivel and Wood.

Sled: Black or White Powder Coat base; Stackable up to 8 high; 100% recyclable; Suitable for outdoors.

Swivel: Sand Blasted Die Cast Aluminium base; Clear lacquered and Black Powder Coat options.

Wood: Oak base; clear lacquer or black stain; Copper cross brace.

Y Chair by Tom Dixon

Further information:

Most chairs seen in the contract market are made from Polypropylene but Glass Reinforced Nylon has short overlapping strands of glass fibre in the plastic which provides a much higher degree of strength.

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Impasto by Nikolaj Steenfatt

Copenhagen designer Nikolaj Steenfatt has created a range of pendant lights, chairs and stools made from coffee granules, sawdust and animal glues (+ slideshow).

Impasto chair by Nikolaj Steenfatt

Graduate designer Steenfatt created a biodegradable composite which he calls Impasto after the painting technique of applying thick layers of paint.

He makes it by mixing waste materials including sawdust, wood chippings and animal glues with water and coloured pigments. The mixture is made into a dough, pressed, rolled and folded into flat sheets, and then vacuum-formed to create the range of chairs, stools and pendants.

“The development of the production process is driven by an idea of creating a process that is adaptable to the industry, but has a unique output as if it was handmade,” said Steenfatt.

Impasto by Nikolaj Steenfatt
Stool

The project was based on sustainable materials research.”This led to experiments with different natural fibres and binders, with the aim of creating a new material that is biodegradable, easy to work with and simple to understand,” Steenfatt explained.

Impasto pendants by Nikolaj Steenfatt
Pendants

During the production process, the coloured pigments are only partially mixed in, making each sheet unique.

Impasto by Nikolaj Steenfatt
Rolling out the Impasto material

Steenfatt completed the Impasto project whilst studying at the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts – School of Design.

Here’s a movie showing the making process:

Other stories about materials include a new bioplastic made from crab shells, cycle helmets made from mulched newspapers and a dome made from silk fibres woven by a robotic arm and silkworms.

See more materials features »
See more furniture »

Impasto by Nikolaj Steenfatt
Mixing pigments

Photographs are by the designer.

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Candy Chair by Jeong Yong

South Korean design student Jeong Yong has created a prototype armchair with round balls on each arm and leg.

Candy Chair by Jeong Yong

“I wanted to make a chair that is sweet and cute,” Jeong Yong told Dezeen. “Candy chair is a simple design with circular points.”

Candy Chair by Jeong Yong

The Candy chair features a backrest and seat made from plywood and a solid ash frame.

Candy Chair by Jeong Yong

Yong told Dezeen that Candy is available directly from him and comes in a range of “candy-like” colours including orange, blue and yellow.

Candy Chair by Jeong Yong

Yong is due to graduate next year from Konkuk University Global Campus in Seoul.

Other products by Yong featured on Dezeen include a pair of chairs with grid-like frames based on traditional Korean furniture and a calendar made from three magnetic rings that align to display the date.

See more chairs »

Photographs are by the designer.

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