Repurposed Cardboard in Posh Chair Shapes

It’s time for some awesome application of repurposed cardboard, folks, here in a set of furniture by the name of Re-Ply. This project works with what designer Dan Goldstein assures is rather unique in both form and method, using broken-down boxes that would otherwise be tossed in a garbage heap, here using them for undeniably strong – and trendy, too.

Best of all, this project is primed for KickStarter, launched now and ready for your support! You’ve got boxes cut and laminated by you, a steel base, and two bolts – and that’s it! The bolts hold the fold in the chair and allow the whole machination to move. Felt is included as well in some cases – and the whole construction can be left with the cardboard exposed or custom printed with designs and logos galore!

The metal base is either powdercoated or zing-plated and the overall dimensions are 30” L x 23” D x 25.5” H – you can reach the KickStarter at Re-PLY Chair and note that it’s already past its funding goal – go get em!

Designer: Dan Goldstein


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(Repurposed Cardboard in Posh Chair Shapes was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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Future Primitives by Muller Van Severen

Interieur 2012: soft leather seats hang between the colourful plastic shelves of this furniture by Belgian design duo Muller Van Severen presented at the Interieur design biennale in Kortrijk, Belgium, last week (+ slideshow).

Future Primitives by Muller van Severen

The collection includes shelving units in various heights and configurations, some with seats draped like deckchairs inserted into their frames, as well as standing and hanging lamps and separate chairs and loungers.

Future Primitives by Muller van Severen

Responding to the theme of Future Primitives set by Interieur, the designers began with what they saw as primitive forms and basic material, and updated them for the future by combining different functions. The resulting objects are intended to be “timeless”, they said.

Future Primitives by Muller van Severen

The designers selected materials they felt were strong and simple, such as tubular steel and leather.

Future Primitives by Muller van Severen

“We chose the materials because we think they are very pure,” designer Fien Muller told Dezeen. “The leather is very natural [and] also the steel tubes are not painted because we like the light in it. When you paint it that’s gone.”

Future Primitives by Muller van Severen

The shelves are made from polyethylene plates used in the catering industry for food hygiene purposes. “All the colours are made for one food, for example yellow is for poultry, blue is for fish, green is for vegetables,” said Muller.

Future Primitives by Muller van Severen

“We used all the colours you can have of that material, but it’s again the combination of the colours that makes it special,” she added.

Future Primitives by Muller van Severen

The slim black frames splashed with colour recall furniture from the de Stijl movement, such as Gerrit Rietveld’s 1923 Red Blue Chair.

Future Primitives by Muller van Severen

Muller Van Severen is a furniture project launched by photographer Fien Muller and artist Hannes Van Severen in 2011.

Future Primitives by Muller van Severen

Other installations in the Future Primitives series we’ve featured include Greg Lynn’s prototype of a rotating cocoon for compact living and an aerodynamic concept vehicle by Ross Lovegrove.

Future Primitives by Muller van Severen

See all our stories about furniture »
See all our stories from Interieur 2012 »

Future Primitives by Muller van Severen

Photographs are by Frederik Vercruysse.

Here’s some more information from the designers:


We are Fien Muller and Hannes Van Severen and we are both active as visual artists. We see our collaboration as outside the field of visual arts and describe it as a ‘furniture project’. That collaboration started only two years ago; we called it Muller Van Severen.

Future Primitives by Muller van Severen

For Interieur 2012 we were selected for the Future Primitives series.  For us, Future Primitives means starting from basic materials and their basic measurements (like plates and profiles that already exist). In that sense it is something very primitive – the primitive side is about FORM. The future side of this story is more about FUNCTION, mostly the combination of functions. It is future-oriented thinking in a primitive form! For us, Future Primitives is something timeless because it is something that could just as well have existed in the past as it can function in the future.

The post Future Primitives
by Muller Van Severen
appeared first on Dezeen.

Doppeldecker

Doppeldecker Working and dinning tableThe Doppeldecker solves the dilemma of modern working: how to combine work and leisure. Hastily cleaning the tab..

“In the East End there are always materials to be found” – Nina Tolstrup

In this movie filmed by Dezeen, Studiomama founder Nina Tolstrup talks about the chair she modified for the Stepney Green Design Collection and how “there are always materials to be found” in east London.

Nina Tolstrup on her Re-imagined chair for the Stepney Green Design Collection

“One of the things that is quite fantastic about the East End is that there are always bits, pieces and materials to be found around, and with a little resourcefulness there’s a lot of potential in exploring and finding the beauty in the unloved,” says Tolstrup.

Nina Tolstrup on her Re-imagined chair for the Stepney Green Design Collection

The colourful Re-imagined chairs were first created for an interior project that required new designs quickly, so Tolstrup took chairs she ”found in [her] local streets in Bethnal Green” and gave them a new lease of life.

Nina Tolstrup on her Re-imagined chair for the Stepney Green Design Collection

She stripped the old chairs down to the frames, which she powder-coated in bright colours then added new backs and seats that were upholstered locally to match.

Nina Tolstrup on her Re-imagined chair for the Stepney Green Design Collection

“It’s kind of a full circle: from a chair that was actually from our streets that has found its way back into the Stepney Collection,” she says.

Nina Tolstrup on her Re-imagined chair for the Stepney Green Design Collection

The Stepney Green Design Collection consists of 10 products selected by Marcus Fairs of Dezeen from creatives who live near to VIVO, a new housing development in the east London district. The project also includes objects chosen by east London bloggers Pete Stean of Londoneer and Kate Antoniou of Run Riot.

Nina Tolstrup on her Re-imagined chair for the Stepney Green Design Collection

The collection is on show at the Genesis Cinema, 93-95 Mile End Road, Whitechapel, London E1 4UJ, from 10am to 10pm every day until January. After this, the objects will be given to VIVO residents.

Nina Tolstrup on her Re-imagined chair for the Stepney Green Design Collection

See all the items in the Stepney Green Design Collection here and watch the movies we’ve featured so far here. The music featured in the movies is by American designer and musician Glen Lib. You can listen to the full track on Dezeen Music Project.

The post “In the East End there are always materials
to be found” – Nina Tolstrup
appeared first on Dezeen.

Think Pink: Designers Customize Grete Jalk’s GJ Chair to Benefit Breast Cancer Research


From left, GJ Chairs customized by Rafael de Cárdenas, Harry Allen, and Deborah Berke.

If you’ve ever watched the eBay clock tick down to its single-digit seconds before clicking “Bid,” you know that timing is everything in the cutthroat world of online auctions. Unfortunately, the crucial final hours of Suite New York’s Pink Jalk Project auction to benefit the Breast Cancer Research Foundation were initially scheduled for yesterday, as the East Coast continued to grapple with the devastation wrought by Hurricane Sandy. That grappling continues–the Suite New York Showroom remains closed and without power–but the auction has been extended until tomorrow afternoon, giving you one more day to score one-of-a-kind versions of Greta Jalk’s laminated teak plywood GJ Chair customized by 20 designers and architects, including Winka Dubbeldam, Kelly Wearstler, Harry Allen, and Maharam Design Studio. David Rockwell got creative with sparkly Swarovski tiles, while Rafael de Cárdenas united the usually disparate forces of op-art and floral chintz. Deborah Berke collborated with sign painter David Newcomb and decorative painter Alexa Davis of Lillian Heard Studio on a pink-bottomed chair that honors women pioneers in architecture and design (see the making of Berke’s chair in the below video). Bid to win here.
continued…

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Rocking Chair For Technophiles

Picture it, Richardson Texas, a semi-detached town home made of bricks and columns surrounded by majestic magnolia trees. It’s a mild 75ºF and I’m outside on the veranda suckin’ on jujubes. Betwixt yelling at the neighborhood kids for being too loud and at my dog for digging in the yard, I thumb thru the latest news on my iPad rocking gently to the music of Janet Jackson. My hands tire of holding the iPad, so I place it up on a dock connected to my iRock. Yes, it’s pure genius. A rocking chair for a generation of technophiles.

Grammy gram’s rich oak rocking chair may be nice and all but my generation needs to be entertained even while sitting. The ole’ rocking chair isn’t just for geriatrics anymore. The iRock is the world’s first power generating iPad dock and sound station. Made from Swedish oak and pine, available in 5 colors, and the rocking motion provides enough power to keep your iPad juiced up. One hour of rocking provides 35% of power.

See how life comes full circle? We start out life rocking away and we leave this world rocking away. DO WANT!

Designer: Micasa LAB $1,300


Yanko Design
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(Rocking Chair For Technophiles was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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NEWTON dining table

We are still working hard on new challenges for artisans and designers, new techniques, materials and concepts are still being tested now it’s a..

Chain, Chain, Chain… Chain of Stools!

The inspiration behind the TOOJO stool series is from the semi-nomadic Maasai people of Kenya and Tanzania; specifically, their distinctive jewelry. Like the intricate beadwork of the jewelry, the stool is highly flexible, light and able to connect to other stools to create a “chain” of stools. The design allows for modular, custom seating arrangements linked by small surfaces for resting items like beverages. Perfect for pow wows!

Designer: Marek Harmata


Yanko Design
Timeless Designs – Explore wonderful concepts from around the world!
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(Chain, Chain, Chain… Chain of Stools! was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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Swing Sofa by Studio Aisslinger for Vitra

This swinging sofa by Berlin-based Studio Aisslinger for design brand Vitra isn’t meant for the garden or conservatory but for weary workers in the office.

Swing Sofa by Studio Aisslinger

The Swing Sofa is hung from a metal A-frame structure that comes in white (pictured here) or yellow. It’s meant for relaxation and contemplation rather than play, so “overly forceful pushes are prevented by a spring integrated into the upper beam, which prevents the swing from exceeding its natural bounds within the office,” say designers Werner Aisslinger and Nicole Losos.

Swing Sofa by Studio Aisslinger

The product was launched at the Orgatec trade fair in Cologne last week, where Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec also presented stackable chairs and tables designed for a Danish university and KiBiSi showed a mechanical desk that can be cranked up and down.

This isn’t the first piece of kinetic office furniture we’ve featured on Dezeen – we recently reported on a swinging table with hanging chairs by Duffy London.

A selection of watches designed by Studio Aisslinger for the Italian brand Lorenz is available in the Dezeen Watch Store, including the original model with windows cut into the watch face to reveal its numbers and the recently launched chronograph version.

See all our stories about Studio Aisslinger »
See all our stories about Vitra »
See all our stories about sofas »

The post Swing Sofa by Studio Aisslinger
for Vitra
appeared first on Dezeen.

Dat Weave

The latest addition to the Gaga & Design woven furniture collection the COD series of chairs inspired by a passion to preserve the age old craft. The structure of the weave is created with a twilling technique to create an angular 3D matrix that is at once modern and rooted in tradition. There an excellent addition to modern spaces needing a little warmth and are usable inside or out!

Designer: Rami Tareef for Gaga & Design


Yanko Design
Timeless Designs – Explore wonderful concepts from around the world!
Yanko Design Store – We are about more than just concepts. See what’s hot at the YD Store!
(Dat Weave was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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