indie-Furniture by Nicola from Bern

Indiefurniture2

When I saw this DIY cabinet yesterday over at the 101-woonideenblog I was really excited…could this be something for our own home? We have been looking for a long time, but still haven't find one that we like and more important, can afford 🙂 

Indiefurniture

The idea from designer Nicola Enrico Stäubli behind the Indie Furniture is to create a  storage solution consisting of universal furniture joints and customized wood panels. There is an easy configurator in the shop to help you calculate how much you would need and the costs of course. 

Screens

The designer behind Indie-Furniture is Nicola from bern… perhaps you have seen other work from him before like the series… I also love his latest project called 'Screen'. Perhaps the idea is to use it as information screens for exhibitions, but I would not mind to have it here in my studio and use it as a room-divider and hang all my inspiration scraps on it. More about Nicola the designer right here and here you can buy the materials for the Indie-Furniture cabinet. 

Screen

 

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{Via}

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February resolution wrap up, and introduction of March resolution

In 2011, I’m trying out small, monthly resolutions instead of large, annual New Year’s resolutions. My public resolution for January was to be more organized in the kitchen, and create and use more nutritious meal plans for my family. In February, my public resolution was to go through everything — absolutely everything — in my office.

Within days of declaring my February resolution, I had abandoned it. My aunt passed away and I ended up traveling to Kansas and tending to family responsibilities for awhile. Uncluttering my office wasn’t a priority on my list of things to do, and I wasn’t even physically near it had I wanted to organize. After returning to the east coast in the second half of the month, my immediate family then decided to sell our house and move. Without intentionally doing so, I ended up sorting through everything in my office after all.

February came to a close and everything in my office had been sorted, dusted, and packed in a box, dropped off at a charity, sold, recycled, or thrown in the trash. Even the Elfa shelving system was disassembled and sold, as we purchased new office furniture for the new place. Packing the office was similar to packing the rest of the house, but with some notable exceptions:

  • Sensitive data. My corporate clients almost always have me sign non-disclosure agreements. As a result, I have to transport their files personally and can’t let a professional mover or friend tend to them. If you’re in a corporate or government setting, you might have similar restrictions when moving offices. I recommend color coding all of these sensitive boxes with bright orange or red stickers and numbering them (Box 2 of 7) to help keep track of them. Then, personally move the boxes last out of the old place and set them up first in the new space. Don’t leave these boxes in your car overnight if you are making a multiple-day move — your job and/or client relationship depend on it.
  • Knick knacks. I realized I had a ridiculous number of personal knick knacks in my office. For example, I had four pictures of my husband on my desk … and he works seven feet away from me. It’s nice to personalize a space (it sends a cue to your boss that you are not planning on leaving), but not let the personal items become a distraction to you or others. In the new office I’m going to try to limit knick knacks to one per every two or three feet of desk space, which will be about three knick knacks total.
  • Cable control. With the help of a label maker, I labeled both ends of every cable before packing it (external hard drive, scanner, stereo speakers). This will speed up the unpacking process and make things easily identifiable the next time I have to crawl under my desk to unplug a device.
  • Office supplies. Painter’s tape is great for keeping cables with electronics, lids on small containers, and little objects grouped together. Don’t use Scotch tape, masking tape, or packing tape for these objects, as you will waste too much time removing the adhesive once you’re in the new office. You can also write on the painter’s tape to identify objects.
  • Scan and recycle. Paper is extremely heavy, and you will want to move as little of it as possible. Use the move as an excuse to sort through all of your paper files and purge anything you don’t need in physical form. Scan the data you want, and then recycle the paper. Also, don’t move any “to be filed” piles — file before you pack to avoid moving something you don’t really need.

It should be no surprise that my public resolution for the month of March will be to completely unpack and organize our new home and office. In fact, my husband’s family is coming to visit in mid-March and my goal is to have almost everything unpacked before they arrive. I’m trying to think of it like an adventure instead of a chore. Wish me luck!

Do you have resolutions? What are you doing to achieving them? Can you do something today to get one step closer to your goal?

Like this site? Buy Erin Rooney Doland’s Unclutter Your Life in One Week from Amazon.com today.


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Ausgebrannt by Kaspar Hamacher at 20 Designers at Biologiska

Ausgebrannt by Kaspar Hamacher

Stockholm 2011: Belgian designer Kaspar Hamacher makes stools from wooden logs by setting them on fire.

Ausgebrannt by Kaspar Hamacher at 20 Designers at Biologiska

Called Ausgebrannt (German for ‘burnt out’), the project involves stripping bark from the logs then burning away certain sections to create legs.

Ausgebrannt by Kaspar Hamacher at 20 Designers at Biologiska

The stools were displayed on circular landings at the Biologiska museum in Stockholm as part of 20 Designers at Biologiska, surrounded by a 360 degree diorama of stuffed animals and sea birds.

Ausgebrannt by Kaspar Hamacher at 20 Designers at Biologiska

More about 20 Designers at Biologiska in our earlier story.

Ausgebrannt by Kaspar Hamacher at 20 Designers at Biologiska

Stockholm Design Week took place 7-13 February. See all our coverage of the event here »

Ausgebrannt by Kaspar Hamacher at 20 Designers at Biologiska

Here’s some text from Hamacher:


Kaspar Hamacher uses fire to create furniture. Fittingly named ‘ausgebrannt’ which means ‘burned out’ in german. Tree trunks have been cut into segments varying in length.

Ausgebrannt by Kaspar Hamacher at 20 Designers at Biologiska

The bark is stripped from the exterior and fire is then used to hollow out parts of the trunk to create legs. Working in Brussels, Kaspar moved back to the forest where he now runs his atelier. The product brought him back to his roots.


See also:

.

Emma Marga Blanche
at Biologiska
Fredrik Färg
at Biologiska
David Taylor
at Biologiska

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