Mia Cullin models wooden benches on piano stools for Orkester collection

Swedish architect and designer Mia Cullin has produced a range of benches and stools with adjustable seats modelled on traditional wooden peg furniture and piano stools.

Orkester bench collection by Mia Cullin

Mia Cullin‘s Orkester collection features benches with two or three seats as well as individual stools. The flat circular seats are attached to cylindrical pieces of timber by large wooden screws.

Four wooden legs are splayed from beneath the horizontal section of wood.

Orkester bench collection by Mia Cullin

Mia Cullin said the design was influenced by a type of piano stool with an adjustable seat and “simple traditional wooden furniture assembled with plugs without any screws or metal fittings”.

“As the seats are adjustable, you can choose the height suitable for you but still sit next to your friends, parent or child,” explained Cullin.

Orkester bench collection by Mia Cullin

The furniture is made entirely from ash wood, without the use of any screws or metal fittings. It was designed for use in schools and nurseries, but can also be used in waiting rooms, entrances and other public spaces.

Orkester bench collection by Mia Cullin

The benches and stools come in natural or stained colour variations. Photography is by Mathias Nero.

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New Impressive Exhibition by Ai Weiwei

L’artiste chinois Ai Weiwei a récemment exposé son projet impressionnant « Evidence » au musée Martin-Gropius-Bau à Berlin. L’exposition s’étend sur 3000 mètres carré et 18 pièces. L’installation centrale appelée « Stools » contient 6000 tabourets en bois trouvés un peu partout dans zones rurales chinoises.

« Evidence » sera exposée jusqu’au 7 Juillet.

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Nendo reimagines the Navy Chair to create new stool for Emeco

Milan 2014: American furniture company Emeco has revealed a collection of stools and tables made from recycled and reclaimed materials in collaboration with Nendo (+ slideshow).

Nendo reimagines the Navy Chair to create new stool for Emeco

Called SU, which means simple and plain in Japanese, the collection is being shown at the Salone Internazionale del Mobile in Milan this week.

Nendo reimagines the Navy Chair to create new stool for Emeco

The tabletop is made from high-pressure laminate (HPL). The stool seats come in three materials – reclaimed oak, eco-concrete and recycled polyethylene. The legs to the table and stools are made of reclaimed oak or recycled aluminium in natural or with a black anodized finish.

Nendo reimagines the Navy Chair to create new stool for Emeco

Oki Sato from Nendo said he was inspired by the American company’s Navy Chair design in making the collection. “The Emeco Navy Chair is “the chair”, and has always been inspiring many architects and designers around the world,” said Sato.

“After roughly two years, we are proud to present a stool, which is strongly linked with the Navy Chair. It is for us, definitely “the stool”.”

Nendo reimagines the Navy Chair to create new stool for Emeco

The reclaimed oak seat has been sourced from old buildings in the US and carved by Amish craftsmen in Pennsylvania. Magnus Breitling, Vice president of product at Emeco said the wormholes in the oak give the seat “character and uniqueness”.

“We keep the oak seat untreated to allow the colour to change depending on its exposure to the sun, humidity and above all – usage, thus creating its own history,” said Breitling.

Nendo reimagines the Navy Chair to create new stool for Emeco

The eco or ‘green concrete’ is made from 50 per cent recycled glass bottles and CSA (calcium sulfoaluminate cement), which requires less energy to make.

Nendo reimagines the Navy Chair to create new stool for Emeco

The recycled polyethylene seats are shaped into the SU seat through rotation moulding and come in red, flint grey and dark charcoal grey.

Nendo reimagines the Navy Chair to create new stool for Emeco

The stools and tables will be on show until 13 April at the Emeco stand, Hall 20, E09 in Salone Internazionale del Mobile in Milan.

Nendo reimagines the Navy Chair to create new stool for Emeco

Here’s some more information from Emeco:


Emeco Announces the SU Collection – Stools and Tables Designed in Collaboration With Nendo

SU Collection features the famous Emeco characteristics of design, engineering and strength, built with recycled and reclaimed materials.

Nendo reimagines the Navy Chair to create new stool for Emeco

HANOVER, PA – April 8, 2014 – Emeco today announced that they will launch The SU Collection of stools and tables designed in collaboration with Nendo, at the Salone Internazionale del Mobile in Milan, Italy, April 8 – 13, at Emeco’s Stand Hall 20, E09. The Japanese concept of ‘su’ comes from traditional Japanese culture, and means simple, plain, minimal. Nendo brought the design aesthetic of ‘SU’ to the collaboration with Emeco, along with the name, for the Emeco SU Collection.

Nendo reimagines the Navy Chair to create new stool for Emeco

The SU Collection features precise engineering and the use of new, surprising eco-conscious materials. SU has “Emeco bones” the iconic seat of Emeco chairs made since 1944, and is made of reclaimed and recycled materials discovered through ongoing exploration of eco-conscious resources. SU seats come in three new material choices, all of which demonstrate a more environmentally conscious way of doing things, using responsibly selected alternatives of some traditional materials.

Nendo reimagines the Navy Chair to create new stool for Emeco

Solid reclaimed oak seats have been sourced from old architecture in the U.S.A., and carved into the Emeco seat by Amish craftsmen in Pennsylvania. Every piece is unique with signs of its past life. Eco- Concrete seats are made of Green-Concrete, a revolutionary concept that can replace the energy-consuming traditional concrete used in architecture. Emeco’s eco-concrete SU seat consists of 50% recycled glass bottles and CSA (calcium sulfoaluminate cement) that takes much less energy to make.

Nendo reimagines the Navy Chair to create new stool for Emeco

Recycled Polyethylene seats, made of 75% postindustrial and 25% post consumer content, and shaped into the SU seat through rotation molding, come in three timeless colour options – red, flint grey and dark charcoal grey. Emeco’s traditional material, recycled aluminium is used to make SU legs with either natural or black anodized finish. Reclaimed oak, as used in the seat, is another choice for the legs.

Nendo reimagines the Navy Chair to create new stool for Emeco

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Bar stool by Aurélien Barbry features multiple footrests to fit any user

Bar stool by Aurélien Barbry features multiple footrests to fit any user

This barstool designed by Aurélien Barbry allows people of different heights to sit comfortably thanks to footrests positioned at various heights.

Bar stool by Aurélien Barbry features multiple footrests to fit any user

Copenhagen designer Aurelien Barbry created the prototype by joining together six rectangular frames made from bent strips of steel, with a seventh circular frame as the base.

Bar stool by Aurélien Barbry features multiple footrests to fit any user

The structure is divided into three vertical sections each made from two pieces, creating footrests where they meet.

Bar stool by Aurélien Barbry features multiple footrests to fit any user

The designer deliberately made the pieces of steel for each side different lengths so that the supports will occur at different heights.

One side features a footrest three quarters of the way down the stool, another is positioned halfway and the last one a quarter of the way down.

Bar stool by Aurélien Barbry features multiple footrests to fit any user

“The three foot rests make this barstool usable by everyone, adults or children, and lets you place your legs as you want,” said Barbry.

The resulting structure is then capped by a thin piece of black plywood to create the seat.

Bar stool by Aurélien Barbry features multiple footrests to fit any user

At present the stool is still a prototype, but is available on request.

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Furniture made from waste tiles by Tsuyoshi Hayashi

Cologne 2014: Eindhoven designer Tsuyoshi Hayashi has used discarded roof tiles to create curving seats for a series of stools and benches (+ slideshow).

Furniture made from waste tiles by Tsuyoshi Hayashi

Hayashi gathered the traditional kawara tiles from a factory in Takahama, a city in Japan with a long history of producing the curved roof tiles from local clay.

Furniture made from waste tiles by Tsuyoshi Hayashi

Across Japan, a five percent rate of kawara tiles being damaged during production results in more than 65,000 pieces being sent to landfill every year.

Furniture made from waste tiles by Tsuyoshi Hayashi

Hayashi cuts off the chipped or cracked parts of the damaged tiles and fixes them to a wooden frame that he designed to fit the standardised shape so no nails or glue are required for assembly.

Furniture made from waste tiles by Tsuyoshi Hayashi

“The smooth curved shape [of the tiles] invites people to sit and it keeps one’s posture straight ergonomically,” Hayashi told Dezeen.

The designer added that the processes used to manufacture the tiles make them extremely durable and weatherproof so they can be used outdoors.

Furniture made from waste tiles by Tsuyoshi Hayashi

“Japanese roof tiles are fired in more than 1200 degrees [Celsius], which makes them harder than the ones in Europe, which are mostly fired at around 800 degrees,” said Hayashi. “A single chair can support a person weighing up to 120 kilograms.”

Furniture made from waste tiles by Tsuyoshi Hayashi

Other properties that attracted Hayashi to seek out a new function for these redundant objects included the variety of textures and colours that are produced.

Furniture made from waste tiles by Tsuyoshi Hayashi

“Smoked roof tiles gives an ageing texture to the surface, and colours are created continuously by glazing companies as waste material after they showed them to the clients,” said the designer.

Furniture made from waste tiles by Tsuyoshi Hayashi

The wooden frames can be constructed as single pieces or combined to create long benches with legs of different heights.

Furniture made from waste tiles by Tsuyoshi Hayashi

Hayashi graduated from Design Academy Eindhoven last year and opened his own studio in the city in December. He is working on projects that explore potential uses for various waste materials from factories in Europe and Japan.

Furniture made from waste tiles by Tsuyoshi Hayashi

“My biggest wish is to collaborate with factories in each country and apply my design principle to propose unique value and locality of waste material,” said Hayashi.

Furniture made from waste tiles by Tsuyoshi Hayashi

The Kawara project was exhibited as part of the [D3] Design Talents exhibition at imm cologne.

This year’s [D3] Contest was won by a storage rail based on a traditional Shaker-style peg board. Imm cologne continues until Sunday at the Koelnmesse exhibition centre.

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by Tsuyoshi Hayashi
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Wooden stool with a gaping mouth stores a magazine within its seat

Montreal designer Loïc Bard has created a wooden stool to add to his collection of furniture with gaping mouths that store magazines inside the top.

Andy Stool by Loic Bard

A single magazine can be stored within the thin curved lip of the Andy stool seat.

Andy Stool by Loic Bard

“This new furniture follows the organic shape of my previous creations,” said Bard, who has also created a coffee table in a similar style.

Andy Stool by Loic Bard

His collection was influenced by his childhood memories of a trip to Japan: “I designed this [furniture] while remembering the sober atmosphere, the simplicity of the utensils and the rustic environment of the tea ceremony.”

Andy Stool by Loic Bard

Three tapered round legs support the irregular-shaped seat, which comes in maple wood finished with natural oil or stained darker colours.

Andy Stool by Loic Bard

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Studio Visit: Martin Björnson: Playful furniture from a Swedish designer at the heart of Malmö’s emerging scene

Studio Visit: Martin Björnson


Recently in Malmö for The Conference, we took the time to visit local designer Martin Björnson in his studio workshop. Björnson’s Bobbin stool has received a lot of design recognition this year,…

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Poke Stool by Kyuhyung Cho for Innermost

London Design Festival 2013: these round stools by Stockholm designer Kyuhyung Cho can be stacked thanks to a ring of holes around the edge of each seat.

Poke Stool by Kyuhyung Cho for Innermost

Kyuhyung Cho designed the Poke Stool for British brand Innermost. It features four round legs and has eight holes in the seat. When not in use, the legs can be poked through the holes of another stool.

Poke Stool by Kyuhyung Cho for Innermost

“The twist of each stool added creates a rhythm as the stack grows higher,” said Cho.

Poke Stool by Kyuhyung Cho for Innermost

“The composition of different colours and variations to the rhythm lead us create our own structure, like a geometric sculpture,” he added.

Poke Stool by Kyuhyung Cho for Innermost

The stools are available from Innermost in black, white, natural wood, red, yellow, green and blue. They are made from laquered timber and are 44 centimetres in height.

Poke Stool by Kyuhyung Cho for Innermost

The Poke stool was launched in Paris at design tradeshow Maison&Objet and at designjunction during London Design Festival.

Poke Stool by Kyuhyung Cho for Innermost

Here’s a short film from Innermost:

We’ve also recently published a feature about Cho’s gravity-defying coat stand that has a hovering metal ring keeping four diagonal sticks from crashing to the ground.

Poke Stool by Kyuhyung Cho for Innermost

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

Photographs are courtesy of Innermost.

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The Simple Things by Sara Mellone

These aluminium stools and benches by design graduate Sara Mellone are designed to look like folded pieces of paper.

The Simple Things by Sara Mellone

The Simple Things, Sara Mellone‘s graduate project from the University of Applied Sciences Düsseldorf, comprises pieces of furniture made from 2.5-millimetre sheets of aluminium that have each been folded four times.

The Simple Things by Sara Mellone

The process of bending the lightweight aluminium gives the furniture strength and ensures that the stools and benches have a stable footing.

The Simple Things by Sara Mellone

“The simple shape of the double fold creates enough strength to build a bench that is three times longer then the stool,” says Mellone.

The Simple Things by Sara Mellone

Both designs can be manufactured without any offcuts and don’t require any additional parts for assembly.

The Simple Things by Sara Mellone

Mellone has also created a version finished with a white powder coating, which protects the surface from fingerprints and scratches.

The Simple Things by Sara Mellone

Other benches we’ve featured in recent months include a wavy plastic seat by Ron Arad, and a bench by Zaha Hadid modelled on a block of ice.

See all our stories about benches »
See all our stories about stools »

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Sparkle by Tokujin Yoshioka for Kartell

Milan 2013: Japanese designer Tokujin Yoshioka presented plastic furniture that resembles cut-crystal glasses for Italian brand Kartell at the Salone Internazionale del Mobile last week.

Sparkle by Tokujin Yoshioka for Kartell

The Sparkle stool and side table by Tokujin Yoshioka have ridges that gently curve around the sides and fan out across the tops, giving the furniture a twisted appearance.

“Sparkle shines by refraction of light from the prism effect like a crystal glass,” says Yoshioka.

Sparkle by Tokujin Yoshioka for Kartell

Kartell is famous for plastic products and also launched a sofa by Philippe Starck that’s the largest single-piece injection moulding in the world on its stand at the Salone Internazionale del Mobile. See all our stories about plastic furniture by Kartell.

Yoshioka meanwhile is known for transparent objects and has previously created a see-through armchair and set of almost invisible tables for Kartell, plus an installation with hundreds of transparent plastic sticks. See all our stories about design by Tokujin Yoshioka.

See all our stories about design at Milan 2013 »

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