Soft side tables by Curtis Popp

SOFT Side table by Curtis Popp

Californian designer Curtis Popp has made a series of round side tables with colourful powder-coated steel legs that pierce each table top.

SOFT Side table by Curtis Popp

Called Soft collection, the tables are made of solid rift-sawn white oak or walnut wood.

SOFT Side table by Curtis Popp

Each piece is handmade and customised according to the customer’s choice of colour and material.

SOFT Side table by Curtis Popp

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SOFT Side table by Curtis Popp

The following is from the designer:


The SOFT Side table is part of the SOFT series of furniture designed by Curtis Popp.

The language of the entire collection is approachable and whimsical without the loss of sophistication or elegance. The table is constructed of powder-coated steel with solid rift sawn white oak or black walnut coated in a durable conversion varnish finish. Each table is made to order and by hand, so it can be customized in a myriad of colors. Each piece is manufactured and assembled locally by Sacramento fabricators and carpenters.

Table specifications 18” dia x 18” h


See also:

.

Missing Pieces
by Rupert McKelvie
Roll table
by Tom Dixon
Rubber Table
by Thomas Schnur

Champions by Konstantin Grcic at Gallerie Kreo

Champions by Konstantin Grcic at Gallerie Kreo

Indistrial designer Konstantin Grcic presents these tables painted to look like Formula 1 cars at Gallerie Kreo in Paris.

Champions by Konstantin Grcic at Gallerie Kreo

Called Champions, the aluminium trestle tables are lacquered with graphics inspired by sports equipment.

Champions by Konstantin Grcic at Gallerie Kreo

Each has a round or rectangular glass top.

Champions by Konstantin Grcic at Gallerie Kreo

The exhibition continues until 23 July.

Champions by Konstantin Grcic at Gallerie Kreo

Watch an interview with Konstantin Grcic on our movie site Dezeen Screen »

Champions by Konstantin Grcic at Gallerie Kreo

More about Konstantin Grcic on Dezeen »

Champions by Konstantin Grcic at Gallerie Kreo

Photography is by Fabrice Gousset, courtesy of Galérie kreo.

The following details are from Gallerie Kreo:


KONSTANTIN GRCIC Champions

“I want the tables to appear like they are Formula 1 cars lined up on the starting grid of a race track,” Konstantin Grcic says, standing in his studio space in Munich on a spring morning in 2011, a time we’ve set aside to discuss six new tables produced for his exhibition, ‘‘Champions’’, at Galerie kreo in Paris.

Champions by Konstantin Grcic at Gallerie Kreo

We are flicking through a thick dossier of print-outs of computer renderings of the new table bases – aluminium trestle-like constructions with either circular or rectangular glass surfaces. The dossier details the various stages of the rigorous research and design process: the structural designs, the graphic logos, the colours, and the numerous fonts that have all been tried out.

Champions by Konstantin Grcic at Gallerie Kreo

As we continue our conversation, Grcic’s eyes move to a sleek black ski pole propped up against a bookshelf; he reaches out for it. Lettering runs up and down the stick: the larger lettering reads ‘Salomon’, while the smaller insists this is ‘High Performance’ equipment. “After all, it’s not such a leap between these two things,” Grcic remarks, holding the black ski stick next to the leg of the table, a black version of table_ONE (2005). “What I particularly like is how the graphics on sports equipment refers to performance,” Grcic continues. “They create the illusion that the object with them is faster or more powerful than the one without. The graphics on the six tables are fake – totally made up.”

Champions by Konstantin Grcic at Gallerie Kreo

Cutting across these two references from the world of sport, comes Grcic’s memory of a 1994 Jean Prouvé exhibition at the Galerie Jousse Seguin in Paris. Turning the pages of a Prouve monograph, Grcic stops at an archive image of the exhibition and elaborates on how the table tops were hung flat against the walls with the table legs protruding out into the narrow room.

Champions by Konstantin Grcic at Gallerie Kreo

Grcic’s designs for the new tables are loosely derived from the juxtaposition of these two disparate sources: the world of Formula 1 racing cars and sports equipment on the one side and that of Prouvé on the other. By staging the disjunction that exists between the anonymous designs of the sports world and a signature design by Prouvé, Grcic reshuffles the otherwise static relationship between the high and low in the product design world.

Champions by Konstantin Grcic at Gallerie Kreo

One of the early problems encountered during the research and design process for the new tables was how to ensure the graphics didn’t feel extraneous to their design – i.e., to ensure that the three-dimensional and the two-dimensional vocabularies productively interrelated. This objective was achieved by rejecting the transfer foils that are routinely used in sports equipment and instead opting to collaborate with the highly revered lacquerer, Walter Maurer, who worked directly with Andy Warhol and Frank Stella in Germany on their art cars for BMW in the mid-1970s.

Champions by Konstantin Grcic at Gallerie Kreo

The way Maurer painstakingly builds a graphic language up by using many layers of paint is crucial. The graphic vocabulary seems as if it’s embedded into the aluminium tables, like a series of inlays. “The lacquerer technique is old school – I wanted to achieve the same level of quality found in an old lacquered Chinese box,” Grcic affirms.

Champions by Konstantin Grcic at Gallerie Kreo

Received wisdom has it that Grcic inherits the legacy of the product designers Marcel Breuer and Dieter Rams from the pre and post-war periods respectively. But this smooth lineage is too simplistic to really hold since it fails to take into account Grcic’s flexible way of responding to even the tightest briefs within the context of industrial product design. In fact, with these new tables, it’s as if Grcic sets out to deliberately refute the lineage pinned on him, introducing a playful graphic vocabulary thoroughly alien to the functionalist designs of Breuer and Rams.

Champions by Konstantin Grcic at Gallerie Kreo

By transferring the precision that derives from the research and design process from his industrial product designs to these new gallery bound tables, Grcic has been able to question these two genealogies central to the history of product design: of Prouve, Breuer and Rams with their strict principles and geometries on the one hand, and Studio Alchimia and Memphis, with their panoply of ersatz decorative signs and playfully Pop shapes on the other. Instead of just being a tautological game, this is nothing less than a speculative design process aimed at generating a vocabulary of product design for the future.

Champions by Konstantin Grcic at Gallerie Kreo

Exhibition: Galerie Kreo from June 11, 2011 to July 23, 2011
Opening: Saturday, June 11, 2011 from 4:00 pm to 8:00 pm Opening Hours: from 11:00 am to 7:00 pm


See also:

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Waver
by Konstantin Grcic
Teepee and Kanu
by Konstantin Grcic
Table B
by Konstantin Grcic

Missing Pieces by Rupert McKelvie

Missing Pieces by Rupert McKelvie

UK designer Rupert McKelvie has assembled a table using thousands of pieces from jigsaw puzzles.

Missing Pieces by Rupert McKelvie

Called Missing Pieces, it was made by hand from puzzles with missing pieces.

Missing Pieces by Rupert McKelvie

Photographs are by James Forshall.

Missing Pieces by Rupert McKelvie

The information below is from Rupert McKelvie:


Missing Pieces

Hand constructed from thousands of Jigsaw pieces over hundreds of hours, Jigsaw sets with missing pieces were used to construct this table. The piece explores the concept of taking something that is incomplete and completing it in a new and functional form.

Rupert McKelvie is a U.K based designer. Having trained as a classical boat builder he now runs a furniture design studio in the heart of Dartmoor, Devon.


See also:

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Roll table by
Tom Dixon
Pond tables
by Nendo
SP-7 Dining Table
by Schwab/Panther

Roll table by Tom Dixon

Rolling table by Tom Dixon

British designer Tom Dixon has added a small wheel to a standard cafe table design to make it easier for staff to move around. 

Rolling table by Tom Dixon

The base is made of cast iron while the solid birch top has a rubber bumper round its edge.

Rolling table by Tom Dixon

Dixon presented the design at his show in Milan in April. See all our stories about Milan 2011 »

Rolling table by Tom Dixon

More about Tom Dixon on Dezeen »

Rolling table by Tom Dixon

The following is from the designer:


Roll is an example of indestructible mechanical practicality. A series of hard working tables specifically constructed to ease the workers’ burden. The rolling wheel on the cast iron base enables lone waiting staff to reconfigure tables with minimal fuss and assistance.

The robust bumper edge trim, extruded in rubber, allows tables to be grouped together and withstand the hard knocks of life.


See also:

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Flame
by Tom Dixon 2
Pond
by Nendo
FALT.series
by Tim Mackerodt

Join Table by DING3000

Join Table by DING3000

Based on a Japanese puzzle, the legs of this table by German design studio DING3000 knot together to create support for the blue glass tabletop.

Join Table by DING3000

As the legs interlock in the centre, the table can be assembled and dismantled without tools.

Join Table by DING3000

The project accompanies the Join cutlery set, which has the same assembly method (see our earlier story).

Join Table by DING3000

More projects by DING3000 on Dezeen »
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These details are from the designer:


JOIN table

The inspiration for the table-top support of JOIN TABLE was an ancient Japanese game.

Three legs can be fitted into each other without any tools by means of the simple but enigmatic principle of the devils knot and merge to one mysterious object.

Join Table by DING3000 5

JOIN table is the big brother to our cutlery JOIN, which is based on the same principle.

Materials: Oak (untreated), colour stained/smoked glass
Size: WxHxD  750 x 400 x 750 mm

Join Table by DING3000 5

JOIN table travels as a part of the “Design Deutschland 2011″ exhibition – curated by the German Design Council – from the FuoriSalone in Milan to the ICFF in New York and finally to the Business of Design Week in Hong Kong.

Tour dates:
– Milan, FuoriSalone, Spazio Carrozzeria, Via Tortona. 12-17 April 2011
– New York, ICFF International Contemporary Furniture Fair, 14-17 May 2011
– Hong Kong, Business of Design Week, 1-3 December 2011


See also:

.

Join by DING3000New Standard Table
by Fredrik Paulsen
6×3 Burr Puzzle Table
by Petar Zaharinov

Shrine Flat-table by Sschemata Architecture Office

Shrine Flat-table by Schemata Architecture Office

Japanese designer Jo Nagasaka of Sschemata Architecture Office presented this series of wooden tables with fluorescent resin encasing their gouged-out tops at Spazio Rossana Orlandi in Milan last month.

Shrine Flat-table by Schemata Architecture Office

Called Shrine Flat-table, the piece is based on a traditional Japanese design with eight legs.

Shrine Flat-table by Schemata Architecture Office

The colour of the resin is more or less intense depending on the varying depths of the wood across its surface.

Shrine Flat-table by Schemata Architecture Office

More about Sschemata Architecture Office on Dezeen »

Shrine Flat-table by Schemata Architecture Office

See all our stories about Milan 2011 »

Shrine Flat-table by Schemata Architecture Office

The information below is from Jo Nagasaka:


Flat Table peeled

The Shrine Flat-table is a contemporary interpretation of the traditional Japanese Hassoku dai, which means 8 legged table. The top of the Shrine Table can be separated from its legs.

In addition to the traditional table we added a layer of coloured epoxy poured on a wooden surface which grain had been gushed out to create different depth and by doing so various intensity in colour.

Shrine Flat-table comes in 3 Heights with the following dimensions: 750×300 (top) and total height of 540, 720 or 900mm.


See also:

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Long Chair by
Jo Nagasaka
Bench2 by
Jo Nagasaka
Paco by
Jo Nagasaka

Plug-In by MAP Studio

Plug-In by MAP Studio

MAP Studios of Madrid have designed this table with an integrated mirror, vase and candle sticks.

Plug-In by MAP Studio

Called Plug-In, the table features hand-crafted ceramic items which are removable but unable to stand up on their own.

Plug-In by MAP Studio

The following is from the designer:


Plug-in by MAP Studio

Symbiosis is any relationship between individuals of different species where both individuals derive a benefit.

Plug-In by MAP Studio

This concept is the basis of this project, which consists on a collection of objects that need furniture to hold them, in such a way that the furniture gets a new identity.

Plug-In by MAP Studio

Nowadays the world is getting more and more homogeneous. In commerce, multinational companies have monopolized the market thanks to their low prizes.

Plug-In by MAP Studio

Who doesn´t have a bookcase with a Swedish name? For many people, the way of being different, could be to transform their furniture by using these pieces.

Plug-In by MAP Studio

With this project I pretend to involve people in the creative process by using very simple procedures, and always achieving unique results.

Plug-In by MAP Studio

Mirrors, vases and candle holders fit in and on the furniture, becoming part of it.

Plug-In by MAP Studio

Plug-In by MAP Studio


See also:

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Trestle by
TAF
Carousel by
Adam Goodrum
The Trestle by
Bénédicte de Lescure

FildeFer

Take your armchair outside with this clever riff on lawn furniture
FildeFer2.jpg

Italian furniture designer Alessandra Baldereschi‘s work, while often surreal and usually ironic, is always completely functional. A moss chair lends a modernist form to an earthy material; a glass whale engulfs an indifferent fish. In her 2011 collection for Italian contemporary design company Skitsch shown recently at, Baldereschi gives the humble lawn chair a hefty dose of whimsy.

FildeFer1.jpg

The FildeFer collection, practical, nostalgic and a little tongue-in-cheek, uses slim iron rods to deftly draw outlines of plush upholstery. Currently available in-store or by phone from Skitsch, it comes in gray, green, blue or white.


Pond by Nendo for Moroso

Pond by Nendo for Moroso

Milan 2011: in Milan this week Italian brand Moroso launch this set of low tables by Japanese designers Nendo, where a mirrored lower shelf reveals the patterned underside of the table top.

Pond by Nendo for Moroso

Called Pond, the clusters of mirrored surfaces are each supported on three thin metal legs.

Pond by Nendo for Moroso

The project is on show at at the Salone Internazionale del Mobile until 17 April.

Pond by Nendo for Moroso

See all our stories about Milan 2011 »

Pond by Nendo for Moroso

More about Moroso on Dezeen »
More about Nendo on Dezeen »

The information below is from Moroso:


Pond – design by Nendo
The narcissist low table.

Pond illustrates the seductive mystery of an image reflected in a mirror. The idea of a pond as seen in the table’s round shape and in its inspiration which reveals the silence of Nature, the hush of the woods and the trees in bloom reflected inside it.

The table has a simple structure: three rods raise and separate two tabletops, one decorated and upside down, the other a mirror that expands the table’s heigh and depth. But the idea behind this design conceals a particularly fascinating design study.

In fact Pond embodies the dualism of right and reverse as a symbol of nature/earth (light and dark( and of reflected images (which reproduce but are also projected) within a reciprocal relationship involving an enigmatic vision of space and an aesthetic recreated in the decoration.

Available in painted steel, the Pond low table is the perfect addition to any interior.


See also:

.

Transparent Collection by
Nendo
Bamboo-steel chair by
Nendo
Wire-chair by
Nendo

Carousel by Adam Goodrum

Carousel by Adam Goodrum

Australian designer Adam Goodrem has designed this console table with colourful lacquered-steel legs that pierce  the table top.

Carousel by Adam Goodrum

Called Carousel, the table features three circles of coloured dots where the ends of the steel rods emerge from the table’s surface.

Carousel by Adam Goodrum

The console will be on show at the Galerie Gossarez during the Pavillon des Arts et du Design in Paris this month.

Carousel by Adam Goodrum

More furniture on Dezeen»

The following is from the gallery:


Famous Australian designer Adam Goodrum gives us a contemporary restyling of the period Louis XVI console, by revisiting its codes for our greatest pleasure:

  • Corian, the early 21st century noble material par excellence replaces mahogany
  • The table top takes the form of the characteristic half moon shape
  • The fluted legs are figured by multicoloured lacquered steel rods.

These rods project joyful spots onto the immaculate tabletop and form three elegant and colourful rounds that evoke the Carousels of our childhood, thereby giving their name to our console.

According to Adam Goodrum, Carousel uses the juxtaposition of the colourful vertical elements with the planar geometry of the tabletop to show the transition from the playfulness of childhood to the practicality necessary in everyday life.

Edition galerie Gosserez limitée à 12 exemplaires + 1 prototype

H : 76 cm -W : 110 cm -D : 48 cm


See also:

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Shrub by
Zhili Liu
Pylon by Abrahamsson and
Fagerström for Nola
Furniture by
Axel Bjurström