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Ono Chair by Matthias Weber for Swiss chair manufacturer Dietiker.

Plain and nevertheless independent: the solid wood chair Ono has more to offer than dynamic, timeless design. Thanks to the low weight and its stackability – which one does not see at first glance – it is suitable for object seating as well as for the private realm. The Ono is even more unmistakable but just as practical as an armrest chair. Both versions are optionally available in beech, oak and American walnut as well as optionally with seat cushions for even more comfort.

About Matthias Weber

Matthias Weber, born 1973 in Zurich, completed an apprenticeship as a mechanic before he studied industrial design at the Zurich University of Arts (ZHdK). After his education he worked as an industrial designer with Haeberli Marchand Product Development (Zurich), with Gebrüder Thonet GmbH (Frankenberg) and with Christophe Marchand Product Development (Zurich). In 2004, he switched to the agency from Hannes Wettstein in order to take care of the furniture design projects there. Together with the star designer he developed furniture for national and international clients such as Accademia, Fiam Italia and Eric Jorgensen. Many of the team’s works have been awarded a price. Among other things, Weber created the Ono solid wood chair for Dietiker. Since Wettstein’s death in July 2008 Matthias Weber heads the furniture and product department at Studio Hannes Wettstein as chief of design.

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A green chair manufacturer is Philippines based Passad. They put together tiny chips of wood of the Gmelina tree which grows abundantly in the Philippines and hand craft them into sculptural furniture like this Easy Lounge chair

Via Christopher Adach .

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I found this nice photo by Jouko Lehtola in one of the NY Times blogs T Magazine Blog coined as Well Dressed Chair.

Actually it is a reissued Tank Chair by Alver Aalto to commemorate the 75th anniversary of Artek, the company that Alver co-founded, .

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Vitra introduced Chairless, a sitting strap only, designed by Chilean architect Alejandro Aravena at Salone.

Aravena was inspired by a similar sitting strap commonly used by the Ayoreo Indians living in the border region between Paraguay and Bolivia. A portion of the proceeds from Chairless will go to the non-profit Foundation for Paraguayan Indian Communities, for support of the Ayoreo Indians.

Via Cool Hunting

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At least for me this is a good example how social media work:

  • I’m browsing the site of chair manufacturer Vitra.
  • There I find the photo that a fan, De Pauw from Florida, has send to Vitra upon a request from Vitra.
  • I recognized it to be a Van Severen chair.
  • I’m already a huge fan of Maarten Van Severen.
  • I check the site for more details about the chair (maybe I can publish about it here).
  • Find a nice photo of the chaise itself:

But then I also see this photo:

And you know what? It’s multi functional: As a recliner and as a daybed and for use indoors and outdoors!

So I’m sold. On the basis of these three photos I believe I have to have this multi-functional chaise for my terrace…

My next Work In Progress is trying to copy and paste the photo in a photo of my terrace and then find an opportunity to look at the chair in real life.

I have put it on my Vitra Wish List……even while I don’t know the price yet…

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This photo from a post at Design Paris



The bottom of the seat reads:

When you recycle a plastic bottle, you’re doing something good. When you recycle 111 of them, you’re doing something great!

Firsts Emeco went nude, then they went light, then wood and now they are going red…err green:

Do Drink 111 Coca Cola Pet Bottles empty and bring them to Emeco who will use them for 60% of their reincarnated 111 Navy Chair. On Show in Milan Next week

Emeco:

After four years of work, we have created a new Navy Chair made of 111 recycled plastic PET bottles (about 65% post consumer content). We designed The 111 Navy Chair ® to have the attributes of the original aluminum version – super strong, durable and comfortable, but now its also warm, colorful and about half the price of the aluminum one (195₤). We expect to use about 3,000,000 plastic beverage bottles each year in production, which will start in June 2010.

Via David Report, a post that happened to disappear, but still remained readable in a Feed Reader.

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Regular readers know I’m a huge fan of Maarten van Severen who passed away much to early in 2005.

Oops! I’ve had to change some posts here, because I had misspelled Maarten van Severen’s name. My first mistake was that I believed that his name was Van Seventer, then I thought it was Van Sevener….all wrong. I believe the reason was the wrong connotation it has with the Dutch word Zeveren, which means so much as nag or moan. Sorry Maarten. Anyway I pinched this photo from the Vitra site which is getting better and better nowadays while they use less and less flash…

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I featured Emeco’s Tuyomyo Bench by Frank Gehry earlier, but got a special from Emeco after I had asked for a photo of Frank Gehry and Emeco’s owner together on the Tuyomyo Bench. That was published in a Wallpaper* issue of last year. Alas it was copyrighted, but now I have a second best: The Tuyomyo Bench with the daughter of the owner as a model:-)

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Hot from the e-mail a press release that is well worded albeit dated november 2009:-)

I have a soft spot for Emeco that as a long standing family run Chair Manufacturer tries new venues, be it it in advertising ( see Emeco: An Old Chair Manufacturer Goes Nude) or in chair design.

Therefor the integral Press release here:

Emeco Collaborates with Michael Young on Lancaster, a New Collection

Emeco, The Aluminum Chair Company, will present a new furniture collection by British designer Michael Young at the Salone Internazionale del Mobile, April 14 – 19 in Milan. The collection of stacking chairs, barstools and tables is Emeco’s first foray into component-based design incorporating cast aluminum seats and backs with carved ash-wood legs. The ash-wood components are made by Emeco’s partner, an Amish factory in nearby Lancaster County PA, providing the collection its name, Lancaster.

“I have worked extensively with the aluminum manufacturing process recently, and with some of the best equipped factories in Asia. I was looking at the ways to join other materials with aluminum over the last few years and thinking about a chair, “explained Mr. Young.

“My work with the bicycle manufacturer, Giant, pushed me away from using standard section metal tubing. The sculptural form of the chair leg could only be made in wood. When I found that Emeco has partnered with a remarkable wood factory, the project gelled. It is an immense privilege to work with the Emeco family, I am sincerely proud in a way I have not felt previously. And I do feel the project fits me well with my love for and industrial heritage and what I consider to be the real thing.

I feel passionate about working with natural materials that live for ever; wood and metal are really the materials that connect to the human so there was no question that the richness of their aging processes is a prefect combination I felt would be contrasting in the Emeco collection. I felt that using wood would create a softer edge to a product whilst the aluminum would keep to sophistication and heritage.

For me the new chair was much needed, not as a vanity but as good sold piece of industrial hardware for both domestic and contract markets.”

Lancaster features an indestructible, cast aluminum seat and back in dark anodized and machine polished finishes. The wood legs are available in natural ash-wood and dark stain ash-wood. The chair, which stacks six high, retails starting at €315 ex VAT, and will be available in May 2010.

Michael Young

Born in Sunderland, England in 1966, he studied furniture and product design at Kingston University between 1989 to 1992 . In 1994 Young opened his own studio in London and a second think space in the Icelandic capital, Reykjavik, which became his home for a short while. He has since developed products and furniture for such manufacturers as Cappellini , Magis and Rosenthal, bicycles for Giant, telephones for Native Union , interior projects such as Pissarro restaurant in Hong Kong. In 2006 he relocated his head office to Hong Kong to work with advanced technical industries creating a bridge between global industries employing the office.
He this years Creative Director of 100% Design Shanghai and Asian Aerospace events .

Emeco

Emeco was founded in 1944 to make all-aluminum chairs for the US Navy. Gregg Buchbinder purchased the company in 1998 and began a friendship and association with the renowned French architect, Philippe Starck, creating a series of products that united Emeco’s historic manufacturing capabilities with Mr. Starck’s classic designs for a new century. In 2000, Mr. Starck’s Hudson chair for Emeco won the GOOD DESIGN Award and was inducted into the permanent design collection of the Museum of Modern Art in New York.

In 2004, Emeco collaborated with the American architect Frank Gehry on Superlight, a chair that utilizes aluminum’s ability to be both strong and flexible. Mr. Gehry’s chair won another GOOD DESIGN award in 2004 and was included in collections at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art and the Pinakothek der Modern in Munich. In 2007 Emeco’s collaboration with Norman Foster “20-06” debuted at the Salone Internazionale del Mobile and won another GOOD DESIGN award, as well as a 2007 Spark Design Award. Emeco launched the Nine-O collection by Ettore Sottsass – the last design by Mr. Sottsass who died in 2007 at the age of 90, and Morgans, a chair designed by Andrée Putman for the Morgans hotel renovation in New York.

From a workforce of 15 craftsmen in 1998, Emeco has quadrupled its size and recently instated a second manufacturing shift for the first time in 25 years. Emeco has made over 1,000,000 1006 Navy® chairs since 1944 and now sells its all-aluminum furniture in 50 countries.

Thank you Dan Fogelson

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Via Cribcandy and contemporist I found this in my view new interpretation of a Chesterfield sofa, the Sofa Ruche by Inga Sempe for Ligne Roset

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