diy: the future of cardboard

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Little did I know, the world of cardboard furniture goes deep. Gehry led the field with his first line of cardboard furniture:

http://www.inhabitat.com/2006/10/05/curvy-corregated-cardboard-chair/

But he wasn’t the last apparently. I have found several links to companies that design lines of all cardboard furniture. The Swedish company Retur makes their business on all types of cardboard furniture. Finely crafted cardboard furniture. Expensive cardboard furniture.

                 http://www.returdesign.se/

                 and a video of one of the bad boys being assembled:

                 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZrbGHG8uyFU&NR=1

And this Swiss architect,  Nicola Enrico Stäubli volunteers his designs and patterns for whomever is interested. Unfortunately, the downloaded pattern and instruction was 54 PGS LONG! That doesn’t seem very tree friendly. And it looks like they’re only strong enough to hold children. But they’re pretty. :

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                 http://www.foldschool.com

This competition is fairly impressive:

                 http://www.designboom.com/cardboard.html

watch this unfold:

                http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vxD9UuiSAFo&eurl

One of the competition entries : YOC (YOUR OWN CHAIR) #469 by JOHAN CARLSSON was what I first chose to put together. It looked and seemed well designed with functionality in mind.

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                 The pattern seemed straightforward, with just a little bit of measuring to do:

                 yoc_cardboard1.jpg yoc_cardboard2.jpg

                 here’s the process of me putting it together:

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                 Ultimately, it just didn’t stand up. I don’t know if I committed a serious design flaw orif he was using some kind of super powered cardboard. I didn’t feel like it folded easily, closed securely, or felt sturdy.

                 So I decided to try another that looked more stable. And it was. This one was by ILIA MULOSEY # : 467 and folded onto itself as well as using serious layers of reinforcement. I did the test of standing on it like in his picture and it did hold me.

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But this design is less aesthetic and to really keep together, it needed packing tape. And it was also less aesthetic than the previous one. I figured there must be a way to combine Nicola’s folding technique and design aesthetic with Retur’s simplicity and Ilia’s sturdy structure…..

                 more later……..

2 Responses to “diy: the future of cardboard”

  1. Anon Says:

    How the heck do I fold this one up??

  2. craftastic Says:

    The last one that I am sitting on you mean? If so, I just followed what I saw in Design Boom’s cardboard chair competition http://www.designboom.com/cardboard.html by Ilia Mulosey

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