Extruded Clay Stool by Max Ceprack

With a result reminding me of a now popular technique of manipulating concrete cloth material, Max Ceprack, a student at the Holon Institute of Technology in Israel, researched and pioneered a process in clay extrusion:

For this purpose, I built two pneumatic extruders (for two different die sizes) that push clay through the die. The Semiindustrial process enabled me to manipulate the material, with never-before-seen precision and  complexity. I chose to express the result of my research process in a new design for a stool. The final result is inspired by the material culture of the Middle East so as to express time and place.

Via designboom.com

Cousin Chair by Meghan O’Halloran

Cousin Chair by Meghan O’Halloran
Cousin Chair by Meghan O’Halloran Side

Meghan O’Halloran asked our attention for her work. With pleasure we feature this elegant Cousin Chair.

Meghan O’Halloran was trained as an architect at Cornell University in Ithaca NY. Before becoming immersed in high quality home goods, she worked at KPF London, Santiago Calatrava NYC, Architectural Record NYC, Arup Shanghai. She is 27 and has lived in Rome, Milan, London, Shanghai, New York, Ithaca, and San Francisco, learning new languages wherever possible.

Outline Chair by Michael Samoriz

Outline Chair by Michael Samoriz
Outline Chair by Michael Samoriz Filled in

Intrigued by Julia’s post Outline Chair by Sebastian Errazuriz, I became even more intrigued when I found a second Outline Chair and want to share it with you before I share the Inline Chair I promised to find you.

I think this is an elegant chair and I prefer it without the fill in side panels.

Michael Samoriz is an Ukraine based designer.

Via Behance

One Legged Stool by Andrew Kopp

And one more design from Andrew Kopp I just had to post about – the One Legged Stool. How would you use one?

Andrew Kopp’s Benches

Concept Bench
Shell Bench
Shell Bench, side view

More successful designs from Andrew Kopp: Concept Bench, Shell Bench and a Museum Bench.

RISD Museum Bench

The Museum Bench is made of white ash and patina steel and has been recently purchased by RISD Museum for use as a public seating at their new ancient gallery area. The RISD Museum Bench‘s dimensions are: 48” x 17” x 17”.

Found via design-milk.com