upcycling (verb)
reusing discarded objects or materials to create a product of higher quality or value than the original
have you ever updated your interior by reupholstering or refinishing your furniture?
do you think that reusing antique or vintage furnishings is a component of green design?
some of the most innovative contemporary furniture designers are reinventing, rethinking, and repurposing worn or broken materials or objects to create eco-conscious furnishings.
i first heard about
bokja while my husband, bob, and i were living in london. in 2000,
bokja began
upcycling mid-century modern furniture by
reupholstering it in antique or vintage
levant or
silk road textiles or tapestries.
could this beirut design duo have inspired the current craze for
ikat and
suzani textiles?
left: bokja | scrambled egg chair
right: bokja | eames chair
photo credits bokja
instead of vintage textiles,
james plumb is
rejuvenating broken and abandoned furniture by removing the upholstery and replacing it with cast concrete cushions.
to symbolize the marriage of the materials, the british husband and wife design team named the works after wedding vows, like
to love and to cherish,
to have and to hold, or
for richer for poorer.
do you think that
restoration hardware discovered
james plumb before designing their deconstructed furniture collection?
james plumb | armchairs and sofa | to love and to cherish | concrete stitches series
photo credit new york times
james plumb and
bokja are both represented by one of my favorite design destinations,
spazio rossana orlandi, a gallery and store in milan that promotes some of the most innovative contemporary furniture designers, such as
studio tord boontje, piet hein eek, fernando + humberto campana, and
maarten baas.
left: studio toord boonje | rough and ready chair
right: piet hein eek | scrapwood wallpaper
photo credits studio tord boontje (left) and piet hein eek (right)
and, the
campana brothers and
maarten baas created their
sushi and
hey, chair... collections by
repurposing discarded fabric and furniture.
left: fernando + humberto campana | sushi chair | 2002
right: maarten baas | hey, chair, be a bookshelf! | white
even
hermes, the luxest of luxury brands, is
upcycling.
their
petit h creative lab, established in 2009,
recreates one of a kind objects from leftover or imperfect materials. so, an imperfectly stitched kelly handbag becomes a clock, an imperfectly molded vase becomes a pair of bookends, or an imperfectly printed silk scarf becomes the 'veneer' for a chest of drawers.
petit h is so exclusive that it is only available at
hermes boutiques during traveling flash sales.
have you started upcycling, yet?
click here to read 'next best thing', an article about upcycling by lucia van der post in the 7 july 2012 how to spend it magazine section of the financial times newspaper.