#Flatpack
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SPARKS! The first page Iâve finished for Flatpack even though itâs like half way through the story đ
#queer artist#transgender#transfem#small artist#artists of tumblr#lgbtq#lgbtqia artist#zine#ikea plushies#plushies#blahaj#Flatpack
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Promotional photo of Jonathan Bailey as Flatpack in Campus (2011)
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Flat-pack furniture gets a bad rapâitâs often considered flimsy, poorly-constructed, and cheap in a way that is visually (and actually) unappealing. Ikea, the leader in this field, has made strides towards improving the categoryâs reputation, but the vast popularity (and convenience) of furniture that can be built just as easily as it can be broken down has cleared the way for designers to experiment. In recent years, weâve been tracking the rise of smaller designers putting their own spin on this style. But the best way to see if something is worth it is to try it for yourself. So three Dwell staffers tested out products from three such brandsâStudio Furnis, Unfnshed, and Lucca Houseâto see what all the fuss is about. Studio Furnis Studio Furnis Yankel BookcaseThe YANKEL bookcase assembles quickly and efficiently, requiring no tools and just minutes of your time. Its slender design maximizes storage while taking up minimal space in any setting. H 80" x W 15" x L 10" Itâs no secret that "I found it on Instagram" isnât usually a compliment when it comes to your latest impulse purchase. So youâd be forgiven in thinking that since, as memory strikes, Studio Furnisâs items were brought to our attention from that very platform. When it comes to quality, however, their products are far from what youâd happen upon while idly scrolling. They're designed intentionally for city living, where, according to their website, "apartment living often means constant change," but the furniture made to easily accommodate easy moves is often poorly made. The small, Brooklyn-based team was founded by TomĂĄs Mor in 2023, who leads design and production. Studio Furnis, which has collaborated with Viso, makes it furniture out of Baltic birch wood, and they now offer a small array of bed frames, side tables and chairsâand produce very cool custom pieces as wellâall of which is made to order, and designed to be flatpacked and put together without screws or any tools. Once we arranged the piece Iâd be testingâthe tall, slim, Scandinavian-meets-â70s-undulating-curves bookcase from the NĂŒ collectionâMor offered to drop it off, since their workspace isnât far from my home. Since this is solid wood, the box it came in was long and heavy, but maneuverable. I was hesitant to begin assembly without some assistance; what if I messed it up? The unit came without a manual, so I relied on pausing the video on the website in my quest to put it together. After sliding the shelves into the slots of the two sides-slash-legs of the bookshelf, I realized I had put it together backwards, reversed everything, and was finished. This meant that my process from unpacking to completion took probably five minutes instead of the two and a half it would take someone paying attention. Thatâs literally it. The bookshelf is freestanding, the quality of the wood and the smooth finish extremely satisfying. Thereâs perhaps an expected roughness to furniture this simple, but when done successfully, it can have the level of detail that Studio Furnis has put into these pieces. The entire thing seemed almost too good to be trueâexactly what you want from flatpack furniture. I have no plans to move anytime in the near future, but they now have me wondering if I need a new bed frame. âKate Dries Unfnshed Unfnshed Side TableMeet the Unfnshed Side Table: Your blank canvas for comfort and style. No tools needed, just your imagination. Paint it, stain it, make it yours. Use it as a table, seat, or plant standâthe choice is yours! Top: 12" or 18" Diameter Height: 18" Weight limit: 200 lbs Despite living in an apartment that is already filled with furniture, an occupational hazard is the constant desire for more. Inundated as we are every day with beautiful objects, when a particular item does catch my attentionâand holds itâthen thatâs something worth investigating. Unfnshd is one such company. Their wares held my attention over the course of a couple of nightsâ worth of Instagram scrolling, and, thanks to the algorithm, after clicking on an ad for it just once, my feed was flooded. A corner of my living room desperately "needed" a side tableâsomething petite and narrow but also nice to look atâand Unfnshedâs Side Table fit the bill.According to the website, Unfnhsed was founded by Abdel Ibrahim in 2023; after he realized an earlier prototype of their first product, made from laminated plywood, would be too expensive to produce, he pivoted. The result is a suite of very reasonably-priced furniture made from Baltic birch plywood that is, as the name suggests, unfinishedâa beautiful canvas for creativity, if the wind moves you that way.My little stool arrived in one box and was dead easy to assemble. The stool came in just three partsâthe top and then the bits that form the legsâand slotted together so fast that I was nervous that I did something wrong. And Iâm not surprised to say that I didâlike my colleague Kate, I had inadvertently put the legs on in a way that felt (and was) wrong. I corrected my error, deconstructed and reconstructed the stool a few times to make sure, and then did what I love to do to wooden furniture: painted it.To be clear: the stool did not need the paint, because the material itself is so high-quality, smooth to the touch, and beautiful in its own right. (If you do want to paint or stain your piece, the website offers some simple tutorials for inspiration.)However, I love a project and was briefly obsessed with the idea of an icy, prissy blue side table. So I took matters into my own hands and painted the stoolâs top and just one of the legs, for a subtle moment of contrast. When it came time to reassemble the stool after the paint had dried, I realized my mistake. In my exuberance I painted the part of the legs that slot into the table, which made the pegs thicker than they were before. It was a bit of a struggle to put the stool back together and I did have to really put my back into it in order for the stool to be structurally sound. I did the best I could, cursing my impetuous nature, and put the stool in its place, where it now holds a fake plant.Despite the user error detailed above, I love my stool! The rest of Unfnshedâs offerings are alluring to me, tooâI could always use a bookshelf or a bench or really, any surface upon which to pile things. For right now, though, I am at capacity for furnitureâbut thereâs a rickety Ikea bookshelf in my apartment thatâs fighting for its life. Once it succumbs, I have a vision and this time, I wonât make the same mistake. âMegan ReynoldsLucca House 4x2 ShelfA shelf or storage for any space. Similar to the 5x2, but with an extra shelf in the middle for even more options. Laminated maple ply. Assembles in 1 minute. Exterior 47.5 x 23.5 x 11.5" Interior 10.5 x 15.5 x 12.5" / 16.5 x 15.5 x 12.5â The first thing I notice about the Lucca House 4x2 shelf when it arrives is that itâs lightâimportant if you live in a fifth floor walk-up with crumbling stairs, as I do. The next thing I noticed is that even though itâs light, itâs sturdy. As I unpack it and slot it together, the maple plywood is more resilient than the cheaper particle-board stuff offered by other, larger brands. The pieces slide together tightly, so I have to take a hammer and tap the pieces together (with the protection of an improvised cardboard cushion), but everything holds up. The whole process is very fast, and there are no confusing directions or hex keys to figure out. There is no hardware at all, actually, but itâs still sturdy enough to handle everything Iâve loaded onto it.Visually it fits into my home as easily as it does physically. Iâm not generally a light wood kind of person, but the little strips of color on the edges keep the shelf from going too Scandi-modern. I got the multicolor/Harlequin option, and the colors are muted enough to keep it from feeling childish. It feels distinct without screaming for attention, and I can see myself holding onto it for decades.All this supports the ideas behind Lucca House: that young-ish urbanites are moving every few years and need nice, affordable furniture that they can easily move with them. "We're trying to make it as simple and straightforward as possible," Lucca Houseâs founder, Lucca Zeray, tells me. The shelves are meant to be "idiot-proof" and fill a niche between the usual disposable furniture available elsewhere and the gallery-quality stuff that most 20- and 30-somethings canât afford. Which is not to say that the brand is not sophisticated; Zeray worked previously at Matter, the collectible design gallery in New York, and cites Dutch flatpack furniture from the 1940s as inspiration. Zeray brings that design intelligence to Lucca, which makes everything in house at their shop in Pittsfield, Massachusetts. Though shelves are the companyâs only offering now, he promises more soon, potentially a desk and other kinds of furniture that urban professionals have to tote with them from home to home. Zeray recognizes that there are a bunch of flat-pack design companies out there, but he embraces the company. "I do think a rising tide lifts all ships," he says. "More people making stuff more or less locally is a good thing. I think it will make consumers and make us designers a little bit sharper and more critical of what is being produced and being consumed." So far, Lucca stands up to scrutiny. âJack Balderrama MorleyWe love the products we feature and hope you do, too. If you buy something through a link on the site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Related Reading: Source link
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Flat-pack furniture gets a bad rapâitâs often considered flimsy, poorly-constructed, and cheap in a way that is visually (and actually) unappealing. Ikea, the leader in this field, has made strides towards improving the categoryâs reputation, but the vast popularity (and convenience) of furniture that can be built just as easily as it can be broken down has cleared the way for designers to experiment. In recent years, weâve been tracking the rise of smaller designers putting their own spin on this style. But the best way to see if something is worth it is to try it for yourself. So three Dwell staffers tested out products from three such brandsâStudio Furnis, Unfnshed, and Lucca Houseâto see what all the fuss is about. Studio Furnis Studio Furnis Yankel BookcaseThe YANKEL bookcase assembles quickly and efficiently, requiring no tools and just minutes of your time. Its slender design maximizes storage while taking up minimal space in any setting. H 80" x W 15" x L 10" Itâs no secret that "I found it on Instagram" isnât usually a compliment when it comes to your latest impulse purchase. So youâd be forgiven in thinking that since, as memory strikes, Studio Furnisâs items were brought to our attention from that very platform. When it comes to quality, however, their products are far from what youâd happen upon while idly scrolling. They're designed intentionally for city living, where, according to their website, "apartment living often means constant change," but the furniture made to easily accommodate easy moves is often poorly made. The small, Brooklyn-based team was founded by TomĂĄs Mor in 2023, who leads design and production. Studio Furnis, which has collaborated with Viso, makes it furniture out of Baltic birch wood, and they now offer a small array of bed frames, side tables and chairsâand produce very cool custom pieces as wellâall of which is made to order, and designed to be flatpacked and put together without screws or any tools. Once we arranged the piece Iâd be testingâthe tall, slim, Scandinavian-meets-â70s-undulating-curves bookcase from the NĂŒ collectionâMor offered to drop it off, since their workspace isnât far from my home. Since this is solid wood, the box it came in was long and heavy, but maneuverable. I was hesitant to begin assembly without some assistance; what if I messed it up? The unit came without a manual, so I relied on pausing the video on the website in my quest to put it together. After sliding the shelves into the slots of the two sides-slash-legs of the bookshelf, I realized I had put it together backwards, reversed everything, and was finished. This meant that my process from unpacking to completion took probably five minutes instead of the two and a half it would take someone paying attention. Thatâs literally it. The bookshelf is freestanding, the quality of the wood and the smooth finish extremely satisfying. Thereâs perhaps an expected roughness to furniture this simple, but when done successfully, it can have the level of detail that Studio Furnis has put into these pieces. The entire thing seemed almost too good to be trueâexactly what you want from flatpack furniture. I have no plans to move anytime in the near future, but they now have me wondering if I need a new bed frame. âKate Dries Unfnshed Unfnshed Side TableMeet the Unfnshed Side Table: Your blank canvas for comfort and style. No tools needed, just your imagination. Paint it, stain it, make it yours. Use it as a table, seat, or plant standâthe choice is yours! Top: 12" or 18" Diameter Height: 18" Weight limit: 200 lbs Despite living in an apartment that is already filled with furniture, an occupational hazard is the constant desire for more. Inundated as we are every day with beautiful objects, when a particular item does catch my attentionâand holds itâthen thatâs something worth investigating. Unfnshd is one such company. Their wares held my attention over the course of a couple of nightsâ worth of Instagram scrolling, and, thanks to the algorithm, after clicking on an ad for it just once, my feed was flooded. A corner of my living room desperately "needed" a side tableâsomething petite and narrow but also nice to look atâand Unfnshedâs Side Table fit the bill.According to the website, Unfnhsed was founded by Abdel Ibrahim in 2023; after he realized an earlier prototype of their first product, made from laminated plywood, would be too expensive to produce, he pivoted. The result is a suite of very reasonably-priced furniture made from Baltic birch plywood that is, as the name suggests, unfinishedâa beautiful canvas for creativity, if the wind moves you that way.My little stool arrived in one box and was dead easy to assemble. The stool came in just three partsâthe top and then the bits that form the legsâand slotted together so fast that I was nervous that I did something wrong. And Iâm not surprised to say that I didâlike my colleague Kate, I had inadvertently put the legs on in a way that felt (and was) wrong. I corrected my error, deconstructed and reconstructed the stool a few times to make sure, and then did what I love to do to wooden furniture: painted it.To be clear: the stool did not need the paint, because the material itself is so high-quality, smooth to the touch, and beautiful in its own right. (If you do want to paint or stain your piece, the website offers some simple tutorials for inspiration.)However, I love a project and was briefly obsessed with the idea of an icy, prissy blue side table. So I took matters into my own hands and painted the stoolâs top and just one of the legs, for a subtle moment of contrast. When it came time to reassemble the stool after the paint had dried, I realized my mistake. In my exuberance I painted the part of the legs that slot into the table, which made the pegs thicker than they were before. It was a bit of a struggle to put the stool back together and I did have to really put my back into it in order for the stool to be structurally sound. I did the best I could, cursing my impetuous nature, and put the stool in its place, where it now holds a fake plant.Despite the user error detailed above, I love my stool! The rest of Unfnshedâs offerings are alluring to me, tooâI could always use a bookshelf or a bench or really, any surface upon which to pile things. For right now, though, I am at capacity for furnitureâbut thereâs a rickety Ikea bookshelf in my apartment thatâs fighting for its life. Once it succumbs, I have a vision and this time, I wonât make the same mistake. âMegan ReynoldsLucca House 4x2 ShelfA shelf or storage for any space. Similar to the 5x2, but with an extra shelf in the middle for even more options. Laminated maple ply. Assembles in 1 minute. Exterior 47.5 x 23.5 x 11.5" Interior 10.5 x 15.5 x 12.5" / 16.5 x 15.5 x 12.5â The first thing I notice about the Lucca House 4x2 shelf when it arrives is that itâs lightâimportant if you live in a fifth floor walk-up with crumbling stairs, as I do. The next thing I noticed is that even though itâs light, itâs sturdy. As I unpack it and slot it together, the maple plywood is more resilient than the cheaper particle-board stuff offered by other, larger brands. The pieces slide together tightly, so I have to take a hammer and tap the pieces together (with the protection of an improvised cardboard cushion), but everything holds up. The whole process is very fast, and there are no confusing directions or hex keys to figure out. There is no hardware at all, actually, but itâs still sturdy enough to handle everything Iâve loaded onto it.Visually it fits into my home as easily as it does physically. Iâm not generally a light wood kind of person, but the little strips of color on the edges keep the shelf from going too Scandi-modern. I got the multicolor/Harlequin option, and the colors are muted enough to keep it from feeling childish. It feels distinct without screaming for attention, and I can see myself holding onto it for decades.All this supports the ideas behind Lucca House: that young-ish urbanites are moving every few years and need nice, affordable furniture that they can easily move with them. "We're trying to make it as simple and straightforward as possible," Lucca Houseâs founder, Lucca Zeray, tells me. The shelves are meant to be "idiot-proof" and fill a niche between the usual disposable furniture available elsewhere and the gallery-quality stuff that most 20- and 30-somethings canât afford. Which is not to say that the brand is not sophisticated; Zeray worked previously at Matter, the collectible design gallery in New York, and cites Dutch flatpack furniture from the 1940s as inspiration. Zeray brings that design intelligence to Lucca, which makes everything in house at their shop in Pittsfield, Massachusetts. Though shelves are the companyâs only offering now, he promises more soon, potentially a desk and other kinds of furniture that urban professionals have to tote with them from home to home. Zeray recognizes that there are a bunch of flat-pack design companies out there, but he embraces the company. "I do think a rising tide lifts all ships," he says. "More people making stuff more or less locally is a good thing. I think it will make consumers and make us designers a little bit sharper and more critical of what is being produced and being consumed." So far, Lucca stands up to scrutiny. âJack Balderrama MorleyWe love the products we feature and hope you do, too. If you buy something through a link on the site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Related Reading: Source link
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Photo

Flat-pack furniture gets a bad rapâitâs often considered flimsy, poorly-constructed, and cheap in a way that is visually (and actually) unappealing. Ikea, the leader in this field, has made strides towards improving the categoryâs reputation, but the vast popularity (and convenience) of furniture that can be built just as easily as it can be broken down has cleared the way for designers to experiment. In recent years, weâve been tracking the rise of smaller designers putting their own spin on this style. But the best way to see if something is worth it is to try it for yourself. So three Dwell staffers tested out products from three such brandsâStudio Furnis, Unfnshed, and Lucca Houseâto see what all the fuss is about. Studio Furnis Studio Furnis Yankel BookcaseThe YANKEL bookcase assembles quickly and efficiently, requiring no tools and just minutes of your time. Its slender design maximizes storage while taking up minimal space in any setting. H 80" x W 15" x L 10" Itâs no secret that "I found it on Instagram" isnât usually a compliment when it comes to your latest impulse purchase. So youâd be forgiven in thinking that since, as memory strikes, Studio Furnisâs items were brought to our attention from that very platform. When it comes to quality, however, their products are far from what youâd happen upon while idly scrolling. They're designed intentionally for city living, where, according to their website, "apartment living often means constant change," but the furniture made to easily accommodate easy moves is often poorly made. The small, Brooklyn-based team was founded by TomĂĄs Mor in 2023, who leads design and production. Studio Furnis, which has collaborated with Viso, makes it furniture out of Baltic birch wood, and they now offer a small array of bed frames, side tables and chairsâand produce very cool custom pieces as wellâall of which is made to order, and designed to be flatpacked and put together without screws or any tools. Once we arranged the piece Iâd be testingâthe tall, slim, Scandinavian-meets-â70s-undulating-curves bookcase from the NĂŒ collectionâMor offered to drop it off, since their workspace isnât far from my home. Since this is solid wood, the box it came in was long and heavy, but maneuverable. I was hesitant to begin assembly without some assistance; what if I messed it up? The unit came without a manual, so I relied on pausing the video on the website in my quest to put it together. After sliding the shelves into the slots of the two sides-slash-legs of the bookshelf, I realized I had put it together backwards, reversed everything, and was finished. This meant that my process from unpacking to completion took probably five minutes instead of the two and a half it would take someone paying attention. Thatâs literally it. The bookshelf is freestanding, the quality of the wood and the smooth finish extremely satisfying. Thereâs perhaps an expected roughness to furniture this simple, but when done successfully, it can have the level of detail that Studio Furnis has put into these pieces. The entire thing seemed almost too good to be trueâexactly what you want from flatpack furniture. I have no plans to move anytime in the near future, but they now have me wondering if I need a new bed frame. âKate Dries Unfnshed Unfnshed Side TableMeet the Unfnshed Side Table: Your blank canvas for comfort and style. No tools needed, just your imagination. Paint it, stain it, make it yours. Use it as a table, seat, or plant standâthe choice is yours! Top: 12" or 18" Diameter Height: 18" Weight limit: 200 lbs Despite living in an apartment that is already filled with furniture, an occupational hazard is the constant desire for more. Inundated as we are every day with beautiful objects, when a particular item does catch my attentionâand holds itâthen thatâs something worth investigating. Unfnshd is one such company. Their wares held my attention over the course of a couple of nightsâ worth of Instagram scrolling, and, thanks to the algorithm, after clicking on an ad for it just once, my feed was flooded. A corner of my living room desperately "needed" a side tableâsomething petite and narrow but also nice to look atâand Unfnshedâs Side Table fit the bill.According to the website, Unfnhsed was founded by Abdel Ibrahim in 2023; after he realized an earlier prototype of their first product, made from laminated plywood, would be too expensive to produce, he pivoted. The result is a suite of very reasonably-priced furniture made from Baltic birch plywood that is, as the name suggests, unfinishedâa beautiful canvas for creativity, if the wind moves you that way.My little stool arrived in one box and was dead easy to assemble. The stool came in just three partsâthe top and then the bits that form the legsâand slotted together so fast that I was nervous that I did something wrong. And Iâm not surprised to say that I didâlike my colleague Kate, I had inadvertently put the legs on in a way that felt (and was) wrong. I corrected my error, deconstructed and reconstructed the stool a few times to make sure, and then did what I love to do to wooden furniture: painted it.To be clear: the stool did not need the paint, because the material itself is so high-quality, smooth to the touch, and beautiful in its own right. (If you do want to paint or stain your piece, the website offers some simple tutorials for inspiration.)However, I love a project and was briefly obsessed with the idea of an icy, prissy blue side table. So I took matters into my own hands and painted the stoolâs top and just one of the legs, for a subtle moment of contrast. When it came time to reassemble the stool after the paint had dried, I realized my mistake. In my exuberance I painted the part of the legs that slot into the table, which made the pegs thicker than they were before. It was a bit of a struggle to put the stool back together and I did have to really put my back into it in order for the stool to be structurally sound. I did the best I could, cursing my impetuous nature, and put the stool in its place, where it now holds a fake plant.Despite the user error detailed above, I love my stool! The rest of Unfnshedâs offerings are alluring to me, tooâI could always use a bookshelf or a bench or really, any surface upon which to pile things. For right now, though, I am at capacity for furnitureâbut thereâs a rickety Ikea bookshelf in my apartment thatâs fighting for its life. Once it succumbs, I have a vision and this time, I wonât make the same mistake. âMegan ReynoldsLucca House 4x2 ShelfA shelf or storage for any space. Similar to the 5x2, but with an extra shelf in the middle for even more options. Laminated maple ply. Assembles in 1 minute. Exterior 47.5 x 23.5 x 11.5" Interior 10.5 x 15.5 x 12.5" / 16.5 x 15.5 x 12.5â The first thing I notice about the Lucca House 4x2 shelf when it arrives is that itâs lightâimportant if you live in a fifth floor walk-up with crumbling stairs, as I do. The next thing I noticed is that even though itâs light, itâs sturdy. As I unpack it and slot it together, the maple plywood is more resilient than the cheaper particle-board stuff offered by other, larger brands. The pieces slide together tightly, so I have to take a hammer and tap the pieces together (with the protection of an improvised cardboard cushion), but everything holds up. The whole process is very fast, and there are no confusing directions or hex keys to figure out. There is no hardware at all, actually, but itâs still sturdy enough to handle everything Iâve loaded onto it.Visually it fits into my home as easily as it does physically. Iâm not generally a light wood kind of person, but the little strips of color on the edges keep the shelf from going too Scandi-modern. I got the multicolor/Harlequin option, and the colors are muted enough to keep it from feeling childish. It feels distinct without screaming for attention, and I can see myself holding onto it for decades.All this supports the ideas behind Lucca House: that young-ish urbanites are moving every few years and need nice, affordable furniture that they can easily move with them. "We're trying to make it as simple and straightforward as possible," Lucca Houseâs founder, Lucca Zeray, tells me. The shelves are meant to be "idiot-proof" and fill a niche between the usual disposable furniture available elsewhere and the gallery-quality stuff that most 20- and 30-somethings canât afford. Which is not to say that the brand is not sophisticated; Zeray worked previously at Matter, the collectible design gallery in New York, and cites Dutch flatpack furniture from the 1940s as inspiration. Zeray brings that design intelligence to Lucca, which makes everything in house at their shop in Pittsfield, Massachusetts. Though shelves are the companyâs only offering now, he promises more soon, potentially a desk and other kinds of furniture that urban professionals have to tote with them from home to home. Zeray recognizes that there are a bunch of flat-pack design companies out there, but he embraces the company. "I do think a rising tide lifts all ships," he says. "More people making stuff more or less locally is a good thing. I think it will make consumers and make us designers a little bit sharper and more critical of what is being produced and being consumed." So far, Lucca stands up to scrutiny. âJack Balderrama MorleyWe love the products we feature and hope you do, too. If you buy something through a link on the site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Related Reading: Source link
0 notes
Photo

Flat-pack furniture gets a bad rapâitâs often considered flimsy, poorly-constructed, and cheap in a way that is visually (and actually) unappealing. Ikea, the leader in this field, has made strides towards improving the categoryâs reputation, but the vast popularity (and convenience) of furniture that can be built just as easily as it can be broken down has cleared the way for designers to experiment. In recent years, weâve been tracking the rise of smaller designers putting their own spin on this style. But the best way to see if something is worth it is to try it for yourself. So three Dwell staffers tested out products from three such brandsâStudio Furnis, Unfnshed, and Lucca Houseâto see what all the fuss is about. Studio Furnis Studio Furnis Yankel BookcaseThe YANKEL bookcase assembles quickly and efficiently, requiring no tools and just minutes of your time. Its slender design maximizes storage while taking up minimal space in any setting. H 80" x W 15" x L 10" Itâs no secret that "I found it on Instagram" isnât usually a compliment when it comes to your latest impulse purchase. So youâd be forgiven in thinking that since, as memory strikes, Studio Furnisâs items were brought to our attention from that very platform. When it comes to quality, however, their products are far from what youâd happen upon while idly scrolling. They're designed intentionally for city living, where, according to their website, "apartment living often means constant change," but the furniture made to easily accommodate easy moves is often poorly made. The small, Brooklyn-based team was founded by TomĂĄs Mor in 2023, who leads design and production. Studio Furnis, which has collaborated with Viso, makes it furniture out of Baltic birch wood, and they now offer a small array of bed frames, side tables and chairsâand produce very cool custom pieces as wellâall of which is made to order, and designed to be flatpacked and put together without screws or any tools. Once we arranged the piece Iâd be testingâthe tall, slim, Scandinavian-meets-â70s-undulating-curves bookcase from the NĂŒ collectionâMor offered to drop it off, since their workspace isnât far from my home. Since this is solid wood, the box it came in was long and heavy, but maneuverable. I was hesitant to begin assembly without some assistance; what if I messed it up? The unit came without a manual, so I relied on pausing the video on the website in my quest to put it together. After sliding the shelves into the slots of the two sides-slash-legs of the bookshelf, I realized I had put it together backwards, reversed everything, and was finished. This meant that my process from unpacking to completion took probably five minutes instead of the two and a half it would take someone paying attention. Thatâs literally it. The bookshelf is freestanding, the quality of the wood and the smooth finish extremely satisfying. Thereâs perhaps an expected roughness to furniture this simple, but when done successfully, it can have the level of detail that Studio Furnis has put into these pieces. The entire thing seemed almost too good to be trueâexactly what you want from flatpack furniture. I have no plans to move anytime in the near future, but they now have me wondering if I need a new bed frame. âKate Dries Unfnshed Unfnshed Side TableMeet the Unfnshed Side Table: Your blank canvas for comfort and style. No tools needed, just your imagination. Paint it, stain it, make it yours. Use it as a table, seat, or plant standâthe choice is yours! Top: 12" or 18" Diameter Height: 18" Weight limit: 200 lbs Despite living in an apartment that is already filled with furniture, an occupational hazard is the constant desire for more. Inundated as we are every day with beautiful objects, when a particular item does catch my attentionâand holds itâthen thatâs something worth investigating. Unfnshd is one such company. Their wares held my attention over the course of a couple of nightsâ worth of Instagram scrolling, and, thanks to the algorithm, after clicking on an ad for it just once, my feed was flooded. A corner of my living room desperately "needed" a side tableâsomething petite and narrow but also nice to look atâand Unfnshedâs Side Table fit the bill.According to the website, Unfnhsed was founded by Abdel Ibrahim in 2023; after he realized an earlier prototype of their first product, made from laminated plywood, would be too expensive to produce, he pivoted. The result is a suite of very reasonably-priced furniture made from Baltic birch plywood that is, as the name suggests, unfinishedâa beautiful canvas for creativity, if the wind moves you that way.My little stool arrived in one box and was dead easy to assemble. The stool came in just three partsâthe top and then the bits that form the legsâand slotted together so fast that I was nervous that I did something wrong. And Iâm not surprised to say that I didâlike my colleague Kate, I had inadvertently put the legs on in a way that felt (and was) wrong. I corrected my error, deconstructed and reconstructed the stool a few times to make sure, and then did what I love to do to wooden furniture: painted it.To be clear: the stool did not need the paint, because the material itself is so high-quality, smooth to the touch, and beautiful in its own right. (If you do want to paint or stain your piece, the website offers some simple tutorials for inspiration.)However, I love a project and was briefly obsessed with the idea of an icy, prissy blue side table. So I took matters into my own hands and painted the stoolâs top and just one of the legs, for a subtle moment of contrast. When it came time to reassemble the stool after the paint had dried, I realized my mistake. In my exuberance I painted the part of the legs that slot into the table, which made the pegs thicker than they were before. It was a bit of a struggle to put the stool back together and I did have to really put my back into it in order for the stool to be structurally sound. I did the best I could, cursing my impetuous nature, and put the stool in its place, where it now holds a fake plant.Despite the user error detailed above, I love my stool! The rest of Unfnshedâs offerings are alluring to me, tooâI could always use a bookshelf or a bench or really, any surface upon which to pile things. For right now, though, I am at capacity for furnitureâbut thereâs a rickety Ikea bookshelf in my apartment thatâs fighting for its life. Once it succumbs, I have a vision and this time, I wonât make the same mistake. âMegan ReynoldsLucca House 4x2 ShelfA shelf or storage for any space. Similar to the 5x2, but with an extra shelf in the middle for even more options. Laminated maple ply. Assembles in 1 minute. Exterior 47.5 x 23.5 x 11.5" Interior 10.5 x 15.5 x 12.5" / 16.5 x 15.5 x 12.5â The first thing I notice about the Lucca House 4x2 shelf when it arrives is that itâs lightâimportant if you live in a fifth floor walk-up with crumbling stairs, as I do. The next thing I noticed is that even though itâs light, itâs sturdy. As I unpack it and slot it together, the maple plywood is more resilient than the cheaper particle-board stuff offered by other, larger brands. The pieces slide together tightly, so I have to take a hammer and tap the pieces together (with the protection of an improvised cardboard cushion), but everything holds up. The whole process is very fast, and there are no confusing directions or hex keys to figure out. There is no hardware at all, actually, but itâs still sturdy enough to handle everything Iâve loaded onto it.Visually it fits into my home as easily as it does physically. Iâm not generally a light wood kind of person, but the little strips of color on the edges keep the shelf from going too Scandi-modern. I got the multicolor/Harlequin option, and the colors are muted enough to keep it from feeling childish. It feels distinct without screaming for attention, and I can see myself holding onto it for decades.All this supports the ideas behind Lucca House: that young-ish urbanites are moving every few years and need nice, affordable furniture that they can easily move with them. "We're trying to make it as simple and straightforward as possible," Lucca Houseâs founder, Lucca Zeray, tells me. The shelves are meant to be "idiot-proof" and fill a niche between the usual disposable furniture available elsewhere and the gallery-quality stuff that most 20- and 30-somethings canât afford. Which is not to say that the brand is not sophisticated; Zeray worked previously at Matter, the collectible design gallery in New York, and cites Dutch flatpack furniture from the 1940s as inspiration. Zeray brings that design intelligence to Lucca, which makes everything in house at their shop in Pittsfield, Massachusetts. Though shelves are the companyâs only offering now, he promises more soon, potentially a desk and other kinds of furniture that urban professionals have to tote with them from home to home. Zeray recognizes that there are a bunch of flat-pack design companies out there, but he embraces the company. "I do think a rising tide lifts all ships," he says. "More people making stuff more or less locally is a good thing. I think it will make consumers and make us designers a little bit sharper and more critical of what is being produced and being consumed." So far, Lucca stands up to scrutiny. âJack Balderrama MorleyWe love the products we feature and hope you do, too. If you buy something through a link on the site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Related Reading: Source link
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Photo

Flat-pack furniture gets a bad rapâitâs often considered flimsy, poorly-constructed, and cheap in a way that is visually (and actually) unappealing. Ikea, the leader in this field, has made strides towards improving the categoryâs reputation, but the vast popularity (and convenience) of furniture that can be built just as easily as it can be broken down has cleared the way for designers to experiment. In recent years, weâve been tracking the rise of smaller designers putting their own spin on this style. But the best way to see if something is worth it is to try it for yourself. So three Dwell staffers tested out products from three such brandsâStudio Furnis, Unfnshed, and Lucca Houseâto see what all the fuss is about. Studio Furnis Studio Furnis Yankel BookcaseThe YANKEL bookcase assembles quickly and efficiently, requiring no tools and just minutes of your time. Its slender design maximizes storage while taking up minimal space in any setting. H 80" x W 15" x L 10" Itâs no secret that "I found it on Instagram" isnât usually a compliment when it comes to your latest impulse purchase. So youâd be forgiven in thinking that since, as memory strikes, Studio Furnisâs items were brought to our attention from that very platform. When it comes to quality, however, their products are far from what youâd happen upon while idly scrolling. They're designed intentionally for city living, where, according to their website, "apartment living often means constant change," but the furniture made to easily accommodate easy moves is often poorly made. The small, Brooklyn-based team was founded by TomĂĄs Mor in 2023, who leads design and production. Studio Furnis, which has collaborated with Viso, makes it furniture out of Baltic birch wood, and they now offer a small array of bed frames, side tables and chairsâand produce very cool custom pieces as wellâall of which is made to order, and designed to be flatpacked and put together without screws or any tools. Once we arranged the piece Iâd be testingâthe tall, slim, Scandinavian-meets-â70s-undulating-curves bookcase from the NĂŒ collectionâMor offered to drop it off, since their workspace isnât far from my home. Since this is solid wood, the box it came in was long and heavy, but maneuverable. I was hesitant to begin assembly without some assistance; what if I messed it up? The unit came without a manual, so I relied on pausing the video on the website in my quest to put it together. After sliding the shelves into the slots of the two sides-slash-legs of the bookshelf, I realized I had put it together backwards, reversed everything, and was finished. This meant that my process from unpacking to completion took probably five minutes instead of the two and a half it would take someone paying attention. Thatâs literally it. The bookshelf is freestanding, the quality of the wood and the smooth finish extremely satisfying. Thereâs perhaps an expected roughness to furniture this simple, but when done successfully, it can have the level of detail that Studio Furnis has put into these pieces. The entire thing seemed almost too good to be trueâexactly what you want from flatpack furniture. I have no plans to move anytime in the near future, but they now have me wondering if I need a new bed frame. âKate Dries Unfnshed Unfnshed Side TableMeet the Unfnshed Side Table: Your blank canvas for comfort and style. No tools needed, just your imagination. Paint it, stain it, make it yours. Use it as a table, seat, or plant standâthe choice is yours! Top: 12" or 18" Diameter Height: 18" Weight limit: 200 lbs Despite living in an apartment that is already filled with furniture, an occupational hazard is the constant desire for more. Inundated as we are every day with beautiful objects, when a particular item does catch my attentionâand holds itâthen thatâs something worth investigating. Unfnshd is one such company. Their wares held my attention over the course of a couple of nightsâ worth of Instagram scrolling, and, thanks to the algorithm, after clicking on an ad for it just once, my feed was flooded. A corner of my living room desperately "needed" a side tableâsomething petite and narrow but also nice to look atâand Unfnshedâs Side Table fit the bill.According to the website, Unfnhsed was founded by Abdel Ibrahim in 2023; after he realized an earlier prototype of their first product, made from laminated plywood, would be too expensive to produce, he pivoted. The result is a suite of very reasonably-priced furniture made from Baltic birch plywood that is, as the name suggests, unfinishedâa beautiful canvas for creativity, if the wind moves you that way.My little stool arrived in one box and was dead easy to assemble. The stool came in just three partsâthe top and then the bits that form the legsâand slotted together so fast that I was nervous that I did something wrong. And Iâm not surprised to say that I didâlike my colleague Kate, I had inadvertently put the legs on in a way that felt (and was) wrong. I corrected my error, deconstructed and reconstructed the stool a few times to make sure, and then did what I love to do to wooden furniture: painted it.To be clear: the stool did not need the paint, because the material itself is so high-quality, smooth to the touch, and beautiful in its own right. (If you do want to paint or stain your piece, the website offers some simple tutorials for inspiration.)However, I love a project and was briefly obsessed with the idea of an icy, prissy blue side table. So I took matters into my own hands and painted the stoolâs top and just one of the legs, for a subtle moment of contrast. When it came time to reassemble the stool after the paint had dried, I realized my mistake. In my exuberance I painted the part of the legs that slot into the table, which made the pegs thicker than they were before. It was a bit of a struggle to put the stool back together and I did have to really put my back into it in order for the stool to be structurally sound. I did the best I could, cursing my impetuous nature, and put the stool in its place, where it now holds a fake plant.Despite the user error detailed above, I love my stool! The rest of Unfnshedâs offerings are alluring to me, tooâI could always use a bookshelf or a bench or really, any surface upon which to pile things. For right now, though, I am at capacity for furnitureâbut thereâs a rickety Ikea bookshelf in my apartment thatâs fighting for its life. Once it succumbs, I have a vision and this time, I wonât make the same mistake. âMegan ReynoldsLucca House 4x2 ShelfA shelf or storage for any space. Similar to the 5x2, but with an extra shelf in the middle for even more options. Laminated maple ply. Assembles in 1 minute. Exterior 47.5 x 23.5 x 11.5" Interior 10.5 x 15.5 x 12.5" / 16.5 x 15.5 x 12.5â The first thing I notice about the Lucca House 4x2 shelf when it arrives is that itâs lightâimportant if you live in a fifth floor walk-up with crumbling stairs, as I do. The next thing I noticed is that even though itâs light, itâs sturdy. As I unpack it and slot it together, the maple plywood is more resilient than the cheaper particle-board stuff offered by other, larger brands. The pieces slide together tightly, so I have to take a hammer and tap the pieces together (with the protection of an improvised cardboard cushion), but everything holds up. The whole process is very fast, and there are no confusing directions or hex keys to figure out. There is no hardware at all, actually, but itâs still sturdy enough to handle everything Iâve loaded onto it.Visually it fits into my home as easily as it does physically. Iâm not generally a light wood kind of person, but the little strips of color on the edges keep the shelf from going too Scandi-modern. I got the multicolor/Harlequin option, and the colors are muted enough to keep it from feeling childish. It feels distinct without screaming for attention, and I can see myself holding onto it for decades.All this supports the ideas behind Lucca House: that young-ish urbanites are moving every few years and need nice, affordable furniture that they can easily move with them. "We're trying to make it as simple and straightforward as possible," Lucca Houseâs founder, Lucca Zeray, tells me. The shelves are meant to be "idiot-proof" and fill a niche between the usual disposable furniture available elsewhere and the gallery-quality stuff that most 20- and 30-somethings canât afford. Which is not to say that the brand is not sophisticated; Zeray worked previously at Matter, the collectible design gallery in New York, and cites Dutch flatpack furniture from the 1940s as inspiration. Zeray brings that design intelligence to Lucca, which makes everything in house at their shop in Pittsfield, Massachusetts. Though shelves are the companyâs only offering now, he promises more soon, potentially a desk and other kinds of furniture that urban professionals have to tote with them from home to home. Zeray recognizes that there are a bunch of flat-pack design companies out there, but he embraces the company. "I do think a rising tide lifts all ships," he says. "More people making stuff more or less locally is a good thing. I think it will make consumers and make us designers a little bit sharper and more critical of what is being produced and being consumed." So far, Lucca stands up to scrutiny. âJack Balderrama MorleyWe love the products we feature and hope you do, too. If you buy something through a link on the site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Related Reading: Source link
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Photo

Flat-pack furniture gets a bad rapâitâs often considered flimsy, poorly-constructed, and cheap in a way that is visually (and actually) unappealing. Ikea, the leader in this field, has made strides towards improving the categoryâs reputation, but the vast popularity (and convenience) of furniture that can be built just as easily as it can be broken down has cleared the way for designers to experiment. In recent years, weâve been tracking the rise of smaller designers putting their own spin on this style. But the best way to see if something is worth it is to try it for yourself. So three Dwell staffers tested out products from three such brandsâStudio Furnis, Unfnshed, and Lucca Houseâto see what all the fuss is about. Studio Furnis Studio Furnis Yankel BookcaseThe YANKEL bookcase assembles quickly and efficiently, requiring no tools and just minutes of your time. Its slender design maximizes storage while taking up minimal space in any setting. H 80" x W 15" x L 10" Itâs no secret that "I found it on Instagram" isnât usually a compliment when it comes to your latest impulse purchase. So youâd be forgiven in thinking that since, as memory strikes, Studio Furnisâs items were brought to our attention from that very platform. When it comes to quality, however, their products are far from what youâd happen upon while idly scrolling. They're designed intentionally for city living, where, according to their website, "apartment living often means constant change," but the furniture made to easily accommodate easy moves is often poorly made. The small, Brooklyn-based team was founded by TomĂĄs Mor in 2023, who leads design and production. Studio Furnis, which has collaborated with Viso, makes it furniture out of Baltic birch wood, and they now offer a small array of bed frames, side tables and chairsâand produce very cool custom pieces as wellâall of which is made to order, and designed to be flatpacked and put together without screws or any tools. Once we arranged the piece Iâd be testingâthe tall, slim, Scandinavian-meets-â70s-undulating-curves bookcase from the NĂŒ collectionâMor offered to drop it off, since their workspace isnât far from my home. Since this is solid wood, the box it came in was long and heavy, but maneuverable. I was hesitant to begin assembly without some assistance; what if I messed it up? The unit came without a manual, so I relied on pausing the video on the website in my quest to put it together. After sliding the shelves into the slots of the two sides-slash-legs of the bookshelf, I realized I had put it together backwards, reversed everything, and was finished. This meant that my process from unpacking to completion took probably five minutes instead of the two and a half it would take someone paying attention. Thatâs literally it. The bookshelf is freestanding, the quality of the wood and the smooth finish extremely satisfying. Thereâs perhaps an expected roughness to furniture this simple, but when done successfully, it can have the level of detail that Studio Furnis has put into these pieces. The entire thing seemed almost too good to be trueâexactly what you want from flatpack furniture. I have no plans to move anytime in the near future, but they now have me wondering if I need a new bed frame. âKate Dries Unfnshed Unfnshed Side TableMeet the Unfnshed Side Table: Your blank canvas for comfort and style. No tools needed, just your imagination. Paint it, stain it, make it yours. Use it as a table, seat, or plant standâthe choice is yours! Top: 12" or 18" Diameter Height: 18" Weight limit: 200 lbs Despite living in an apartment that is already filled with furniture, an occupational hazard is the constant desire for more. Inundated as we are every day with beautiful objects, when a particular item does catch my attentionâand holds itâthen thatâs something worth investigating. Unfnshd is one such company. Their wares held my attention over the course of a couple of nightsâ worth of Instagram scrolling, and, thanks to the algorithm, after clicking on an ad for it just once, my feed was flooded. A corner of my living room desperately "needed" a side tableâsomething petite and narrow but also nice to look atâand Unfnshedâs Side Table fit the bill.According to the website, Unfnhsed was founded by Abdel Ibrahim in 2023; after he realized an earlier prototype of their first product, made from laminated plywood, would be too expensive to produce, he pivoted. The result is a suite of very reasonably-priced furniture made from Baltic birch plywood that is, as the name suggests, unfinishedâa beautiful canvas for creativity, if the wind moves you that way.My little stool arrived in one box and was dead easy to assemble. The stool came in just three partsâthe top and then the bits that form the legsâand slotted together so fast that I was nervous that I did something wrong. And Iâm not surprised to say that I didâlike my colleague Kate, I had inadvertently put the legs on in a way that felt (and was) wrong. I corrected my error, deconstructed and reconstructed the stool a few times to make sure, and then did what I love to do to wooden furniture: painted it.To be clear: the stool did not need the paint, because the material itself is so high-quality, smooth to the touch, and beautiful in its own right. (If you do want to paint or stain your piece, the website offers some simple tutorials for inspiration.)However, I love a project and was briefly obsessed with the idea of an icy, prissy blue side table. So I took matters into my own hands and painted the stoolâs top and just one of the legs, for a subtle moment of contrast. When it came time to reassemble the stool after the paint had dried, I realized my mistake. In my exuberance I painted the part of the legs that slot into the table, which made the pegs thicker than they were before. It was a bit of a struggle to put the stool back together and I did have to really put my back into it in order for the stool to be structurally sound. I did the best I could, cursing my impetuous nature, and put the stool in its place, where it now holds a fake plant.Despite the user error detailed above, I love my stool! The rest of Unfnshedâs offerings are alluring to me, tooâI could always use a bookshelf or a bench or really, any surface upon which to pile things. For right now, though, I am at capacity for furnitureâbut thereâs a rickety Ikea bookshelf in my apartment thatâs fighting for its life. Once it succumbs, I have a vision and this time, I wonât make the same mistake. âMegan ReynoldsLucca House 4x2 ShelfA shelf or storage for any space. Similar to the 5x2, but with an extra shelf in the middle for even more options. Laminated maple ply. Assembles in 1 minute. Exterior 47.5 x 23.5 x 11.5" Interior 10.5 x 15.5 x 12.5" / 16.5 x 15.5 x 12.5â The first thing I notice about the Lucca House 4x2 shelf when it arrives is that itâs lightâimportant if you live in a fifth floor walk-up with crumbling stairs, as I do. The next thing I noticed is that even though itâs light, itâs sturdy. As I unpack it and slot it together, the maple plywood is more resilient than the cheaper particle-board stuff offered by other, larger brands. The pieces slide together tightly, so I have to take a hammer and tap the pieces together (with the protection of an improvised cardboard cushion), but everything holds up. The whole process is very fast, and there are no confusing directions or hex keys to figure out. There is no hardware at all, actually, but itâs still sturdy enough to handle everything Iâve loaded onto it.Visually it fits into my home as easily as it does physically. Iâm not generally a light wood kind of person, but the little strips of color on the edges keep the shelf from going too Scandi-modern. I got the multicolor/Harlequin option, and the colors are muted enough to keep it from feeling childish. It feels distinct without screaming for attention, and I can see myself holding onto it for decades.All this supports the ideas behind Lucca House: that young-ish urbanites are moving every few years and need nice, affordable furniture that they can easily move with them. "We're trying to make it as simple and straightforward as possible," Lucca Houseâs founder, Lucca Zeray, tells me. The shelves are meant to be "idiot-proof" and fill a niche between the usual disposable furniture available elsewhere and the gallery-quality stuff that most 20- and 30-somethings canât afford. Which is not to say that the brand is not sophisticated; Zeray worked previously at Matter, the collectible design gallery in New York, and cites Dutch flatpack furniture from the 1940s as inspiration. Zeray brings that design intelligence to Lucca, which makes everything in house at their shop in Pittsfield, Massachusetts. Though shelves are the companyâs only offering now, he promises more soon, potentially a desk and other kinds of furniture that urban professionals have to tote with them from home to home. Zeray recognizes that there are a bunch of flat-pack design companies out there, but he embraces the company. "I do think a rising tide lifts all ships," he says. "More people making stuff more or less locally is a good thing. I think it will make consumers and make us designers a little bit sharper and more critical of what is being produced and being consumed." So far, Lucca stands up to scrutiny. âJack Balderrama MorleyWe love the products we feature and hope you do, too. If you buy something through a link on the site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Related Reading: Source link
0 notes
Photo

Flat-pack furniture gets a bad rapâitâs often considered flimsy, poorly-constructed, and cheap in a way that is visually (and actually) unappealing. Ikea, the leader in this field, has made strides towards improving the categoryâs reputation, but the vast popularity (and convenience) of furniture that can be built just as easily as it can be broken down has cleared the way for designers to experiment. In recent years, weâve been tracking the rise of smaller designers putting their own spin on this style. But the best way to see if something is worth it is to try it for yourself. So three Dwell staffers tested out products from three such brandsâStudio Furnis, Unfnshed, and Lucca Houseâto see what all the fuss is about. Studio Furnis Studio Furnis Yankel BookcaseThe YANKEL bookcase assembles quickly and efficiently, requiring no tools and just minutes of your time. Its slender design maximizes storage while taking up minimal space in any setting. H 80" x W 15" x L 10" Itâs no secret that "I found it on Instagram" isnât usually a compliment when it comes to your latest impulse purchase. So youâd be forgiven in thinking that since, as memory strikes, Studio Furnisâs items were brought to our attention from that very platform. When it comes to quality, however, their products are far from what youâd happen upon while idly scrolling. They're designed intentionally for city living, where, according to their website, "apartment living often means constant change," but the furniture made to easily accommodate easy moves is often poorly made. The small, Brooklyn-based team was founded by TomĂĄs Mor in 2023, who leads design and production. Studio Furnis, which has collaborated with Viso, makes it furniture out of Baltic birch wood, and they now offer a small array of bed frames, side tables and chairsâand produce very cool custom pieces as wellâall of which is made to order, and designed to be flatpacked and put together without screws or any tools. Once we arranged the piece Iâd be testingâthe tall, slim, Scandinavian-meets-â70s-undulating-curves bookcase from the NĂŒ collectionâMor offered to drop it off, since their workspace isnât far from my home. Since this is solid wood, the box it came in was long and heavy, but maneuverable. I was hesitant to begin assembly without some assistance; what if I messed it up? The unit came without a manual, so I relied on pausing the video on the website in my quest to put it together. After sliding the shelves into the slots of the two sides-slash-legs of the bookshelf, I realized I had put it together backwards, reversed everything, and was finished. This meant that my process from unpacking to completion took probably five minutes instead of the two and a half it would take someone paying attention. Thatâs literally it. The bookshelf is freestanding, the quality of the wood and the smooth finish extremely satisfying. Thereâs perhaps an expected roughness to furniture this simple, but when done successfully, it can have the level of detail that Studio Furnis has put into these pieces. The entire thing seemed almost too good to be trueâexactly what you want from flatpack furniture. I have no plans to move anytime in the near future, but they now have me wondering if I need a new bed frame. âKate Dries Unfnshed Unfnshed Side TableMeet the Unfnshed Side Table: Your blank canvas for comfort and style. No tools needed, just your imagination. Paint it, stain it, make it yours. Use it as a table, seat, or plant standâthe choice is yours! Top: 12" or 18" Diameter Height: 18" Weight limit: 200 lbs Despite living in an apartment that is already filled with furniture, an occupational hazard is the constant desire for more. Inundated as we are every day with beautiful objects, when a particular item does catch my attentionâand holds itâthen thatâs something worth investigating. Unfnshd is one such company. Their wares held my attention over the course of a couple of nightsâ worth of Instagram scrolling, and, thanks to the algorithm, after clicking on an ad for it just once, my feed was flooded. A corner of my living room desperately "needed" a side tableâsomething petite and narrow but also nice to look atâand Unfnshedâs Side Table fit the bill.According to the website, Unfnhsed was founded by Abdel Ibrahim in 2023; after he realized an earlier prototype of their first product, made from laminated plywood, would be too expensive to produce, he pivoted. The result is a suite of very reasonably-priced furniture made from Baltic birch plywood that is, as the name suggests, unfinishedâa beautiful canvas for creativity, if the wind moves you that way.My little stool arrived in one box and was dead easy to assemble. The stool came in just three partsâthe top and then the bits that form the legsâand slotted together so fast that I was nervous that I did something wrong. And Iâm not surprised to say that I didâlike my colleague Kate, I had inadvertently put the legs on in a way that felt (and was) wrong. I corrected my error, deconstructed and reconstructed the stool a few times to make sure, and then did what I love to do to wooden furniture: painted it.To be clear: the stool did not need the paint, because the material itself is so high-quality, smooth to the touch, and beautiful in its own right. (If you do want to paint or stain your piece, the website offers some simple tutorials for inspiration.)However, I love a project and was briefly obsessed with the idea of an icy, prissy blue side table. So I took matters into my own hands and painted the stoolâs top and just one of the legs, for a subtle moment of contrast. When it came time to reassemble the stool after the paint had dried, I realized my mistake. In my exuberance I painted the part of the legs that slot into the table, which made the pegs thicker than they were before. It was a bit of a struggle to put the stool back together and I did have to really put my back into it in order for the stool to be structurally sound. I did the best I could, cursing my impetuous nature, and put the stool in its place, where it now holds a fake plant.Despite the user error detailed above, I love my stool! The rest of Unfnshedâs offerings are alluring to me, tooâI could always use a bookshelf or a bench or really, any surface upon which to pile things. For right now, though, I am at capacity for furnitureâbut thereâs a rickety Ikea bookshelf in my apartment thatâs fighting for its life. Once it succumbs, I have a vision and this time, I wonât make the same mistake. âMegan ReynoldsLucca House 4x2 ShelfA shelf or storage for any space. Similar to the 5x2, but with an extra shelf in the middle for even more options. Laminated maple ply. Assembles in 1 minute. Exterior 47.5 x 23.5 x 11.5" Interior 10.5 x 15.5 x 12.5" / 16.5 x 15.5 x 12.5â The first thing I notice about the Lucca House 4x2 shelf when it arrives is that itâs lightâimportant if you live in a fifth floor walk-up with crumbling stairs, as I do. The next thing I noticed is that even though itâs light, itâs sturdy. As I unpack it and slot it together, the maple plywood is more resilient than the cheaper particle-board stuff offered by other, larger brands. The pieces slide together tightly, so I have to take a hammer and tap the pieces together (with the protection of an improvised cardboard cushion), but everything holds up. The whole process is very fast, and there are no confusing directions or hex keys to figure out. There is no hardware at all, actually, but itâs still sturdy enough to handle everything Iâve loaded onto it.Visually it fits into my home as easily as it does physically. Iâm not generally a light wood kind of person, but the little strips of color on the edges keep the shelf from going too Scandi-modern. I got the multicolor/Harlequin option, and the colors are muted enough to keep it from feeling childish. It feels distinct without screaming for attention, and I can see myself holding onto it for decades.All this supports the ideas behind Lucca House: that young-ish urbanites are moving every few years and need nice, affordable furniture that they can easily move with them. "We're trying to make it as simple and straightforward as possible," Lucca Houseâs founder, Lucca Zeray, tells me. The shelves are meant to be "idiot-proof" and fill a niche between the usual disposable furniture available elsewhere and the gallery-quality stuff that most 20- and 30-somethings canât afford. Which is not to say that the brand is not sophisticated; Zeray worked previously at Matter, the collectible design gallery in New York, and cites Dutch flatpack furniture from the 1940s as inspiration. Zeray brings that design intelligence to Lucca, which makes everything in house at their shop in Pittsfield, Massachusetts. Though shelves are the companyâs only offering now, he promises more soon, potentially a desk and other kinds of furniture that urban professionals have to tote with them from home to home. Zeray recognizes that there are a bunch of flat-pack design companies out there, but he embraces the company. "I do think a rising tide lifts all ships," he says. "More people making stuff more or less locally is a good thing. I think it will make consumers and make us designers a little bit sharper and more critical of what is being produced and being consumed." So far, Lucca stands up to scrutiny. âJack Balderrama MorleyWe love the products we feature and hope you do, too. If you buy something through a link on the site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Related Reading: Source link
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Flat-pack furniture gets a bad rapâitâs often considered flimsy, poorly-constructed, and cheap in a way that is visually (and actually) unappealing. Ikea, the leader in this field, has made strides towards improving the categoryâs reputation, but the vast popularity (and convenience) of furniture that can be built just as easily as it can be broken down has cleared the way for designers to experiment. In recent years, weâve been tracking the rise of smaller designers putting their own spin on this style. But the best way to see if something is worth it is to try it for yourself. So three Dwell staffers tested out products from three such brandsâStudio Furnis, Unfnshed, and Lucca Houseâto see what all the fuss is about. Studio Furnis Studio Furnis Yankel BookcaseThe YANKEL bookcase assembles quickly and efficiently, requiring no tools and just minutes of your time. Its slender design maximizes storage while taking up minimal space in any setting. H 80" x W 15" x L 10" Itâs no secret that "I found it on Instagram" isnât usually a compliment when it comes to your latest impulse purchase. So youâd be forgiven in thinking that since, as memory strikes, Studio Furnisâs items were brought to our attention from that very platform. When it comes to quality, however, their products are far from what youâd happen upon while idly scrolling. They're designed intentionally for city living, where, according to their website, "apartment living often means constant change," but the furniture made to easily accommodate easy moves is often poorly made. The small, Brooklyn-based team was founded by TomĂĄs Mor in 2023, who leads design and production. Studio Furnis, which has collaborated with Viso, makes it furniture out of Baltic birch wood, and they now offer a small array of bed frames, side tables and chairsâand produce very cool custom pieces as wellâall of which is made to order, and designed to be flatpacked and put together without screws or any tools. Once we arranged the piece Iâd be testingâthe tall, slim, Scandinavian-meets-â70s-undulating-curves bookcase from the NĂŒ collectionâMor offered to drop it off, since their workspace isnât far from my home. Since this is solid wood, the box it came in was long and heavy, but maneuverable. I was hesitant to begin assembly without some assistance; what if I messed it up? The unit came without a manual, so I relied on pausing the video on the website in my quest to put it together. After sliding the shelves into the slots of the two sides-slash-legs of the bookshelf, I realized I had put it together backwards, reversed everything, and was finished. This meant that my process from unpacking to completion took probably five minutes instead of the two and a half it would take someone paying attention. Thatâs literally it. The bookshelf is freestanding, the quality of the wood and the smooth finish extremely satisfying. Thereâs perhaps an expected roughness to furniture this simple, but when done successfully, it can have the level of detail that Studio Furnis has put into these pieces. The entire thing seemed almost too good to be trueâexactly what you want from flatpack furniture. I have no plans to move anytime in the near future, but they now have me wondering if I need a new bed frame. âKate Dries Unfnshed Unfnshed Side TableMeet the Unfnshed Side Table: Your blank canvas for comfort and style. No tools needed, just your imagination. Paint it, stain it, make it yours. Use it as a table, seat, or plant standâthe choice is yours! Top: 12" or 18" Diameter Height: 18" Weight limit: 200 lbs Despite living in an apartment that is already filled with furniture, an occupational hazard is the constant desire for more. Inundated as we are every day with beautiful objects, when a particular item does catch my attentionâand holds itâthen thatâs something worth investigating. Unfnshd is one such company. Their wares held my attention over the course of a couple of nightsâ worth of Instagram scrolling, and, thanks to the algorithm, after clicking on an ad for it just once, my feed was flooded. A corner of my living room desperately "needed" a side tableâsomething petite and narrow but also nice to look atâand Unfnshedâs Side Table fit the bill.According to the website, Unfnhsed was founded by Abdel Ibrahim in 2023; after he realized an earlier prototype of their first product, made from laminated plywood, would be too expensive to produce, he pivoted. The result is a suite of very reasonably-priced furniture made from Baltic birch plywood that is, as the name suggests, unfinishedâa beautiful canvas for creativity, if the wind moves you that way.My little stool arrived in one box and was dead easy to assemble. The stool came in just three partsâthe top and then the bits that form the legsâand slotted together so fast that I was nervous that I did something wrong. And Iâm not surprised to say that I didâlike my colleague Kate, I had inadvertently put the legs on in a way that felt (and was) wrong. I corrected my error, deconstructed and reconstructed the stool a few times to make sure, and then did what I love to do to wooden furniture: painted it.To be clear: the stool did not need the paint, because the material itself is so high-quality, smooth to the touch, and beautiful in its own right. (If you do want to paint or stain your piece, the website offers some simple tutorials for inspiration.)However, I love a project and was briefly obsessed with the idea of an icy, prissy blue side table. So I took matters into my own hands and painted the stoolâs top and just one of the legs, for a subtle moment of contrast. When it came time to reassemble the stool after the paint had dried, I realized my mistake. In my exuberance I painted the part of the legs that slot into the table, which made the pegs thicker than they were before. It was a bit of a struggle to put the stool back together and I did have to really put my back into it in order for the stool to be structurally sound. I did the best I could, cursing my impetuous nature, and put the stool in its place, where it now holds a fake plant.Despite the user error detailed above, I love my stool! The rest of Unfnshedâs offerings are alluring to me, tooâI could always use a bookshelf or a bench or really, any surface upon which to pile things. For right now, though, I am at capacity for furnitureâbut thereâs a rickety Ikea bookshelf in my apartment thatâs fighting for its life. Once it succumbs, I have a vision and this time, I wonât make the same mistake. âMegan ReynoldsLucca House 4x2 ShelfA shelf or storage for any space. Similar to the 5x2, but with an extra shelf in the middle for even more options. Laminated maple ply. Assembles in 1 minute. Exterior 47.5 x 23.5 x 11.5" Interior 10.5 x 15.5 x 12.5" / 16.5 x 15.5 x 12.5â The first thing I notice about the Lucca House 4x2 shelf when it arrives is that itâs lightâimportant if you live in a fifth floor walk-up with crumbling stairs, as I do. The next thing I noticed is that even though itâs light, itâs sturdy. As I unpack it and slot it together, the maple plywood is more resilient than the cheaper particle-board stuff offered by other, larger brands. The pieces slide together tightly, so I have to take a hammer and tap the pieces together (with the protection of an improvised cardboard cushion), but everything holds up. The whole process is very fast, and there are no confusing directions or hex keys to figure out. There is no hardware at all, actually, but itâs still sturdy enough to handle everything Iâve loaded onto it.Visually it fits into my home as easily as it does physically. Iâm not generally a light wood kind of person, but the little strips of color on the edges keep the shelf from going too Scandi-modern. I got the multicolor/Harlequin option, and the colors are muted enough to keep it from feeling childish. It feels distinct without screaming for attention, and I can see myself holding onto it for decades.All this supports the ideas behind Lucca House: that young-ish urbanites are moving every few years and need nice, affordable furniture that they can easily move with them. "We're trying to make it as simple and straightforward as possible," Lucca Houseâs founder, Lucca Zeray, tells me. The shelves are meant to be "idiot-proof" and fill a niche between the usual disposable furniture available elsewhere and the gallery-quality stuff that most 20- and 30-somethings canât afford. Which is not to say that the brand is not sophisticated; Zeray worked previously at Matter, the collectible design gallery in New York, and cites Dutch flatpack furniture from the 1940s as inspiration. Zeray brings that design intelligence to Lucca, which makes everything in house at their shop in Pittsfield, Massachusetts. Though shelves are the companyâs only offering now, he promises more soon, potentially a desk and other kinds of furniture that urban professionals have to tote with them from home to home. Zeray recognizes that there are a bunch of flat-pack design companies out there, but he embraces the company. "I do think a rising tide lifts all ships," he says. "More people making stuff more or less locally is a good thing. I think it will make consumers and make us designers a little bit sharper and more critical of what is being produced and being consumed." So far, Lucca stands up to scrutiny. âJack Balderrama MorleyWe love the products we feature and hope you do, too. If you buy something through a link on the site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Related Reading: Source link
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Flat-pack furniture gets a bad rapâitâs often considered flimsy, poorly-constructed, and cheap in a way that is visually (and actually) unappealing. Ikea, the leader in this field, has made strides towards improving the categoryâs reputation, but the vast popularity (and convenience) of furniture that can be built just as easily as it can be broken down has cleared the way for designers to experiment. In recent years, weâve been tracking the rise of smaller designers putting their own spin on this style. But the best way to see if something is worth it is to try it for yourself. So three Dwell staffers tested out products from three such brandsâStudio Furnis, Unfnshed, and Lucca Houseâto see what all the fuss is about. Studio Furnis Studio Furnis Yankel BookcaseThe YANKEL bookcase assembles quickly and efficiently, requiring no tools and just minutes of your time. Its slender design maximizes storage while taking up minimal space in any setting. H 80" x W 15" x L 10" Itâs no secret that "I found it on Instagram" isnât usually a compliment when it comes to your latest impulse purchase. So youâd be forgiven in thinking that since, as memory strikes, Studio Furnisâs items were brought to our attention from that very platform. When it comes to quality, however, their products are far from what youâd happen upon while idly scrolling. They're designed intentionally for city living, where, according to their website, "apartment living often means constant change," but the furniture made to easily accommodate easy moves is often poorly made. The small, Brooklyn-based team was founded by TomĂĄs Mor in 2023, who leads design and production. Studio Furnis, which has collaborated with Viso, makes it furniture out of Baltic birch wood, and they now offer a small array of bed frames, side tables and chairsâand produce very cool custom pieces as wellâall of which is made to order, and designed to be flatpacked and put together without screws or any tools. Once we arranged the piece Iâd be testingâthe tall, slim, Scandinavian-meets-â70s-undulating-curves bookcase from the NĂŒ collectionâMor offered to drop it off, since their workspace isnât far from my home. Since this is solid wood, the box it came in was long and heavy, but maneuverable. I was hesitant to begin assembly without some assistance; what if I messed it up? The unit came without a manual, so I relied on pausing the video on the website in my quest to put it together. After sliding the shelves into the slots of the two sides-slash-legs of the bookshelf, I realized I had put it together backwards, reversed everything, and was finished. This meant that my process from unpacking to completion took probably five minutes instead of the two and a half it would take someone paying attention. Thatâs literally it. The bookshelf is freestanding, the quality of the wood and the smooth finish extremely satisfying. Thereâs perhaps an expected roughness to furniture this simple, but when done successfully, it can have the level of detail that Studio Furnis has put into these pieces. The entire thing seemed almost too good to be trueâexactly what you want from flatpack furniture. I have no plans to move anytime in the near future, but they now have me wondering if I need a new bed frame. âKate Dries Unfnshed Unfnshed Side TableMeet the Unfnshed Side Table: Your blank canvas for comfort and style. No tools needed, just your imagination. Paint it, stain it, make it yours. Use it as a table, seat, or plant standâthe choice is yours! Top: 12" or 18" Diameter Height: 18" Weight limit: 200 lbs Despite living in an apartment that is already filled with furniture, an occupational hazard is the constant desire for more. Inundated as we are every day with beautiful objects, when a particular item does catch my attentionâand holds itâthen thatâs something worth investigating. Unfnshd is one such company. Their wares held my attention over the course of a couple of nightsâ worth of Instagram scrolling, and, thanks to the algorithm, after clicking on an ad for it just once, my feed was flooded. A corner of my living room desperately "needed" a side tableâsomething petite and narrow but also nice to look atâand Unfnshedâs Side Table fit the bill.According to the website, Unfnhsed was founded by Abdel Ibrahim in 2023; after he realized an earlier prototype of their first product, made from laminated plywood, would be too expensive to produce, he pivoted. The result is a suite of very reasonably-priced furniture made from Baltic birch plywood that is, as the name suggests, unfinishedâa beautiful canvas for creativity, if the wind moves you that way.My little stool arrived in one box and was dead easy to assemble. The stool came in just three partsâthe top and then the bits that form the legsâand slotted together so fast that I was nervous that I did something wrong. And Iâm not surprised to say that I didâlike my colleague Kate, I had inadvertently put the legs on in a way that felt (and was) wrong. I corrected my error, deconstructed and reconstructed the stool a few times to make sure, and then did what I love to do to wooden furniture: painted it.To be clear: the stool did not need the paint, because the material itself is so high-quality, smooth to the touch, and beautiful in its own right. (If you do want to paint or stain your piece, the website offers some simple tutorials for inspiration.)However, I love a project and was briefly obsessed with the idea of an icy, prissy blue side table. So I took matters into my own hands and painted the stoolâs top and just one of the legs, for a subtle moment of contrast. When it came time to reassemble the stool after the paint had dried, I realized my mistake. In my exuberance I painted the part of the legs that slot into the table, which made the pegs thicker than they were before. It was a bit of a struggle to put the stool back together and I did have to really put my back into it in order for the stool to be structurally sound. I did the best I could, cursing my impetuous nature, and put the stool in its place, where it now holds a fake plant.Despite the user error detailed above, I love my stool! The rest of Unfnshedâs offerings are alluring to me, tooâI could always use a bookshelf or a bench or really, any surface upon which to pile things. For right now, though, I am at capacity for furnitureâbut thereâs a rickety Ikea bookshelf in my apartment thatâs fighting for its life. Once it succumbs, I have a vision and this time, I wonât make the same mistake. âMegan ReynoldsLucca House 4x2 ShelfA shelf or storage for any space. Similar to the 5x2, but with an extra shelf in the middle for even more options. Laminated maple ply. Assembles in 1 minute. Exterior 47.5 x 23.5 x 11.5" Interior 10.5 x 15.5 x 12.5" / 16.5 x 15.5 x 12.5â The first thing I notice about the Lucca House 4x2 shelf when it arrives is that itâs lightâimportant if you live in a fifth floor walk-up with crumbling stairs, as I do. The next thing I noticed is that even though itâs light, itâs sturdy. As I unpack it and slot it together, the maple plywood is more resilient than the cheaper particle-board stuff offered by other, larger brands. The pieces slide together tightly, so I have to take a hammer and tap the pieces together (with the protection of an improvised cardboard cushion), but everything holds up. The whole process is very fast, and there are no confusing directions or hex keys to figure out. There is no hardware at all, actually, but itâs still sturdy enough to handle everything Iâve loaded onto it.Visually it fits into my home as easily as it does physically. Iâm not generally a light wood kind of person, but the little strips of color on the edges keep the shelf from going too Scandi-modern. I got the multicolor/Harlequin option, and the colors are muted enough to keep it from feeling childish. It feels distinct without screaming for attention, and I can see myself holding onto it for decades.All this supports the ideas behind Lucca House: that young-ish urbanites are moving every few years and need nice, affordable furniture that they can easily move with them. "We're trying to make it as simple and straightforward as possible," Lucca Houseâs founder, Lucca Zeray, tells me. The shelves are meant to be "idiot-proof" and fill a niche between the usual disposable furniture available elsewhere and the gallery-quality stuff that most 20- and 30-somethings canât afford. Which is not to say that the brand is not sophisticated; Zeray worked previously at Matter, the collectible design gallery in New York, and cites Dutch flatpack furniture from the 1940s as inspiration. Zeray brings that design intelligence to Lucca, which makes everything in house at their shop in Pittsfield, Massachusetts. Though shelves are the companyâs only offering now, he promises more soon, potentially a desk and other kinds of furniture that urban professionals have to tote with them from home to home. Zeray recognizes that there are a bunch of flat-pack design companies out there, but he embraces the company. "I do think a rising tide lifts all ships," he says. "More people making stuff more or less locally is a good thing. I think it will make consumers and make us designers a little bit sharper and more critical of what is being produced and being consumed." So far, Lucca stands up to scrutiny. âJack Balderrama MorleyWe love the products we feature and hope you do, too. If you buy something through a link on the site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Related Reading: Source link
0 notes
Photo

Flat-pack furniture gets a bad rapâitâs often considered flimsy, poorly-constructed, and cheap in a way that is visually (and actually) unappealing. Ikea, the leader in this field, has made strides towards improving the categoryâs reputation, but the vast popularity (and convenience) of furniture that can be built just as easily as it can be broken down has cleared the way for designers to experiment. In recent years, weâve been tracking the rise of smaller designers putting their own spin on this style. But the best way to see if something is worth it is to try it for yourself. So three Dwell staffers tested out products from three such brandsâStudio Furnis, Unfnshed, and Lucca Houseâto see what all the fuss is about. Studio Furnis Studio Furnis Yankel BookcaseThe YANKEL bookcase assembles quickly and efficiently, requiring no tools and just minutes of your time. Its slender design maximizes storage while taking up minimal space in any setting. H 80" x W 15" x L 10" Itâs no secret that "I found it on Instagram" isnât usually a compliment when it comes to your latest impulse purchase. So youâd be forgiven in thinking that since, as memory strikes, Studio Furnisâs items were brought to our attention from that very platform. When it comes to quality, however, their products are far from what youâd happen upon while idly scrolling. They're designed intentionally for city living, where, according to their website, "apartment living often means constant change," but the furniture made to easily accommodate easy moves is often poorly made. The small, Brooklyn-based team was founded by TomĂĄs Mor in 2023, who leads design and production. Studio Furnis, which has collaborated with Viso, makes it furniture out of Baltic birch wood, and they now offer a small array of bed frames, side tables and chairsâand produce very cool custom pieces as wellâall of which is made to order, and designed to be flatpacked and put together without screws or any tools. Once we arranged the piece Iâd be testingâthe tall, slim, Scandinavian-meets-â70s-undulating-curves bookcase from the NĂŒ collectionâMor offered to drop it off, since their workspace isnât far from my home. Since this is solid wood, the box it came in was long and heavy, but maneuverable. I was hesitant to begin assembly without some assistance; what if I messed it up? The unit came without a manual, so I relied on pausing the video on the website in my quest to put it together. After sliding the shelves into the slots of the two sides-slash-legs of the bookshelf, I realized I had put it together backwards, reversed everything, and was finished. This meant that my process from unpacking to completion took probably five minutes instead of the two and a half it would take someone paying attention. Thatâs literally it. The bookshelf is freestanding, the quality of the wood and the smooth finish extremely satisfying. Thereâs perhaps an expected roughness to furniture this simple, but when done successfully, it can have the level of detail that Studio Furnis has put into these pieces. The entire thing seemed almost too good to be trueâexactly what you want from flatpack furniture. I have no plans to move anytime in the near future, but they now have me wondering if I need a new bed frame. âKate Dries Unfnshed Unfnshed Side TableMeet the Unfnshed Side Table: Your blank canvas for comfort and style. No tools needed, just your imagination. Paint it, stain it, make it yours. Use it as a table, seat, or plant standâthe choice is yours! Top: 12" or 18" Diameter Height: 18" Weight limit: 200 lbs Despite living in an apartment that is already filled with furniture, an occupational hazard is the constant desire for more. Inundated as we are every day with beautiful objects, when a particular item does catch my attentionâand holds itâthen thatâs something worth investigating. Unfnshd is one such company. Their wares held my attention over the course of a couple of nightsâ worth of Instagram scrolling, and, thanks to the algorithm, after clicking on an ad for it just once, my feed was flooded. A corner of my living room desperately "needed" a side tableâsomething petite and narrow but also nice to look atâand Unfnshedâs Side Table fit the bill.According to the website, Unfnhsed was founded by Abdel Ibrahim in 2023; after he realized an earlier prototype of their first product, made from laminated plywood, would be too expensive to produce, he pivoted. The result is a suite of very reasonably-priced furniture made from Baltic birch plywood that is, as the name suggests, unfinishedâa beautiful canvas for creativity, if the wind moves you that way.My little stool arrived in one box and was dead easy to assemble. The stool came in just three partsâthe top and then the bits that form the legsâand slotted together so fast that I was nervous that I did something wrong. And Iâm not surprised to say that I didâlike my colleague Kate, I had inadvertently put the legs on in a way that felt (and was) wrong. I corrected my error, deconstructed and reconstructed the stool a few times to make sure, and then did what I love to do to wooden furniture: painted it.To be clear: the stool did not need the paint, because the material itself is so high-quality, smooth to the touch, and beautiful in its own right. (If you do want to paint or stain your piece, the website offers some simple tutorials for inspiration.)However, I love a project and was briefly obsessed with the idea of an icy, prissy blue side table. So I took matters into my own hands and painted the stoolâs top and just one of the legs, for a subtle moment of contrast. When it came time to reassemble the stool after the paint had dried, I realized my mistake. In my exuberance I painted the part of the legs that slot into the table, which made the pegs thicker than they were before. It was a bit of a struggle to put the stool back together and I did have to really put my back into it in order for the stool to be structurally sound. I did the best I could, cursing my impetuous nature, and put the stool in its place, where it now holds a fake plant.Despite the user error detailed above, I love my stool! The rest of Unfnshedâs offerings are alluring to me, tooâI could always use a bookshelf or a bench or really, any surface upon which to pile things. For right now, though, I am at capacity for furnitureâbut thereâs a rickety Ikea bookshelf in my apartment thatâs fighting for its life. Once it succumbs, I have a vision and this time, I wonât make the same mistake. âMegan ReynoldsLucca House 4x2 ShelfA shelf or storage for any space. Similar to the 5x2, but with an extra shelf in the middle for even more options. Laminated maple ply. Assembles in 1 minute. Exterior 47.5 x 23.5 x 11.5" Interior 10.5 x 15.5 x 12.5" / 16.5 x 15.5 x 12.5â The first thing I notice about the Lucca House 4x2 shelf when it arrives is that itâs lightâimportant if you live in a fifth floor walk-up with crumbling stairs, as I do. The next thing I noticed is that even though itâs light, itâs sturdy. As I unpack it and slot it together, the maple plywood is more resilient than the cheaper particle-board stuff offered by other, larger brands. The pieces slide together tightly, so I have to take a hammer and tap the pieces together (with the protection of an improvised cardboard cushion), but everything holds up. The whole process is very fast, and there are no confusing directions or hex keys to figure out. There is no hardware at all, actually, but itâs still sturdy enough to handle everything Iâve loaded onto it.Visually it fits into my home as easily as it does physically. Iâm not generally a light wood kind of person, but the little strips of color on the edges keep the shelf from going too Scandi-modern. I got the multicolor/Harlequin option, and the colors are muted enough to keep it from feeling childish. It feels distinct without screaming for attention, and I can see myself holding onto it for decades.All this supports the ideas behind Lucca House: that young-ish urbanites are moving every few years and need nice, affordable furniture that they can easily move with them. "We're trying to make it as simple and straightforward as possible," Lucca Houseâs founder, Lucca Zeray, tells me. The shelves are meant to be "idiot-proof" and fill a niche between the usual disposable furniture available elsewhere and the gallery-quality stuff that most 20- and 30-somethings canât afford. Which is not to say that the brand is not sophisticated; Zeray worked previously at Matter, the collectible design gallery in New York, and cites Dutch flatpack furniture from the 1940s as inspiration. Zeray brings that design intelligence to Lucca, which makes everything in house at their shop in Pittsfield, Massachusetts. Though shelves are the companyâs only offering now, he promises more soon, potentially a desk and other kinds of furniture that urban professionals have to tote with them from home to home. Zeray recognizes that there are a bunch of flat-pack design companies out there, but he embraces the company. "I do think a rising tide lifts all ships," he says. "More people making stuff more or less locally is a good thing. I think it will make consumers and make us designers a little bit sharper and more critical of what is being produced and being consumed." So far, Lucca stands up to scrutiny. âJack Balderrama MorleyWe love the products we feature and hope you do, too. If you buy something through a link on the site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Related Reading: Source link
0 notes
Photo

Flat-pack furniture gets a bad rapâitâs often considered flimsy, poorly-constructed, and cheap in a way that is visually (and actually) unappealing. Ikea, the leader in this field, has made strides towards improving the categoryâs reputation, but the vast popularity (and convenience) of furniture that can be built just as easily as it can be broken down has cleared the way for designers to experiment. In recent years, weâve been tracking the rise of smaller designers putting their own spin on this style. But the best way to see if something is worth it is to try it for yourself. So three Dwell staffers tested out products from three such brandsâStudio Furnis, Unfnshed, and Lucca Houseâto see what all the fuss is about. Studio Furnis Studio Furnis Yankel BookcaseThe YANKEL bookcase assembles quickly and efficiently, requiring no tools and just minutes of your time. Its slender design maximizes storage while taking up minimal space in any setting. H 80" x W 15" x L 10" Itâs no secret that "I found it on Instagram" isnât usually a compliment when it comes to your latest impulse purchase. So youâd be forgiven in thinking that since, as memory strikes, Studio Furnisâs items were brought to our attention from that very platform. When it comes to quality, however, their products are far from what youâd happen upon while idly scrolling. They're designed intentionally for city living, where, according to their website, "apartment living often means constant change," but the furniture made to easily accommodate easy moves is often poorly made. The small, Brooklyn-based team was founded by TomĂĄs Mor in 2023, who leads design and production. Studio Furnis, which has collaborated with Viso, makes it furniture out of Baltic birch wood, and they now offer a small array of bed frames, side tables and chairsâand produce very cool custom pieces as wellâall of which is made to order, and designed to be flatpacked and put together without screws or any tools. Once we arranged the piece Iâd be testingâthe tall, slim, Scandinavian-meets-â70s-undulating-curves bookcase from the NĂŒ collectionâMor offered to drop it off, since their workspace isnât far from my home. Since this is solid wood, the box it came in was long and heavy, but maneuverable. I was hesitant to begin assembly without some assistance; what if I messed it up? The unit came without a manual, so I relied on pausing the video on the website in my quest to put it together. After sliding the shelves into the slots of the two sides-slash-legs of the bookshelf, I realized I had put it together backwards, reversed everything, and was finished. This meant that my process from unpacking to completion took probably five minutes instead of the two and a half it would take someone paying attention. Thatâs literally it. The bookshelf is freestanding, the quality of the wood and the smooth finish extremely satisfying. Thereâs perhaps an expected roughness to furniture this simple, but when done successfully, it can have the level of detail that Studio Furnis has put into these pieces. The entire thing seemed almost too good to be trueâexactly what you want from flatpack furniture. I have no plans to move anytime in the near future, but they now have me wondering if I need a new bed frame. âKate Dries Unfnshed Unfnshed Side TableMeet the Unfnshed Side Table: Your blank canvas for comfort and style. No tools needed, just your imagination. Paint it, stain it, make it yours. Use it as a table, seat, or plant standâthe choice is yours! Top: 12" or 18" Diameter Height: 18" Weight limit: 200 lbs Despite living in an apartment that is already filled with furniture, an occupational hazard is the constant desire for more. Inundated as we are every day with beautiful objects, when a particular item does catch my attentionâand holds itâthen thatâs something worth investigating. Unfnshd is one such company. Their wares held my attention over the course of a couple of nightsâ worth of Instagram scrolling, and, thanks to the algorithm, after clicking on an ad for it just once, my feed was flooded. A corner of my living room desperately "needed" a side tableâsomething petite and narrow but also nice to look atâand Unfnshedâs Side Table fit the bill.According to the website, Unfnhsed was founded by Abdel Ibrahim in 2023; after he realized an earlier prototype of their first product, made from laminated plywood, would be too expensive to produce, he pivoted. The result is a suite of very reasonably-priced furniture made from Baltic birch plywood that is, as the name suggests, unfinishedâa beautiful canvas for creativity, if the wind moves you that way.My little stool arrived in one box and was dead easy to assemble. The stool came in just three partsâthe top and then the bits that form the legsâand slotted together so fast that I was nervous that I did something wrong. And Iâm not surprised to say that I didâlike my colleague Kate, I had inadvertently put the legs on in a way that felt (and was) wrong. I corrected my error, deconstructed and reconstructed the stool a few times to make sure, and then did what I love to do to wooden furniture: painted it.To be clear: the stool did not need the paint, because the material itself is so high-quality, smooth to the touch, and beautiful in its own right. (If you do want to paint or stain your piece, the website offers some simple tutorials for inspiration.)However, I love a project and was briefly obsessed with the idea of an icy, prissy blue side table. So I took matters into my own hands and painted the stoolâs top and just one of the legs, for a subtle moment of contrast. When it came time to reassemble the stool after the paint had dried, I realized my mistake. In my exuberance I painted the part of the legs that slot into the table, which made the pegs thicker than they were before. It was a bit of a struggle to put the stool back together and I did have to really put my back into it in order for the stool to be structurally sound. I did the best I could, cursing my impetuous nature, and put the stool in its place, where it now holds a fake plant.Despite the user error detailed above, I love my stool! The rest of Unfnshedâs offerings are alluring to me, tooâI could always use a bookshelf or a bench or really, any surface upon which to pile things. For right now, though, I am at capacity for furnitureâbut thereâs a rickety Ikea bookshelf in my apartment thatâs fighting for its life. Once it succumbs, I have a vision and this time, I wonât make the same mistake. âMegan ReynoldsLucca House 4x2 ShelfA shelf or storage for any space. Similar to the 5x2, but with an extra shelf in the middle for even more options. Laminated maple ply. Assembles in 1 minute. Exterior 47.5 x 23.5 x 11.5" Interior 10.5 x 15.5 x 12.5" / 16.5 x 15.5 x 12.5â The first thing I notice about the Lucca House 4x2 shelf when it arrives is that itâs lightâimportant if you live in a fifth floor walk-up with crumbling stairs, as I do. The next thing I noticed is that even though itâs light, itâs sturdy. As I unpack it and slot it together, the maple plywood is more resilient than the cheaper particle-board stuff offered by other, larger brands. The pieces slide together tightly, so I have to take a hammer and tap the pieces together (with the protection of an improvised cardboard cushion), but everything holds up. The whole process is very fast, and there are no confusing directions or hex keys to figure out. There is no hardware at all, actually, but itâs still sturdy enough to handle everything Iâve loaded onto it.Visually it fits into my home as easily as it does physically. Iâm not generally a light wood kind of person, but the little strips of color on the edges keep the shelf from going too Scandi-modern. I got the multicolor/Harlequin option, and the colors are muted enough to keep it from feeling childish. It feels distinct without screaming for attention, and I can see myself holding onto it for decades.All this supports the ideas behind Lucca House: that young-ish urbanites are moving every few years and need nice, affordable furniture that they can easily move with them. "We're trying to make it as simple and straightforward as possible," Lucca Houseâs founder, Lucca Zeray, tells me. The shelves are meant to be "idiot-proof" and fill a niche between the usual disposable furniture available elsewhere and the gallery-quality stuff that most 20- and 30-somethings canât afford. Which is not to say that the brand is not sophisticated; Zeray worked previously at Matter, the collectible design gallery in New York, and cites Dutch flatpack furniture from the 1940s as inspiration. Zeray brings that design intelligence to Lucca, which makes everything in house at their shop in Pittsfield, Massachusetts. Though shelves are the companyâs only offering now, he promises more soon, potentially a desk and other kinds of furniture that urban professionals have to tote with them from home to home. Zeray recognizes that there are a bunch of flat-pack design companies out there, but he embraces the company. "I do think a rising tide lifts all ships," he says. "More people making stuff more or less locally is a good thing. I think it will make consumers and make us designers a little bit sharper and more critical of what is being produced and being consumed." So far, Lucca stands up to scrutiny. âJack Balderrama MorleyWe love the products we feature and hope you do, too. If you buy something through a link on the site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Related Reading: Source link
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âšChangfa Packaging Wholesale Luxury Magnetic Gift Box Hard Folding Cardboard Delicate Appearance Custom Logo Packaging Boxes
Magnetic clamshell with handle design, more convenient to open. Inner box reinforced on both sides, more stronger to protect the product from damage. It uses a flat-pack design to saves shipping space and reduces costs, and easy to assemble and can be completed in seconds.
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MoqïŒ500pcs â
SizeïŒ 40X30X10.2 cm
đOfficial website: www.recycledpacking.com đ©Email: [email protected]
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Cavasik ~ CAVA Based Audio Visualizer
This is an audio visualizer based on CAVA with extended capabilities. Features: Change background and foreground colors through a DBus interface! Five normal drawing modes! Two circle drawing modes! Three mirror drawing modes! Four drawing directions! Customizable LibAdwaita interface! Set a single color or up to a 10 color linear gradient for background and foreground! SelectâŠ
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