This year in furniture, we got to write up a lot of furniture building/designing techniques, both old and new. We also got to see some good examples of what the past—not just 2015, we mean "the past" as in centuries ago—still has to offer in terms of learning about furniture design.
Seeing how other folks have solved furniture design problems, whether this year or centuries ago, can help you refine your own techniques. In 2015 we came across a lot of good examples, like "A Better Way to Steam Wood for Bending: Use a Plastic Bag!
We saw one company's solution to end user assembly with "Dock 312's Magnetically-Joined Flatpack Endtables.
We also got to see a neat Japanese woodworking trick in "Clever Design/Build Techniques: Using Sprung Wood as a Latching Mechanism.
Then there's Steven Banken, who uses tannic acid to produce a beautiful ebonizing effect on his dresser drawers
In "An Alternative Design Approach to Expandable Tables," designer Andrea Brugnera replaces one fold-out leaf with eight little ones
Frank Howarth took on the task of "Redesigning the Standard Bookcase for Modularity.
We got to see one of the weirdest fastening systems ever in "This Joinery System Uses Magnets to Activate Screws Captured INSIDE Your Workpiece.
Several companies have been tackling the issue of using dead space for stoarge, as seen in "Sexy Design Solutions for Utilizing 'Blind Corner' Cabinet Space in the Kitchen.
In "Reference: Common Dimensions, Angles and Heights for Seating Designers" we listed a variety of numbers you can use as starting points in a new design.
For those of you who'd rather work in the studio before going to paper, "How to Build a Simple Chair-Designing Rig" shows you the easiest, cheapest way to determine heights and angles in full scale.
Lastly, in "Reference: The Ultimate Wood Joint Visual Reference Guide," we gathered diagrams from around the web that folks have created to help make you aware of all of the options.
In "Vintage Drafting Table Designs," we got to see multiple examples of how 19th-Century craftsmen worked out furniture adjustability details in low-tech, but effective, ways.
Similarly, looking at "How Craftspeople Built Height-Adjustable Shelves Before the Industrial Revolution," we see that when there's a need, clever folks with tools can rise to the challenge without needing fancy machinery.
Here's over a dozen takes on what must be "The World's Oldest, Simplest Chair Design."
In "What Type of Desk Does the President of the United States Use?" we got to look at the very unusual, storied, and upcycled desk used by one of the most powerful persons on Earth.
We also recommended you check out auction sites to find unusual furniture design inspiration from days gone by.
This year we learned that conservator Christopher Storb has been "Preserving, Documenting and Sharing Early American Furniture Designs," showing us an assemblage of rare pieces not seen in your average History of Furniture Design class.
"Nomadic Furniture: DIY Designs from the 1970s" showed us Victor Papanek's groovy take on do-it-yourself furniture from humble materials.
And perhaps a lesson in what not to do came to us via "The Design Benefits of Sunken Conversation Pits."
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• 15 of Your Favorite Posts from 2015
• The Coming Age of Automobility and What It Means for Designers
• 10 Clever, Innovative or Bizarre Design Processes from 2015
• 10 Brilliant and Beautiful Objects from Our 'Designing Women' Series
• 12 Projects to Inspire Future Living
• Design Entrepreneurs Were Killing it in 2015
• The Year in Furniture Designs, Part 1: The Beautiful, the Innovative and the Unusual
• 15 Tools and Tool-Based Projects We Loved in 2015
• 8 New Types of Digital Fabrication Machines
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Comments
Very Nice collection! I like the hall room