Above: Bölja / Roped In / Osynlig / Tactility / LN.1/ Fellow / Unfold / Chair for Cafes / The Copper Chair / M6 / UHO Third year students from Konstfack’s interior architecture and furniture design courses presented their Domestic Commons project at Stockholm Design Week 2023. The Domestic Commons project sees the students create 11 design proposals that explore how narratives, functions and aims can be communicated through furniture design. Jenny Öhlander’s Bölja project challenges the idea of display cabinets as furniture and is made entirely from birch using various craft techniques. Sebstian Alnesog’s Roped In references craft and the tools used in textile production – specifically the loom. Osynlig by Jenna Gillinger is a reclining chair with a transparent surface that seeks to expose ’the invisibility of the female body in the design industry’. Tactility desk by Lovisa Bernrup examines the borderline between the straight lines of manmade buildings and ’nature’s organic expressions’. Lovisa Norrby’s LN.1 draws from the interplay of shadows, emptiness and light. Fellow by Hanna Lidgren is a bench that aims to encourage users to meet and have friendly conversations, while Unfold by Karin Westerberg is a chair featuring a foldable wool mattress that can can be adjusted to the user’s home space and requirements. Oskar Schmidt’s Chair for Cafes is a piece that aims to be sympathetic to any cafe interior space. and The Copper Chair by Olivia Åhman is inspired by architecture. Marine Evrard created M6, a series of modular objects made using aluminum sheets connected by a 6mm threaded rod. Emma Stocklassa’s UHO , which resembles an alien spaceship, is a hanging mirror that plays with volume and scale. Domestic Commons could be found at the Way Gallery during Stockholm Design Week.
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Above: Bölja / Roped In / Osynlig / Tactility / LN.1/ Fellow / Unfold / Chair for Cafes / The Copper Chair / M6 / UHO
Third year students from Konstfack’s interior architecture and furniture design courses presented their Domestic Commons project at Stockholm Design Week 2023.
The Domestic Commons project sees the students create 11 design proposals that explore how narratives, functions and aims can be communicated through furniture design.
Jenny Öhlander’s Bölja project challenges the idea of display cabinets as furniture and is made entirely from birch using various craft techniques. Sebstian Alnesog’s Roped In references craft and the tools used in textile production – specifically the loom.
Osynlig by Jenna Gillinger is a reclining chair with a transparent surface that seeks to expose ’the invisibility of the female body in the design industry’. Tactility desk by Lovisa Bernrup examines the borderline between the straight lines of manmade buildings and ’nature’s organic expressions’.
Lovisa Norrby’s LN.1 draws from the interplay of shadows, emptiness and light.
Fellow by Hanna Lidgren is a bench that aims to encourage users to meet and have friendly conversations, while Unfold by Karin Westerberg is a chair featuring a foldable wool mattress that can can be adjusted to the user’s home space and requirements.
Oskar Schmidt’s Chair for Cafes is a piece that aims to be sympathetic to any cafe interior space. and The Copper Chair by Olivia Åhman is inspired by architecture.
Marine Evrard created M6, a series of modular objects made using aluminum sheets connected by a 6mm threaded rod. Emma Stocklassa’s UHO , which resembles an alien spaceship, is a hanging mirror that plays with volume and scale.
Domestic Commons could be found at the Way Gallery during Stockholm Design Week.