Stories | Anglepoise https://www.anglepoise.com/journal/category/stories/ Abandon Darkness Mon, 14 Apr 2025 15:42:13 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.2 https://www.anglepoise.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/cropped-Anglepoise-f-32x32.png Stories | Anglepoise https://www.anglepoise.com/journal/category/stories/ 32 32 Sasimonokagu Takahashi: a technique called Sasimono that combines wooden materials without nails https://www.anglepoise.com/journal/sasimonokagu-takahashi-a-technique-called-sasimono/ Thu, 03 Oct 2024 15:37:48 +0000 https://www.anglepoise.com/?p=516423 Sasimono Kagu Takahashi is a furniture studio opened in 2010 at Kumano-machi, Hiroshima. We produce original furniture and accessories using the wood from Hiroshima with the traditional technique called Sasimono that combines wooden materials without nails

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About Sasimonokagu Takahashi: Please explain in a few words your activity 

Sasimono Kagu Takahashi is a furniture studio I, Yuji Takahashi, opened in 2010 at Kumano-machi, Hiroshima. We produce original furniture and accessories using the wood from Hiroshima with the traditional technique called Sasimono that combines wooden materials without nails. We make a wide range of products for daily life, from chopsticks to spaces.

We have done some projects in recent years working with domestic and international designers such as Claesson Koivisto Rune (Sweden) and Teruhiro Yanagihara (Japan). The projects are such as Hamacho Hotel (Tokyo) Hermes After sales Centre (Osaka).

We have also done some collaboration projects:
“Rolo stool”, with mina perhonen https://www.mina-perhonen.jp/en/
The combination shelf named “hako” (a box in Japanese) with Karimoku Furniture, one of the top manufacturers in Japan.

Also, late July this year, we had a hotel project with Mitsui Garden Hotel Kyoto Sanjo Premier. We have produced chairs and room accessories for all the guest rooms.
https://www.gardenhotels.co.jp/kyoto-sanjo-premier/eng/

To handle the production of large orders of approximately 600 chairs, we cooperated with Maruni Mokou, a long-established furniture manufacturer also in Hiroshima. As this project, I enjoy working freely with various people, sometimes as a craftsman and sometimes as a designer, without categorizing myself.

Where do you take inspiration for your creations ?

 The old tools made by our ancestors in Japan as well as around the world (everything from woodworking tools such as planes and other small objects used in daily life to furniture and architecture). In my mind, designing furniture and creating furniture fulfills both the creation of form as well as the process and structure of how it is made.

My goal is to make my material, wood, look beautiful. Therefore, I do not want to emphasize the uniqueness of the form but I am interested in how I can make something that does not seem to exist until now, and how I can enhance its perfection as a tool.  I would like our products to be used and matured at least 300 years.

To realise it , the items handed down from our predecessors are valuable materials. I believe what we incorporate into ourselves and how we incorporate what our predecessors have created in the past will lead to the creation of more complete and attractive products.

Tools are of upmost importance for your trade, any favorite (outside of the Anglepoise lamps obviously), and what does it do ?

Antique Peugeot coffee mill
Hand-cranked coffee roaster
Digital camera

 Coffee mill:

The Peugeot coffee mill manufactured around 1920-1950. I came across it at a flea market in the Netherlands in 2017, it was in very poor condition, so I disassembled it and did some repairments. I remade all the wooden parts (drawer knobs, front board, body and grips) by myself. Since then, I have been using it for a long time.

I was very interested in coffee and hand drip, but I had avoided it because I thought it would be too difficult. However, after I met this mill, I was more and more absorbed in coffee because of how nice and comfortable to use as a tool. I started to do hand drip because I want to grind beans with this mill. I learned once again from this mill that a good job starts with the tools.

Next is the hand-cranked roasting machine:

Our workshop is located in the suburbs of Hiroshima City, and many of our customers come here to visit us. We first got into coffee as we wanted to welcome our customers with, and now we do everything from roasting to hand drip coffee making to welcome our customers visiting our studio.

The coffee mill I use is the model of the legendary “Daibo Coffee” coffee shop in Japan. I learned the art of roasting from Mr. Daibo. (*about Daibo coffee for your reference: https://www.nippon.com/en/japan-topics/b01730/daibo-coffee-a-tokyo-legend.html)

The hand-cranked roasting machine just keeps cranking for 40 to 60 minutes. The green beans are roasted by sensing the color, smell, and temperature with all five senses. This is exactly the same handwork that I value in woodwork. It is a different genre of woodwork that I am pursuing, It gives me an objective view of pursuing woodwork and is simply very enjoyable.

Digital camera:

I use a Leica M10-P. I take almost all of the photos on the studio’s website and Instagram. Photographing makes me think about how light and shadow, straight lines and curves look and present themselves. One of the key elements of my woodwork is “Sasimono”, which I learned in Kyoto.

What is important in “Sasimono” is to show the beauty of the wood. I believe in order to show the beauty of the wood, the form should be simple. Because of the simplicity of the form, how it is presented in a photograph is very important.

Photography helps me to visualize the form in three dimensions when designing.

We drink mostly black breakfast tea at Anglepoise HQ in the UK, what’s the drink of choice at Sashimonokagu Takahashi ?

We are frequent coffee drinkers. It is our daily routine to enjoy the hand-drip coffee using the beans I roasted with my wife Kana during our breaks. We also enjoy Japanese tea and black tea.

Thanks to Yuji Takahashi / Sasimono-kagu Takahashi

https://www.instagram.com/sasimonokagu_takahashi

https://www.facebook.com/sasimonokagu.takahashi

 

Translated from Japanese

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In Conversation With: Libby Hilling, a Forgotten Garden Awakens – 004 https://www.anglepoise.com/journal/in-conversation-with-libby-hilling-a-forgotten-garden-awakens-004/ Wed, 03 Jul 2024 12:17:52 +0000 https://www.anglepoise.com/?p=427559 Nestled within the serene walls of a formerly unused garden, a transformative project is underway, led by Libby Hilling and a passionate team driven by a love for nature and community. This once-forgotten space at the Longstock Park Nursery, part of the Leckford Estate, is now being revitalised into a vibrant community garden

The post In Conversation With: Libby Hilling, a Forgotten Garden Awakens – 004 appeared first on Anglepoise.

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Nestled within the serene walls of a formerly unused garden, a transformative project is underway, led by Libby Hilling and a passionate team driven by a love for nature and community. This once-forgotten space at the Longstock Park Nursery, part of the Leckford Estate, is now being revitalised into a vibrant community garden, thanks to the combined effects of dedicated volunteers, national and local businesses supporting through grants, donations, resources or materials, and the esteemed John Lewis Partnership’s Golden Jubilee Trust.

The vision for this project began with a simple observation: an area within the nursery that was not being used to its full potential. Sparked by an idea from the Leckford Sustainability Focus Group and the nursery team, who saw an opportunity to enhance the beauty of their surroundings and create a space that adds value to the community, the project also addresses mental health, partnering with charities like Andover Mind to create a therapeutic environment.

“Gardening helped me during a difficult time in my life and we want this space to offer the same healing experience to others, whether they seek social interaction or a quiet place to reflect. Our nursery is beautiful, and the environment is stunning. But this area wasn’t being used; it was an eyesore,” says Libby. “We wanted to create something that would benefit the community and connect people with nature.”

The project’s goal is not just to beautify the space but to make it sustainable and functional. The garden features mature shrubs, trees, and cleverly designed areas that create a unique microclimate within the walled garden. This thoughtful design ensures that the garden will thrive and provide a sanctuary for both people and wildlife.

A large aspect of the project is its focus on sustainability. The team has implemented an efficient irrigation system to conserve water and maintain the garden. “With the changing climate, it’s crucial to have systems that don’t rely on manual watering at inappropriate times. Our system allows us to water wisely and monitor usage, ensuring that every drop is used effectively.”

The garden also serves as an educational centre. Local colleges like Sparsholt are involved, providing students with hands-on experience in gardening and design, enhancing their learning and fostering a sense of community and shared responsibility. Contractors, volunteers, and community members have all come together, driven by a shared vision. One volunteer, a recently retired horticulturist, expresses the impact perfectly: “I’ve just visited the garden, and I’m hooked. I can’t wait to be a part of this wonderful initiative.”

As the garden continues to evolve, it stands as a beacon of what can be achieved when a community comes together with a shared purpose. This project is built to endure and adapt, benefiting the community for years to come – we can’t wait to see the progress unfold.

Watch (24)

00;00;08;25 – 00;00;36;06
Libby
Welcome to the Garden for Mind. Okay, so this area was just graveled over, hadn’t been used for years. The whole site hadn’t been used for about six years. So it was an empty space. Used to be used for all the stuff in the nursery. But because it’s such vast area, like the partnership just weren’t using this anymore. So this area, we decided to make it into a kitchen garden area.

00;00;36;08 – 00;00;39;00
Libby
So have you, first of all have you pressed the record button?

00;00;39;00 – 00;00;43;24
Simon
This is nice sitting here.

00;00;43;27 – 00;00;44;28
Libby
I know it wasn’t.

00;00;44;28 – 00;01;08;05
Simon
It was lovely. So maybe a bit of a breeze blowing now. Yeah, but the first thing that just struck me, especially when we were sitting over there in that corner, is all about the place. Yeah. And, yeah, there’s something about being here, and I don’t know if it’s in a courtyard or it’s just the sound of the trees and the plastic rustling in the wind

00;01;08;07 – 00;01;22;08
Simon
But you can tell there’s something very special about the place for me. Place is everything. So what originally drew you to this place? How did you discover it? How did you come to think … Wow

00;01;23;06 – 00;01;44;08
Libby
It was initially I had a chat with the nursery team because this area just wasn’t being used. I just thought, there’s an opportunity here. I just saw it as an opportunity because, yeah, the nursery is beautiful, the environment is beautiful. You just sit here and you just listen to the birds and it was just an area that wasn’t being used.

00;01;44;08 – 00;02;08;09
Libby
So the nursery team wanted to see it developed. We’ve set up a sustainability focus group on the Leckford Estate. And one of the things we wanted to do was think of something that would add value and we discussed it and this was the thing that we came up. We thought, let’s make use of it. It’s not been used, it’s an eyesore.

00;02;08;09 – 00;02;34;08
Libby
It was detracting from the beautiful nursery. I just felt it would add value. I just thought it would be good for the community and be able to connect. So it could be used for the working with the charity, but also for the community. And I just love the environment and it’s got its own little microclimate in here as well because it’s the walled garden and when it’s warm, it’s just amazing.

“It was detracting from the beautiful nursery. I just felt it would add value. I just thought it would be good for the community and be able to connect. So it could be used for the working with the charity, but also for the community. And I just love the environment and it’s got its own little microclimate in here as well because it’s the walled garden and when it’s warm, it’s just amazing.”

00;02;34;08 – 00;02;56;03
Libby
You get the heat reflecting off the walls. And I just think the fact that we’ve got mature shrubs in here as well, and then you’ve got all these beautiful trees surrounding it, it’s I just think it’s phenomenal. And so I came up with the idea, put a proposal together, took it to the head tof Leckford Estate and said, what do you think?

00;02;56;07 – 00;03;18;23
Libby
Is this something that you would support? And they said, Yes, but I then needed a vehicle to be able to do it. And that’s where I put an application into the John Lewis partnership, Golden Jubilee Trust. So that is a charity that is separate from John Lewis, but it pays for partners to go and work for a charity of their choice for up to six months.

00;03;18;26 – 00;03;30;02
Libby
So I feel very blessed that some 7000 people within the partnership and there’s usually about 30 or 40 people per annum, they get the opportunity to do it. So I am one of those 30.

00;03;30;05 – 00;03;32;29
Simon
It’s just lovely. Obviously in my day job. We work with

00;03;33;01 – 00;03;33;29
Libby
John Lewis Partnership

00;03;34;01 – 00;03;45;12
Simon
And there’s something about the partnership and that does those kind of things that are quite incredible for business to do. And you just sort of stop here and think, Well, if it wasn’t for that, we wouldn’t be sitting here

00;03;45;12 – 00;03;47;26
Libby
We wouldn’t be, we wouldn’t be here. But you know.

00;03;47;27 – 00;04;01;05
Simon
And yeah, you can really feel it here without all the plants and the shrubs and unfinished and without anyone, you can almost feel the people that are going to be walking around. Just being and then just enjoying the space and that’s something.

00;04;01;07 – 00;04;02;06
Libby
Yeah.

00;04;02;09 – 00;04;17;28
Simon
But what, what can it sort of grow into because you know, you can’t help but feel with this kind of site how many other sites all around the country. That are unloved. Yeah. And you touched on it before, it’s the idea of people have these spaces and they put something in. But then if you don’t invest things

00;04;17;28 – 00;04;20;04
Libby
Yeah, yeah.

00;04;20;06 – 00;04;22;06
Simon
They then just become weeds and they just deteriorate.

00;04;22;06 – 00;04;48;00
Libby
Yeah. And I think for me I wanted, you know, the whole point of my secondment was to come up with a plan. You know, it was a three phase plan. It was firstly look at ways in which to get funds, whether that be through grant applications or donations from businesses, individuals, etc., or doing events to raise funds, but also the contractors to build it.

00;04;48;02 – 00;05;05;09
Libby
But then the third element was, okay, how are we going to maintain it? What are we going to do? How are we going to maintain it? How are we going to get people to get involved and enjoy it and be part of it as it grows? So that’s where the connections came, where I started looking at, okay, well, we can do that through the charity.

00;05;05;09 – 00;05;25;08
Libby
We can do that through volunteers, but also having Sparsholt College on the doorstep, getting them involved as well. Because there’s a win win, they get the opportunity to have work experience, actually working in the garden, designing part of the garden, but also maintaining it. So they’re getting that practical experience that then gets them ready to work in the outside world.

00;05;25;08 – 00;05;26;04
Libby
So …

00;05;26;06 – 00;05;44;00
Simon
It’s lovely as well, I’ll tell you, because you can build up data around something or learning all the time. Yeah. And it’s a little bit like, you know, buy a family a fish to eat or give them a fishing rod where they can, and the means and the ability to use it. You feed them for life.

00;05;44;00 – 00;06;02;22
Simon
So it’s the idea that by doing this, you can then help others to set up their gardens because you understand these things that didn’t work for us. These are things that did. Yeah. So that I think the same mistakes we can make different mistakes and I don’t know, you’re creating a whole sort of citizen type of attitude towards this which is what I sort of love.

00;06;02;27 – 00;06;10;11
Simon
Yeah, this is the really powerful thing. And also things leads onto the bigger questions to me around these ideas of tiny forests.

00;06;10;14 – 00;06;11;02
Libby
Yes.

00;06;11;02 – 00;06;34;09
Simon
This idea that actually we don’t solve things by necessarily big, ambitious goals, but just by small areas nurtured, loved and looked after. We can make huge differences through the actions. What’s lovely here today is this is not about talking about doing something. This is hands on doing it and it will grow. And I suppose you tweak things on the way.

00;06;35;21 – 00;06;59;28
Libby
I’m, I’m excited about the passion I’m feeling. So as you know, I’m incredibly passionate about this. This is my baby. But lots of other people are coming as well. When there was the Heritage Plant fair last Monday, a lady came to see me because I was stood in the rain with my Brolly …

00;07;00;03 – 00;07;12;10
Simon
But it’s one of the things, isn’t it? You know, you, you show someone on a PowerPoint or on photographs it’s one thing. You take them some way, you show them physically. You walk around so they can feel it.

00;07;12;14 – 00;07;13;17
Libby
Yeah.

00;07;13;19 – 00;07;23;23
Simon
They’re hooked. Yeah. And they get it because they see it. And I think so often in life, we put judgments down to, you know, a quick picture or it’s almost like the social media of something.

00;07;23;24 – 00;07;24;19
Libby
Yeah, yeah.

00;07;24;26 – 00;07;41;16
Simon
A reflection. But actually this is all about the slow times, slow made, that actually if you give people time to just absorb and feel something, you feel connected to it, then emotionally you’re connected to it and then you feel like you want to be a part of it.

“A reflection. But actually this is all about the slow times, slow made, that actually if you give people time to just absorb and feel something, you feel connected to it, then emotionally you’re connected to it and then you feel like you want to be a part of it.”

00;07;41;18 – 00;08;13;18
Libby
Well, this, this was going to be just a, a bit of a makeover of this space and, you know, once I got the opportunity to have the six months of combing through the Golden Jubilee Trust, I, I realized there was opportunity to go beyond just getting local volunteers as opportunities to speak to the bigger contractors who do the contracts for John Lewis Partnership because they’d never been asked before to do a project with the partnership.

00;08;13;18 – 00;08;39;01
Libby
And I just thought, well, that’s a real opportunity here because they work for the partnership. They have an interest in the partnership, do work elsewhere. And this is an environment where they’re doing something totally different. So we were very lucky Triag. We’re amazing. They’ve stepped forward as principal contractor and then all the other contractors came on board and I called it the John Lewis Partnership Construction Alliance.

00;08;39;04 – 00;08;48;12
Libby
Yeah. Fabulous. No. Yes. Yeah, a bit of a tongue twister. But it was they you know, these are companies that usually are competing for work.

00;08;48;19 – 00;09;11;27
Simon
You know, it’s amazing here the way you’ve managed to bring in a partner like, Andover Mind, and it’s a great example that I think a lot of times when people do some form of therapy, it’s in quite boring, dull rooms. It’s quite isolating and quite intimidating. Whereas here what you have, yeah, is a garden. People can walk around and almost the conversations will just naturally unfold.

00;09;12;05 – 00;09;51;10
Libby
I just, you know, for me, you know, from personal experience, my garden helped me when I had an injury. We’re struggling for the physical recovery, but also the mental recovery from, you know, having to stop working for quite a while just to concentrate on getting physically fit again. And it does impact on your mental health. And I just found and it was through a friend I was already keen on gardening, can’t remember the name of plants half the time, but I love gardening and, and it was a friend who just engaged with me kind of.

00;09;51;10 – 00;10;17;24
Libby
We started talking about plant. She came to my garden, I went to hers and it just, it, it was just so rewarding. And it was that helped with both physical and mental recovery for me. And I just saw this. This is what people need because I know at that time I wouldn’t have walked into somewhere like Andover Mind or any other charity that offer those sorts of services.

00;10;17;26 – 00;10;35;13
Libby
I don’t know whether it was stigma or fear, I don’t know. But being able to be outside and work in nature and just connect with nature, I just found that so therapeutic and I just feel that this this creates a very different environment where people can feel relaxed.

00;10;35;15 – 00;10;40;24
Simon
So tell me tell me about your fundraising then. How do you pay for this?

00;10;40;27 – 00;10;42;23
Libby
So we.

00;10;42;23 – 00;10;43;24
Simon
Do.

00;10;43;27 – 00;11;13;17
Libby
We started with a we did a Christmas raffle, so we’ll be doing that again. So I will be seeking donations for that. So going to various businesses and seeking donations, it could be materialised by a lovely light. Or it could be meals out or part of it. And we’ve partnered with a company called Abacus who are one of the local they rent and sell motor homes.

00;11;13;20 – 00;11;32;22
Libby
So they gave us a top price last year and they said that they would support this year as well. So that’s going to be a super top prize. But we did the quiz night, so we’re going to do that annually as well. So we’re going to keep the funds coming in. We’ve got a local contractor who is doing a golf day.

00;11;32;22 – 00;11;43;07
Libby
So they are some of the proceeds from the golf day are going towards the charity. And then we’re also doing a squiggle, a squiggle, I would say.

00;11;43;09 – 00;11;43;29
Simon
Yes, squiggle.

00;11;44;00 – 00;11;55;07
Libby
Squiggle, the Mind squiggle, which actually depicts the journey to mental wellbeing. So it’s not a straight line to.

00;11;55;09 – 00;11;58;12
Simon
Is that a Rhubarb and Custard or Mr Messy

00;11;58;15 – 00;12;22;00
Libby
It is a Mr Mewssy. Yeah. No, it’s a yes. No, it’s, you know, the script. Yeah. Yeah, it’s, yeah. And it looks like a flower. And so we’ve got Hurstborne Forge, they have made them for us and the 15 in the garden. So if you think about the Tower of London where they had all the poppies, we’re going to have squiggles in the garden.

00;12;22;03 – 00;12;25;17
Simon
Thanks so much for that Is this, is this our Bill and Ben moment?

00;12;25;17 – 00;12;26;29
Libby
This is our Bill and Ben …

00;12;27;03 – 00;12;28;06
Simon
Our Bill and Ben impression.

00;12;28;13 – 00;12;30;19
Libby
There we are.

00;12;30;22 – 00;12;32;15
Simon
Mine has actually got soil in it! I have just got soil on my head!

00;12;34;02 – 00;12;37;26
Libby
I tried to knock it out of them …

00;12;37;26 – 00;12;48;26
Simon
I feel part of the garden now. Excellent. Always good to have one bit of silliness.

00;12;48;28 – 00;12;49;17
Libby
Excellent.

 

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In Conversation With: James Otter, a Wooden Surfboard Maker – 003 https://www.anglepoise.com/journal/in-conversation-with-james-otter-a-wooden-surfboard-maker-003/ Tue, 21 May 2024 09:01:36 +0000 https://www.anglepoise.com/?p=371148 My second exploration with like-minded creatives is with James Otter from Otter Surfboards. I first came across James’ work in his book Do Make: The power of your own two hands. The introduction was enough to completely blow my mind.

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From Solo Shed to Shared Passion: The Birth of Otter Surfboards

My second exploration with like-minded creatives is with James Otter from Otter Surfboards. I first came across James’ work in his book Do Make: The power of your own two hands. The introduction was enough to completely blow my mind. Here was someone that just got the process and the importance of us as humans having a deep connection with nature and the objects that surround us.

I was drawn to this immediately because I have often talked about the connection needed between the head, the hands and the heart myself. Plus, I have always been brought up around the sea with a love of sailing, windsurfing and more recently paddleboarding. But had never surfed properly before and certainly never had the opportunity before to build my own wooden surfboard.. Just as Katy Bennet’s passion had led her to the age-old process of Danish cord and weaving, James was similarly drawn to very traditional materials and methods for making what is a pretty modern ‘product’ – and I hesitate to call it a product because it really is so much more than that.

“We hand craft personalised wooden surfboards, paddleboards, bellyboards and handplanes. Made from locally grown timber from regenerative, sustainable woodlands, they marry our two deepest passions and allow our customers to enjoy the oceans and rivers whilst being kind to our planet.”

James envisioned a simple life crafting wooden surfboards in his quiet workshop, fulfilling a select few custom orders each year. But fate had other plans and when a local surfer called Steve asked if, rather than sell him a board, would be consider teaching and sharing the entire process of building one with him, an idea began to brew. How many more Steve’s were out there? How many others wanted to share the journey of creation? The workshops started in 2011 and since then more than 200 people have taken part including me.

Last year I finally met James with a hug. Something I later discovered he did with everyone he meets and together we built a surfboard. This experience sparked a deep curiosity about James’ philosophy which goes way beyond the incredible, handmade wooden surfboards and paddleboards that he makes and teaches others to make so I went and chatted to him to find out more about his process, the tactile nature of what he does (and what he shares). Below you can watch or read more about our conversation.

Watch (24)

Please find below the transcript from our conversations. I have left the timings so you can cross-reference the video finding the section you are most interested in.

00:00:09:15 – 00:00:35:19
Simon
So here I am with Mr. James Otter. We got to know each other I think beginning of this year. I came along to do a surfboard making course with with James down in Cornwall. It very much started for me because, I got my hands on a copy of your book, and I just wanted to start off by talking to you a bit about your whole sort of philosophy.

00:00:35:20 – 00:00:54:05
Simon
That connection is also in the book where you talk very much about, when you walk through a forest and you feel you brush past a leaf or a bulk of a tree, or you’re out in the surf and you feel the side of your hand behind you catching the wave, that to me, something very tactile.

00:00:54:08 – 00:00:55:16
Simon
Can you talk about that?

00:00:55:18 – 00:01:21:02
James
Yeah, I think I think in my world, especially when you’re making things, it’s impossible not to become so attuned to the way that your fingers and your hands talk to you. And I think that you then recognize where it permeates the rest of your life. Like you say, when you’re in the in the ocean, when when I’m surfing, the feel of the water in the rail of the board and and everything, it’s a very physical interaction.

00:01:21:02 – 00:01:42:16
James
And a lot of that kind of the understanding of it is then done with you through your hands, which is the same. Then once once you get into the workshop and, and when you’re making things and it’s only through your hands that you get a real sense of of what’s actually going on in front of you. You know, your eyes tell you so much, but your hands can tell you an awful lot more.

“When you’re making things and it’s only through your hands that you get a real sense of of what’s actually going on in front of you. You know, your eyes tell you so much, but your hands can tell you an awful lot more.”

00:01:42:18 – 00:02:07:13
Simon
Yeah. Because another level of this we discussed as well with this is the idea of how we need to connect head to the heart via the hands so and I was using this example actually with the with the students yesterday to talk I was doing at Falmouth University and it really is this point that until you push it into your hands, it’s not out into the real world because it’s stuck in your internal organs in a sense.

00:02:07:13 – 00:02:24:19
Simon
So you can’t push it out into the world until you make that sort of step. So this whole process then begins through the through the making process? Because it’s a very considered process, isn’t it?

00:02:24:20 – 00:02:25:13
James
Yeah.

00:02:25:13 – 00:02:28:04
Simon
You’ve got a particular structure to the way it’s done.

00:02:28:04 – 00:02:46:19
James
I mean that’s it’s  just like, you found when you came with us for the five days. I know the process inside out in terms of the structure of the way the week happens, but through that time, you’re likely to be using your hands in a way that you might not have done before, ever before, or for a very long time.

00:02:46:20 – 00:03:05:21
James
And so you start to you are using your hands to interact with this physical space in front of you and building up a picture of things. And until kind of the final day where it crescendos in this idea of it all coming together and the two that you get most familiar with over the week probably are your own hands.

00:03:05:23 – 00:03:15:01
James
Um, and I think that like whenever you think of any interaction with the physical world, almost always it is the hands first they’re going to lead everything else. Um, so.

00:03:15:01 – 00:03:33:02
Simon
If I talk a second about the tools, because that was the bit that I really sort of fell in love with, is as you realise in the course of some of the tools. So one of my favorite tools was your Japanese pull saw, which to me I just fell in love with because I’ve never used a tool like that before where it’s it’s almost like a cutting knife.

00:03:33:07 – 00:03:54:10
Simon
Then the tool works towards you, so you’re doing a pulling action. And I don’t think that’s something I’ve been used to in a tool from the West, where everything seems to be away from you. It’s the same with the planes as well, which are Japanese, which seem to be towards you too and I find that a moving experience.

00:03:54:10 – 00:04:13:10
Simon
So that that was the first part. And the second part, is the way you trusted us to just use these quite sharp tools. And there was no testing on a piece of wood. It was straight on the board itself. So why did you do that? I find that fascinating. You chose to allow us to to do so much damage.

00:04:13:11 – 00:04:13:20
Simon
Yeah.

00:04:13:23 – 00:04:37:22
James
Yeah, I think I guess that’s something for me that has evolved over the years. We’ve been running these courses for, I don’t know, 12, 13 years now. And you, you kind of learn. I limit the courses to a certain number of people so that I can always be on hand and keeping an eye on everyone. And you learn where people’s confidence is and where their skills are before it becomes hypercritical in terms of the finish that we’re looking for.

00:04:38:00 – 00:04:56:16
James
And I think the reality is, is it’s quite freeing and liberating to the people like you who’ve come in not really sure way what you’re going to be doing, to be doing everything on your board. Like you say, it’s struck you as something I don’t know, like there was a trust there, like I trusted you to do it.

00:04:56:16 – 00:05:02:14
James
And I think part of that trust. Yeah, in you, in your hands and your making can be quite powerful.

00:05:02:15 – 00:05:25:00
Simon
But it was sending trust I’m not used to through my education. So for example, I did my craft design and technology, and we did have craft back in back in my day. And then you weren’t trusted to do anything because it’s all like, don’t do this or that, you’ve got to practice on here. So for me, it was a completely different educational experience where I was trusted just to get on with it.

00:05:25:00 – 00:05:40:09
Simon
And it was almost like a mindset of, well, if you get it wrong and, you know, I caused a bit of damage on my board when I was making it and you just went I was easily corrected. And then you went into the same thing, which was like a lot because I was like, Oh, she’ll be fine. Yeah.

00:05:40:11 – 00:06:01:22
Simon
And there’s something lovely about that as well, I think is that I know that mend has been made already inside the board, but only I know that. And that to me gives me a little bit of extra joy because it makes it more personal to me. I mean, can you talk a bit about that relationship with with the material or with the board and how?

“And there’s something lovely about that as well, I think is that I know that mend has been made already inside the board, but only I know that. And that to me gives me a little bit of extra joy because it makes it more personal to me”

00:06:02:03 – 00:06:23:09
James
I think for me, what I’ve learned through having people in to make their own surfboards is that they they undoubtedly leave part of themselves in it or they imprint themselves on it. And I think it’s through those little mistakes, those little mishaps, that they they are accidental, but they make it they make the whole process and their experience even more unique.

00:06:23:11 – 00:06:52:10
James
And I think that the idea of like the idea of handmade is what you’re actually kind of talking about, really, in terms of those happy accidents or the little little kind of things that seem to go wrong but get repaired and that makes it something that is tangible and human. Yeah, I think the idea of the off the shelf object that we are so used to kind of nowadays is it follows like a machine aesthetic where everything is expected to be perfect.

00:06:52:12 – 00:07:02:16
James
And actually if there’s something a little bit wrong, you question it and think that it’s not going to be quality. But actually when you go back to making things by hand, you notice that that’s just part of the story of the making of it.

00:07:02:18 – 00:07:17:23
Simon
I mean, another thing I love with them as well is, is almost the sign off at the end where you get people to sign their names on it, which for me is a lovely sign off to make it yours. What it also does is stop this mindset of you just building something to sell on or to pass on.

00:07:17:23 – 00:07:38:17
Simon
It really then embeds it into, you know, a love of the boards when we both signed it and for me it’s a lovely relationship between the teacher and the student. And that relationship between because obviously the spring is my my kind of symbol that I’ve sort of adopted it as a as a custodian.

00:07:38:17 – 00:07:47:03
Simon
And so to have that alongside and on the board as well for me is a lovely sort of celebration of that deeper resonance with the object.

00:07:47:05 – 00:08:05:06
James
And I think that to me that’s one thing that’s really important. That’s why the I’ve kind of come to structure the week the way it is, is so that you as a maker of this would feel like it. You feel that complete ownership of it, you know. Yes. It’s got these mistakes in it. And yes, I have helped.

00:08:05:06 – 00:08:15:02
James
You know, we did make it together. But it is ultimately like you, it wouldn’t exist without you. So I think for me that’s really important that you feel that sense of ownership of it for sure.

00:08:15:03 – 00:08:36:06
Simon
I wanted to talk a little bit about the course generally, because I think obviously a lot of, you know, surfers will come here to build their next board and everything else. And I’m not a surfer, so I’ve never surfed before. I’ve done other things, but never specifically surfed. So for me it was more about the making of the board as the object and the learnings from that.

00:08:36:08 – 00:08:52:23
Simon
Yeah, and obviously I’m going to go on and learn how to surf and that’s my challenge and I have to deal with that. But for me, when I turned up here, I expected it to be about, building a surfboard. But then what I soon discovered going through the process that it was far more than that.

00:08:52:23 – 00:09:17:23
Simon
And to me, if you look at it like a business course or a learning course, it gave incredible business insights around processes, how you start with the end in mind. Showing you how you have to follow a specific plan with a board to get to the right result. So on that level, there were so many learnings, but there are also some learnings about being on a retreat somewhere you could come to and just escape from the world for four or five days.

“If you look at it like a business course or a learning course, it gave incredible business insights around processes, how you start with the end in mind. Showing how you have to follow a specific plan with a board to get to the right result. So on that level, there were so many learnings, but there are also some learnings about being on a retreat somewhere you could come to and just escape from the world for four or five days.”

00:09:18:01 –

00:09:18:01 – 00:09:44:10
Simon
But also there was mindfulness elements and the way you structured the week in terms of the staying over the meeting up, the going to different places to eat was almost like it was all part of this plan, including meeting your family, which is lovely. And my absolute favorite is Buddy the dog, the black Labrador, lying in the sawdust in the studio and following everyone around, you know, having a dog here for me was a massive part of the experience.

00:09:44:12 – 00:09:47:22
Simon
So you just want to talk about that for a minute or. Yeah, you see that?

00:09:47:22 – 00:10:03:20
James
Yeah, I think that’s it. Like you’ve kind of an animal head in that, it’s like the hook is the thing that gets you in the door because you think, Right, I want to go make a surfboard. And then when you get towards the end of the week, you kind of start to see you start to reflect on what that week has been.

00:10:03:22 – 00:10:36:15
James
And for a lot of people, it is a break from the day to day. It’s a completely submersed experience because from 9 to 5 we’re making the surf or we’re in the workshop working methodically through that kind of structure. And that can be quite liberating for people because they just following instruction and that’s sometimes quite freeing. But then at the end of the week you’ve got this physical representation of those five days, an unavoidable this is what I’ve done in five days in terms of what you’re able to achieve and, and you’re like what you might have thought your abilities were.

00:10:36:15 – 00:11:01:14
James
This is actually what you’ve been able to achieve. And I think it’s then when you get to the end of the week and you reali

se that it really wasn’t actually about the surfboard, it was it was much more on a personal kind of human level and you touch on it as well in terms of the connections that you make with the people in the space and being on the coast is unavoidable.

“This is actually what you’ve been able to achieve. And I think it’s then when you get to the end of the week and you realise that it really wasn’t actually about the surfboard, it was it was much more on a personal kind of human level and you touch on it as well in terms of the connections that you make with the people in the space and being on the coast is unavoidable.”

00:11:01:14 – 00:11:17:12
James
How raw and amazing the the weather and the and the kind of environment is. Yeah. Coupled with, like you say, that kind of the family, the friendship, the welcoming, the warmth. Yeah. That we try and make sure is is kind of nurtured within the workshop.

00:11:17:14 – 00:11:32:01
Simon
But what’s also great is doing with a couple of other people because I found that it was a shared experience and you may be doing different boards, but you all get the joy of going through this journey together. So you’ve got something to talk about. And I just found that great.

00:11:32:01 – 00:11:53:08
Simon
You meet people from a completely different walk of life. I have two completely different reasons, and that’s just really refreshing to, to, to sort of do that. Yeah, I just want to talk a moment about things from a sort of Anglepoise perspective, I suppose, because I think there’s so much synergy between what we, both do.

00:11:53:08 – 00:12:12:21
Simon
So, you know, couple of years ago we started this whole campaign around Abandon Darkness, which was, a whole movement. It wasn’t just a sort of tagline for our business, it was a way of looking at how we could change things, improve things. In the easiest way by providing light. But light is a symbol of of hope.

00:12:12:21 – 00:12:46:16
Simon
It resonates on so many so many levels. Yeah. And that’s something I think around how that manifests in materials. So I think it’s really interesting, how you use different materials. So for me I use aluminum for example and you use wood as material. So I was just really interesting to look in to that, but also looking at it from a place of something I very much now talk about, which is custodianship of my company because I’m, as you know, fifth generation and it’s going to pass hopefully on to my children and their children’s children.

00:12:46:16 – 00:13:00:03
Simon
So I feel very part of it and I don’t feel like an owner. So you also have this around, you know, stewardship and not something that comes across in your book, in your thinking about how you select the wood and do that?

00:13:00:03 – 00:13:21:01
James
Yeah, I think whenever as you’ll appreciate as like as a designer, you have every point of a product’s journey. You’ve got to consider where it’s coming from and where it’s going. And it’s the same with running a business, you know that you’ve got to look at things on a bigger scale than than the day to day.

00:13:21:03 – 00:13:42:00
James
And that’s the same when it comes down to materials. Like for me, it’s a case of, yes, you can go and buy timber from a timber merchants and you can have an idea that is relatively responsibly sourced. But to really know and understand it, for me, it’s about working with people in the Woodlands and the idea of what it means to manage land.

00:13:42:02 – 00:13:57:03
James
And the minute you’re talking about wood, trees grow on a time scale equivalent to our lives, so it suddenly makes the picture much bigger and wider than the idea of just taking something from over the counter in a store for wood.

“And the minute you’re talking about wood, trees grow on a time scale equivalent to our lives, so it suddenly makes the picture much bigger and wider than the idea of just taking something from over the counter in a store for wood.”

00:13:57:05 – 00:14:18:16
Simon
So don’t touch the bit because another part we have is all to me as that sort of custodianship is about the long view. So a lot of my thinking and design process and the reason why we look after and mend products is because of their longevity and thinking about, you know, future generations and children and children’s children. Because to me, you know, we have to be responsible to think about that.

00:14:18:16 – 00:14:31:04
Simon
And I think that’s obviously very tied in to the story of a tree, which just works in that long way. You know, things happen much slower and things like that. Yeah. So how how do you think about that?

00:14:31:09 – 00:14:58:23
James
Yeah, I think for me it’s about supporting the people who are who I trust and managing woodland in a really responsible and in a rich regenerative sense. So it’s going beyond the idea of sustainable where you can, you know, you can do the same thing every day in perpetuity to something that actually is giving back and and reestablishing the biodiverse and healthy environment that we need to be doing for future generations.

00:14:59:01 – 00:15:19:15
James
So that for me is when we look at to look at the timber in the materials. It’s a case of supporting and finding the people that are doing that. Um, and yeah, then, then when it comes into the designing of things, much like you’ve touched on your thinking along the lines of okay, what’s the, what’s the relative lifespan of this and how do we continue to repair it?

00:15:19:15 – 00:15:46:16
James
And I think that’s something I’ve come to learn over the years. I set out with this idea of making a product that was as sustainable or as low impact as I possibly could. So it was a case of juggling, using some materials to increase the longevity. We’re all using some that are completely biodegradable. So it’s a balance between those two things coupled with, okay, what do we do at the end of the the ten years of reasonable use or the 20 years What happens then?

00:15:46:18 – 00:16:05:13
James
And I’ve kind of come to learn like the reality is when we have customers who come in, if they’re bored or they’ve damaged them through use, we can repair them. And I think that you’ve touched on that. The idea of repair is is huge. Like, I love to think of our bodies being infinitely repairable because ultimately every piece can be.

00:16:05:15 – 00:16:25:02
Simon
Yeah, I think that’s really interesting to me because I’ve, I love this idea of repair. It sort of increases the story of the object you have. So, you know, it’s just like the lamp I have here. That was a lamp sent back to us and you’ll see it’s got a yellow arm. You know what I wanted to do with mend the arm with something different to celebrate them.

00:16:25:02 – 00:16:43:10
Simon
And so that’s a very sort of kintsugi sort or Japanese thing. And I think there’s something really interesting about how that storytelling works. And then you feel more connected to the object because every time you take it or do something, you remember a part in your life or a stage in your life through it. A day in your life for good or for bad.

“And so that’s a very sort of kintsugi or Japanese thing. And I think there’s something really interesting about how that storytelling works. And then you feel more connected to the object because every time you take it or do something, you remember a part in your life or a stage in your life through it. A day in your life for good or for bad.”

00:16:43:10 – 00:16:47:11
Simon
But it’s just all part of your personal journey. Yeah.

00:16:47:13 – 00:17:01:10
James
Yeah. And that’s the same with exactly the same with us. Like when when people are repairing or we need to do repairs. Often it’s a conversation of do you want it to look like it never happened? Or do you want us to celebrate the fact that it has happened and replace it with a contrasting piece of wood or something?

00:17:01:10 – 00:17:04:10
James
And yeah, it’s is always an interesting conversation.

00:17:04:12 – 00:17:20:18
Simon
Well, I like dents, so you should see with dents in my car, which you probably know about, and they will tell a different story. Yeah, I love that. Yeah. You talk about the, the Anglepoise you have because I love the fact I came in and you had, one of one of our lamps in the studio.

00:17:20:18 – 00:17:21:00
Simon
So.

00:17:21:00 – 00:17:45:14
James
Yeah, yeah. It’s funny when, yeah, when I remember when I think when you first emailed, I was piecing it together and because I think your ear embodies angle points isn’t as an angle and it rang a bell because of design and stuff. I studied through design stuff and then and yeah and, and a few years before had been given by a friend one of your, one of your older lamps that was, that was his granddad’s and, and it just been stood up upstairs.

00:17:45:14 – 00:18:01:14
James
Ultimately it lights the sink for when we wash washing up in the winter and there’s no lights around. Um yeah but it’s a lovely object and I think then obviously having known you and started to understand more about the mechanism in the springs, you kind of, Yeah. Realise how special they are.

00:18:01:17 – 00:18:26:20
Simon
I love that kind of story because what we find a lot with all sorts of Anglepoise owners, what they do is have lots of different lamps for different generations. So the product will start life in the living room or the pride of place in this office space. And gradually as another one comes along, they get sort of moved down a tier into the workshop or lighting the corner of the space, it may eventually end up in the loft or something forgotten.

00:18:26:20 – 00:18:41:13
Simon
And then people like maybe a fifth generation or a child discovers it and goes, Oh, can I get that repaired? And that I love those kind of stories that pass through the generations. And it’s lovely to see an object that just endures. Yeah.

00:18:41:15 – 00:19:00:19
James
And I guess that’s like you touched on with the the longevity of your of your family owned business for five generations. Like you’re going to because you’ve always made products to last. You’re going to be experiencing things that have been around for a long time. And I think that’s quite special isn’t it, to understand that relationship between objects for sure.

00:19:00:21 – 00:19:20:11
Simon
James I just wanted to reflect a moment on, you know, the experience of coming back here today because of stopping for a period of of making. And now the board has gone off and been, you know, glassed and  finished. So this is the first time I’ve seen the finished article. So there’s that moment of of expectation and it’s a lovely thing to do.

00:19:20:11 – 00:19:49:05
Simon
And I feel incredibly proud of what I’m seeing here it’s just a joy to see something looking so beautiful, but it’s also a reflection of us. I think it’s an Anglepoise thing, you know, having that long term relationship with the customer is so important. It’s almost like when if something does go wrong, in some ways it’s an opportunity to reconnect with the customer and it’s almost a privilege and a joy to get to sort out a problem or something that doesn’t work.

“Having that long term relationship with the customer is so important. It’s almost like when if something does go wrong, in some ways it’s an opportunity to reconnect with the customer and it’s almost a privilege and a joy to get to sort out a problem or something that doesn’t work.”

00:19:49:05 – 00:20:13:15
Simon
And then you hope they will, you know, potentially have a longer term relationship with you. And that’s what I feel like coming back here. It it isn’t just about the board. It’s about the relationship and  we’ve become sort of friends for life through this action and that that’s that’s a lovely kind of interaction or interface by being brought together through an object that has enabled that journey for us too, I guess.

 

00:20:13:18 – 00:20:32:16
James
Yeah, that’s it. It’s that, that shared experience of the week. I think I hadn’t realised how memorable they were until then. A couple of years ago, me and my wife were sitting there and I think we’d got to ten years or something and I must have more than that been together. And she’d kind of pinned at the year’s on the wall, and I could tell her the month and who came on every workshop.

“I hadn’t realised how memorable they were until then. A couple of years ago, me and my wife were sitting there and I think we’d got to ten years or something and I must have more than that been together. And she’d kind of pinned at the year’s on the wall, and I could tell her the month and who came on every workshop.”

00:20:32:16 – 00:20:58:19
James
But I couldn’t tell her which year we went on holiday somewhere. Because for me, those memories are so strong. So the hope is that they’re just as strong for you as well as a maker, that it’s just quite an intense experience. So to continue that relationship, yeah, is, is something that I treasure as well. And I do often wonder what it’s like when, when you come back because like you say, the finish is applied separately of we do all the woodwork in the week so you leave the board in a different state to where it is now.

00:20:58:19 – 00:21:05:04
James
And it’s it’s one does it feel familiar and and you’re like it’s yours still.

00:21:05:06 – 00:21:33:02
Simon
It’s well it’s almost I think you go for a bit of a sense of wow I was involved in making and that can be useful is and it’s it makes you have an incredible sense of achievement and the sense that you do have the potential ability to do things. And again, it takes me back to reminding us that we have these hands and we should be using the activities that connect us to the world around us, rather than using them to swipe screens all the time, because that is not connecting us to anything.

00:21:33:02 – 00:21:58:07
Simon
It’s it’s alienating us. So and now I hope this becomes an object I can take out into the field and take into the water and actually reconnect me with the world around me to appreciate its material quality. Appreciate water, which was one of the things needed to grow the wood in the first place. So it helps you teach you about all the sort of interconnectedness of things, I suppose.

00:21:58:10 – 00:22:15:09
James
Yeah, Yeah, for sure. That’s just it. You’re now, you know, this is just the start of, of your journey with yourself. But it’s, it’s, it’s incredible to think where this board and all the boats have made to this point. I kind of have been in the ocean and, and, and with people in those environments, it’s it’s pretty special.

00:22:15:09 – 00:22:40:16
James
In fact you remind me actually, and part of what you said about the shared experience of making a board early, early on, a few of the workshops would only have one person on so they wouldn’t have that shared kind of got over the fence, you know, how are you getting on kind of a feeling or experience. So every year we, we invite all our workshop is back together to kind of to connect together and go catch some waves and have a meal together.

00:22:40:16 – 00:22:52:22
James
And that’s always such a lovely space because no one really knows anyone. And then they suddenly realise they’ve got this, this beautiful thing in common that they’ve all been through. And and suddenly they’re like, they’re friends or immediate friends.

00:22:52:22 – 00:23:12:19
Simon
It’s what you brought together through a process, through a common interest through and friendships form formed through that. And I think that’s lovely that that’s happened. And I can’t think, you know, many of the things people do that happens is seen as an act. When you go and buy a toaster or something, you become part of a group, you meet up to talk about it.

00:23:12:21 – 00:23:26:20
Simon
Well maybe we should do that, but it would be a bit ridiculous. Yeah, it might. Doesn’t make me saying that. How we could we do that with Anglepoise because it’s this lovely just people coming together and sharing stories.

00:23:26:20 – 00:23:36:07
James
It’s a sharing of time, isn’t it, together. I think that’s the thing. It’s it’s not transactional in the same way that purchasing a normal surfboard might be.

00:23:36:09 – 00:23:52:20
Simon
But that’s interesting, isn’t it? Because about time, because it was someone telling me, you know, everyone will fight about, you know, getting 10% off or 5% off this and spend all this money getting the cheapest and the discount when the point is. But no one will do that with their time. You know, time is almost just given no thought.

00:23:52:20 – 00:24:06:08
Simon
But the whole point is time is finite. You can’t get time back, but you can always make more money. So for me, it’s a fascinating thing of how we value the things we do in life. Yeah.

“But the whole point is time is finite. You can’t get time back, but you can always make more money. So for me, it’s a fascinating thing of how we value the things we do in life.”

00:24:06:09 – 00:24:13:22
James
Yeah, yeah. Time is is the only thing we, we all have to trade, isn’t it. Yeah. And we don’t know how much we got. Yeah.

00:24:14:00 – 00:24:18:07
Simon
So that’s why I need to get out and get to get on the surf and just do it!

The post In Conversation With: James Otter, a Wooden Surfboard Maker – 003 appeared first on Anglepoise.

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In Conversation With: Katy Bennett, Home of The Good Chair – 002 https://www.anglepoise.com/journal/katie-a-danish-cord-weaver-in-conversation-002/ Mon, 08 Apr 2024 15:04:47 +0000 https://www.anglepoise.com/?p=369535 Anglepoise recently met Katy Bennett, owner of Home of The Good Chair, who proudly gives timber framed chairs a new lease of life by using a method originated in Denmark, which involves weaving sustainably sourced cord.

The post In Conversation With: Katy Bennett, Home of The Good Chair – 002 appeared first on Anglepoise.

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It’s fascinating the people I encounter on my travels that truly capture my interest. I actively seek out those with a unique perspective, individuals with a clear passion that drives them. My aim is to understand their inspiration, what motivates them each day. Often, these conversations revolve around materials and the creative process, frequently focused on traditional crafts, sometimes with a contemporary twist. In other instances, it might be as simple as the act of repairing or reviving an object (with the talented weaver I will shortly introduce you to, I think we have both a wonderful, traditional craft and new life being given to old objects). The goal is to preserve the stories embedded within these products, ensuring these stories are also passed down through generations.

This is precisely what I strive for at Anglepoise, alongside the entire team. We embarked on a journey, delving into our product history all the way back to the 1930s. Remarkably, many of these creations are still in use today. However, they occasionally require modernisation and improvement to guarantee their safety, functionality, and continued usefulness. That’s the true value of these enduring products – they address a genuine need. In our case, it’s providing light exactly where it’s needed.

So, how can we enhance the experience for our Anglepoise enthusiasts and supporters? By simplifying the repair process, of course. Offering replacement parts, rewiring kits for adherence to contemporary electrical standards – these are the kinds of solutions we provide. Additionally, for those lacking electrical expertise, we offer a comprehensive rewiring and repair service. We take the time to meticulously restore these lamps, ensuring they can be utilised and cherished once again.

Putting pen to paper (or fingers to keyboard at least), this mental exploration led me back to Katy Bennett, owner of Home of the Good Chair,  a captivating Danish cord weaver I had the pleasure of meeting. She possessed a remarkable ability to revitalise pre-loved furniture through her skilful craftsmanship and a genuine appreciation for the materials and techniques involved. While some might perceive it as a tedious, highly repetitive task, for her, it seemed almost meditative. I felt compelled to reconnect with her, to explore our perspectives and identify potential areas of mutual learning.

The outcome is a full-length video interview. It’s within these extended discussions that true wisdom often emerges. So, here it is, the complete interview. I hope you find it both engaging and informative.

Watch (20)

Simon
So Katy. I’m sitting with you here today and I believe we met a couple of months ago. At an event we did. And I was just really fascinated by your process. What you were doing and the materials you were using. So I was just wondering if you could give us an introduction into how you started all this and what you do with these amazing chairs like the one here?

Katy
Yes. So we have secondhand chairs in Danish cord. It’s a old craft technique and and just using Danish chord which is paper. It’s paper twine. So three pieces of paper and it’s twined together. It’s really strong and robust and just weaving techniques.

Simon
So can you just talk to me about that a sec. Because what amazed me was I remember you showed me the twine and you unraveled it and as you say it’s just paper. Now to me, paper something you use for printing words on, writing on or use for origami. But to actually use it for something you actually sit on and is very strong and lasts? How does that happen? How was that discovered or how is it made?

An image showing Katie working with Danish Cord

Katy
I think they used it in World War 2. At the beginning it was used as tyres, so like a replacement of tyres. So it  comes in a big reel. And then I think they used that because it was so strong. I think it’s twined together. So that’s what makes it so strong and keeps its strength.

Simon
So how does it create the strength there, when it’s like paper and as we all know with paper, you get it wet and it just disintegrates. How is this different? How is that managed or dealt with? It is very strong and lasts? How does that happen? How was that discovered or how is it made?

Katy
Well its strung together really tightly, and then it’s also waxed on the top of it to protect it a little bit. So that’s the process of making it stronger.

Simon
Yeah. So you’re also saying obviously it’s Danish cord. So obviously founded there, but is this something that has really been used around the world as a material?

Katy
I think so, yeah. You see a lot of corded chairs in different countries and sometimes rush, I think it’s what is in nature and the use of natural materials. So I think people just use what they can get their hands on and then make something out of that.

Simon
Lovely. So how did you come across this technique? Was it this through your studies or through your process? I mean, how did you come to this and decide this is what I really want to do. What drew you to it?

Katy
So I love Danish design and I love making things. And I was working at the Conran Shop at the time and there was loads of paper coated chairs. And I was like, oh, this would be amazing if I could not only just sell vintage chairs, but actually make something myself. That’s what I wanted to do, so I just bought some chairs and then started doing it on YouTube and then it kind of went from there.

Simon
Then you just started playing around with the process and suddenly you realised yeah, it was working. And here you are today doing it with all these lovely chairs.

Katy
It definitely is an enjoyable process.

Simon
So how does it make you feel doing this process? Because obviously for some people they could find it quite a repetitive process. Do you find yourself getting into a mindful state when you’re doing it?

Katy
Sort of, yeah. I think it’s quite nice that it’s a slow process and you take your time on it. And definitely I think what’s rewarding is you get better along the way. So I think it’s really nice to just take it slow and then actually see your improvements. And you know every time you do it, you’ll do a better job.

Simon
You learnt this obviously as an old Craft going round a long time. How have you picked up? How have you developed the the skills or got the training to be able to do this as a craft?

Katy
I just literally learned on YouTube really, and then just kept practising and practising. I think practise makes perfect, so I think I’ve still got a little way to go and I’m still getting better each day. But I think its just doing it and just getting into your groove and knowing what feels right.

 

“I just learned on YouTube really, and then just kept practising and practising. I think practise makes perfect, so I think I’ve still got a little way to go and I’m still getting better each day, but I think it’s just doing it and just getting into your groove and knowing what feels right.”

 

Simon
Within the technique then, are there lots of different knots or different ways of doing it? Are there traditional techniques and are there modern interpretations on a traditional thing? I’m always interested in the relation between traditional craft and contemporising a craft.

Katy
Yeah, I think there are the main weaves. The envelope weave like this one and then the other weave which is one of the main weaves I do which are traditional weaves that have been around for ages. It’s just finding out how to do it and just working with that I think. But I tend to use the traditional techniques in the modern day.

Simon
So is that something you personally just enjoy more, or get more of a sense of satisfaction?

Katy
I think I like to practise something and then do it really well with just one weave and keeping things simple but actually perfecting that one kind of weave I’m doing rather than experimenting a little bit more, just focusing.

Simon
So in many ways, you’re just trying to return return the chair back to how it was traditionally before.

Katy
Yeah, definitely. Just take those techniques into the modern day life, really.

Simon
Yeah, it’s interesting, isn’t it? Because you’ve got people like Jay Blades, and they tend to take something old and put a twist on it with a an accent or a colour. And I think it’s very interesting that you respect the the tradition and the craft and want to almost return to that. So how how did you find it when people come up to you and see you doing it. Is it something you show people how to do? It is something you’re you’re keen to teach others?

Katy
Yeah. I mean, I’d love to down the line, teach others. I do get asked sometimes how to do it and I always give advice. I think it’s nice to do that and I would definitely like to do workshops or something and teach people how to do it because I think it’s really nice when people are interested in it and they want to it themselves. So it’s keeping the tradition and the craft alive.

 

Simon
One thing I always like asking people around the why question as its one of those things that always stood out to me, it’s a bit of a Simon Sinek thing, but I think it’s always a good one, which is all about people don’t buy what you do. They buy why you do it. So I’m always very interested in the personality or the person. Behind the craft or the object, so that’s something I’d like to ask you. What is your why?

Katy
Why I’m doing this? There was a point in my life where I just really wanted to do something for myself. I think I wanted to prove that I was capable of doing something and having success with it. In the past I was getting rejected a lot from job after job and it was just a little bit hurtful, but also I just felt like I needed to do something and then just keep at it and practice it. I think just to prove a point to people that I can use my skills and I do well through the things that I’ve learned.

 

“There was a point in my life where I just really wanted to do something for myself. I think I wanted to prove that I was capable of doing something and having success with it. In the past I was getting rejected a lot from job after job and it was just a little bit hurtful, but also I just felt like I needed to do something and then just keep at it and practice it.”

 

Simon
And for us, in the simplest way to Abandon Darkness by using light or creating light. But for us it’s something that resonates and runs far deeper in us all as a company and as a business. And and the people and the families, which is for me, whenever you look at something, how can you make it better? How can you improve it? Whether it’s social, whether it’s people’s lives, whether it’s our products. For me, no product should be designed or destined for landfill. So that’s really important, which is why we have spares for all our lights.

We repair old lights, we rewire them and we’ve introduced a lifetime guarantee. Because we are custodians of these products and materials and we owe it to them to treat the materials with respect, on the one hand and also our customers with respect. So that when they buy something from us, it is truly for life and a useful item that won’t go out of fashion and it won’t become irrelevant, so I was just interested in reflecting on that because I see so many similarities in what you’re doing with the chairs. Do you want to just touch on that for a moment? How is what you do important?

 

“Because we are custodians of these products and materials and we owe it to them to treat the materials with respect, on the one hand and also our customers with respect. So that when they buy something from us, it is truly for life and a useful item that won’t go out of fashion and it won’t become irrelevant”

 

Katy
Yeah, I think it’s always really nice to work with something that’s already around. And yeah, giving a chair a new lease of life. I think it’s really important to be sustainable in the world now and just making something old. Giving like creating. Something in the modern world, using traditional techniques, I think that’s really important. Always using something that’s had its day, but also just renewing it and just giving it a new lease of life.

Simon
That’s lovely that you know this idea of objects having a life, and the idea of the relationship of the items with the family or the different family members sitting on them and enjoying the touch and the feel. And I presume that the stories the chairs must carry with them through the marks, the dents, all that sort of natural patina that tells a story.

Katy
Yeah, they’ve lasted for years and years and years and that’s also really nice. Sometimes I get clients that have had them in the family. Their grandparents have had them and some people are like, oh, I’ve had those chairs before. So it’s really nice to see that I’m kind of bringing that kind of chair back in or bringing, like, the paper corner seat back in.

Simon
Brilliant. So when you have done it … Looking back on the journey, what should you have worried about less?

Katy
My imagery being perfect and me portraying like this perfect kind of glossy image not telling my story enough through getting lost in the idea tha everything has to look great nowadays. But I think I’m a lot better at that now. I think people nowadays respond to more of a feeling of authenticity rather than just a nice picture. So I think allowing myself to tell my story and my journey through the business definitely. And just being a bit more authentic to myself, I think allowing the public to see that.

Simon
It’s a great point, I think we are touching on there is that image of the glossy mag, the photoshopped perfect objects. People are starting to see through that and I totally agree that they’re looking for something that is authentic. Authenticity is the absolute key. Authentic stories are so powerful.

Simon
What has been a myth or self limiting belief?

Katy
I’m not worthy enough. Like I said, past rejection, getting rejected, job after job. I think that made me feel really low and hurt. And I didn’t feel like I was good enough to really do anything. So I think that obviously sent me back a lot, but I think it’s how you get back up and get back on that horse and then you learn and it strengthens you in a way. But yeah, I think everyone’s worthy of doing a good thing and just finding what they want to do. What they’re passionate about in life. So I definitely think that is the self limiting belief, and sometimes I do still question that, but it’s a lot better now. You’ve just got to move on and bounce back. It makes you stronger.

 

“I think everyone’s worthy of doing a good thing and just finding what they want to do. What they’re passionate about in life. So I definitely think that is the self limiting belief, and sometimes I do still question that, but it’s a lot better now. You’ve just got to move on and bounce back. It makes you stronger.”

 

Simon
I love that you’re sort of doing one thing well. So you’ve found this thing and you just working at it. I also love the fact you say its all about the learning. For me it’s like your habit is just to get better and better. It’s not like you’re setting a goal saying I’ve gotta be here. You’re just continually striving for getting better and you probably will never reach perfection. But that that’s fine. You know you’re better than you were the day before. And that’s what matters.

What’s the mantra you’ll carry with you into your next success?

Katy
I think thoughts. My thoughts creating my reality. I think it’s always good amongst the chaos to have a dream or a goal. I think that’s what keeps me going when it’s just busy and crazy. It’s always nice to have a positive kind of dream to work towards and I think.

I’ve always been quite a bit of a daydreamer, so I think I really like just manifesting and making my thoughts and imagination and kind of turning it into reality is always really rewarding. It just moves me forwards and it keeps me going, really. But in a positive way.

Simon
And that resonates so much for me. Because I totally believe it’s your thinking that creates your reality What you’re also saying there is about dreams being actions and that is a very Japanese concept. So with Honda, when they talk about the power of dreams. Their Tagline. It isn’t about stuff that you’re just thinking, it’s about stuff you’re going to do. Because dreams mean actions in Japan, and I think it’s an incredibly powerful thing when we do hand on heart, pursue our dreams which means driving forward into our dreams and our thinking. So that’s beautiful.

What are you going to fight for?

Katy
I think I’m going to fight for craftsmanship and sustainability. I think something that’s handmade, just traditional techniques being kept alive in the modern day world. I think that’s really important that sustainable materials are used. From nature, connecting with nature and justice, the fact that craftsmanship and individuals are making things by hand, I think, yeah, I will fight for this.

Simon
That’s great. Why should the competition be scared of you?

Katie
Don’t think they should be scared. I wouldn’t want anyone to be scared of me. I think I just want to be someone like, oh, I’m so inspired by what she’s doing. I guess I want to wow and impress people, obviously along the way. But yeah, I think I’m pretty humble.

Simon
What I think what’s interesting about you is why I think the reason why your competition should be scared of you. It’s because you’re so open about the process and sharing it with others and I think a lot of people, won’t do that. Especially craftspeople are very bad at quite understandably, not passing on the knowledge they have spent years learning. I can understand it because they want to protect their knowledge and their value. But obviously if one doesn’t pass that on, crafts die and don’t pass down. So I think that’s something people should be scared of. Your openness and that willingness to share because, you know, we all learn together.

What could make you unstoppable?

Katy
Unstoppable. I think a willingness to learn, a willingness to progress. I don’t think I will ever stop wanting to learn. And you know, get better each day. I think it’s definitely a journey of improving myself. I think that’s what definitely gives me the determination. I didn’t start off doing this perfectly. So it’s a journey. Just wanting to learn more and learn more about myself and the craft I’m doing and why I’m doing. It just gives me the determination to keep going.

Simon
Thanks very much for all the wonderful insights Katie. Let’s let’s pause there.

You can find out more about Katie and her process, on her website www.homeofthegoodchair.com

The post In Conversation With: Katy Bennett, Home of The Good Chair – 002 appeared first on Anglepoise.

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In Conversation With: Sir Kenneth Grange, an industrial designer – 001 https://www.anglepoise.com/journal/sir-kenneth-grange-an-industrial-designer-in-conversation-001/ Fri, 22 Mar 2024 10:05:44 +0000 https://www.anglepoise.com/?p=381164 Here we are at start of my ‘In Conversation…’ series with Sir Kenneth Grange, an industrial designer in conversation - 001. Where I chat to the makers and doers who have inspired me over the years.

The post In Conversation With: Sir Kenneth Grange, an industrial designer – 001 appeared first on Anglepoise.

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Here we are at the start of my ‘In Conversation…’ series with Sir Kenneth Grange, an industrial designer in conversation – 001. Where I chat to the makers and doers who have inspired me over the years.

And the first one is probably going to be the greatest because it involves someone I’ve known for over 21 years and he is without doubt the greatest human being I’ve ever met. Sir Kenneth Grange has so much talent and drive and he seems to be showing no sign of slowing down any time soon.

We are meeting up at an exciting time. He is about to launch his retrospective book by Thames and Hudson, which celebrates his lifetime of industrial design, which has shaped much of modern Britain. You may not know his name but I can guarantee you will have used or admired one of his products and innovations at some point in your lifetime.

This exciting time coincides with another milestone for Anglepoise – the 20th anniversary of the Type 75 lamp – so it was thrilling to see it on the front cover of Sir Kenneth’s book, something we touch on in our conversation. It was only our second project together, but the Type 75 has become a design icon itself, mirroring Sir Kenneth’s design philosophy with its clean lines and meticulous attention to detail.

So, please, settle in and enjoy our chat after two decades, I still learn from Kenneth’s boundless curiosity and wisdom and I have no doubt he will offer you something to take away with you too.

Watch (18)

00:00:09:05 – 00:00:17:13
Simon
So today, I’m thrilled to be joined by a long friend of mine, actually, which is Sir Kenneth Grange.

00:00:17:13 – 00:00:27:04
Simon
how long we known each other now? Kenneth? I think it’s 21 years. I think we first. I think it must be. I’m not a bit surprised. It’s a long time. Yeah,

00:00:27:04 – 00:00:29:04
Simon
I hadn’t started at Anglepoise very long.

00:00:29:05 – 00:00:41:17
Simon
Actually, I think I was very, very new to the business, very new to the game. And, things came about because I was reading an article in our archive, which was about,

00:00:41:17 – 00:00:50:14
Simon
what’s your favorite design of all time sort of article in the style outsider. I think it was in The Guardian. And the name came up and it was Kenneth Grange.

00:00:50:15 – 00:01:13:23
Simon
And I remember you talking about balance being a quality in life. We don’t talk about or value as we should, and timeless design appeals to young and old and things like that. And it was one of those magic moments where the hairs stand up on the back of your neck and you think, I’ve got I’ve got to meet this person and, understandvwhat he means by those things.

00:01:13:23 – 00:01:21:12
Simon
And and here we are. And 21 years on, we’re sitting here together and that’s fantastic.

00:01:21:12 – 00:01:45:00
Kenneth
Simon. I, I think I’d like to talk about the first time I met you, and its a very fond memory and it was a very in a way, on reflection, a very, very important set of circumstances that in those few minutes

00:01:45:00 – 00:01:53:08
Kenneth
there I was sitting next to the man who was a direct part of that old, old family and springs.

00:01:53:10 – 00:02:22:09
Kenneth
Even then, all I could see were such a key part of life still today, it’s 2024 most people out there, have no idea of the importance of springs in their life. They get into their motorcar and it’s 30 or 40 springs at work the moment they open the door. Even opening the door probably involves a spring. So a terrific institution, the spring world.

” It’s 2024 most people out there, have no idea of the importance of springs in their life. They get into their motorcar and it’s 30 or 40 springs at work the moment they open the door. Even opening the door probably involves a spring. So a terrific institution, the spring world.”

00:02:22:11 – 00:02:53:10
Kenneth
And here I was sitting next to a direct descendant of the great Terry business. So you started at the absolute head start of everybody I would of wish to have sat next to and we whether you wanted it or not, I gave you a long dose of my admiration and my my reference via the spring factory to your origins.

00:02:53:12 – 00:03:04:21
Kenneth
And then that led eventually to us working together. And frankly, Simon, it’s been a pleasure all the time.

00:03:04:21 – 00:03:21:06
Simon
I mean, it’s lovely. You mentioned the springs because it’s something that’s obviously very important to me. So much so I always, always carry spring with me and for me, this spring has become special as it connects me to my ancestors.

00:03:21:06 – 00:03:51:22
Simon
So this spring becomes a bit of a ritual for me that actually I’ve started doing so that every time I leave the house, I actually feel this spring and the tension this spring  has. Just to have a moment when I can reconnect myself with my great grandfather and those that went before me. So, yeah, it’s funny you say not many people think about springs, but for me, I never underestimate the importance of this spring and where I’ve come from, and I think it’s a fascinating thing about springs.

00:03:51:22 – 00:04:15:09
Simon
As you say, they’re everywhere without us realising in many ways. And also the spring has often today been replaced by the chip or by electronics. So, the spring is a fascinating item and in its purest form, the paperclip for me is probably one of the most incredibly simple and beautiful spring. It’s just a very simple device.

“The spring is a fascinating item and in it’s purest form, the paperclip for me is probably one of the most incredibly simple and beautiful spring. It’s just a very simple device.”

00:04:15:10 – 00:04:43:20
Simon & Kenneth
Ours are actually quite complicated, constant tensioning springs and quite hard to make. But the spring is is people’s lives depend on the spring. You’re seeing how many airplanes there are at this very moment up there in the sky. And you can be very sure the springs at work in that giant machine. And yet and so sooner or later, everything in life has something to do with a spring.

00:04:43:20 – 00:05:19:16
Kenneth
It is hard to imagine. That’s not an exaggeration. But the fact of the matter is it’s truth. It’s like it’s similar to somebody describing that you own the screw business. Yeah. The vast, vast variety of screws. But there’s a vast, vast variety of springs. So these two elementary pieces of, of engineering of industrial production across the world, no matter what the what the place is, what the people know, what the circumstances are.

00:05:19:18 – 00:05:24:00
Kenneth
Nobody gets through life without a spring.

00:05:24:00 – 00:05:40:05
Simon
The reason why we started work together was because I think you are somebody who has the ability to understand what a product does. So whether it’s a taxi, a train or a food mixer, you’re able to make that product more useful, more usable.

” The reason why we started work together was because I think you are somebody who has the ability to understand what a product does. So whether it’s a taxi, a train or a food mixer, you’re able to make that product more useful, more usable.”

00:05:40:07 – 00:06:00:05
Simon
And for me, you very much have a philosophy where, if it’s a pleasure to use, something will have more value in the world. And I think that’s something that couldn’t be more true today because we live in a land of products that don’t really solve a problem in many, many ways. So if you look at, a product like the type three, what was the sort of thinking?

00:06:00:07 – 00:06:19:18
Simon
Because there’s a lot of beautiful details in there for me that I think you introduced. And it was a kind of and another point you really got us to think about, I think was the idea with the product where the springs are, it’s the engine of the product and you know, you can relate it to motor cars or different objects, but it all comes back to celebrating that engine.

00:06:19:18 – 00:07:02:16
Kenneth
And I think that’s what you did. I think that that’s a very good description. I think it is this modest little, little assembly of parts is in fact the heart of the product. Really. It is the engine, as you say. And I remember setting about your product, which at the time you were making, because as a canvas on which to then work or stage on which obviously did go to perform, as it were, the target of my endeavors was whether it could be improved functionally

00:07:03:15 – 00:07:20:11
Simon
But I mean, I think the two features to me obviously the engine we’ve talked about, which is the spring mechanism, has a beautiful proportionality to it. I think the way we moved the springs inside the tubes and it became clear we learned a lot from the Type three, I think we bought into that mechanism.

00:07:20:13 – 00:07:40:06
Simon
But I think what has also come out being so great about the mechanism is it’s so easy to repair. So what I love, the fact is, 20 years old now, people are starting to buy spares for these products because maybe they’ve used them in a really rusty environment or something’s become lost because over 20 years of heavy usage that can happen.

00:07:40:06 – 00:08:16:23
Simon & Kenneth
So these are becoming now repaired, loved things, just like products we have, they’re up to 90 years old, so I’m not interrupting you there. This is a favorite topic of mine. The question of sometimes just the good fortune of being part of a team that makes a product that history then unfolds and shows to have been a set of decisions a set of engineering decisions that happily go to make the longevity of not only the product but the company.

00:08:17:01 – 00:09:02:10
Kenneth
And the train that I worked on for British Rail is a good example. And another remarkable example this kid, one is Kenwood, where I designed or redesigned a product of his and by a set of circumstances, some of which are not to do with me, but it was in a degree over engineered, over well made. But the marvelous thing is that subsequently and this is what commerce does, of course, it hands on products from one company to another and in the successive variety of ownerships of the company we call Kenwood, of all of them a benefitted from the fact that it is it’s almost indestructible the damn thing

00:09:02:14 – 00:09:28:00
Kenneth
And so people have come to regard it . I promise you there are more Kenwood Chefs have been handed down through families than you’d have hot dinners.

00:09:28:00 – 00:09:50:02
Simon & Kenneth
And I remember because my uncle’s Kenwood chef broke a while ago and you came to visit them and said, I need a particular part. And then I think it was two years later, I think you finally found the right part and sent it to them. And they were just blown away by that because it’s just an incredible that’s a very important component in the product. But I think generally this way of thinking is, you know, built in obsolescence is at the core of most products made and to me, companies are doing themselves a disservice. It’s insulting to to customers who are treated like consumers.

00:09:50:02 – 00:10:09:11
Simon
And the idea is to consume and then throw away. But for me, ever since I’ve been Anglepoise and my whole philosophy has been, you know, no product should be designed or destined for landfill. It’s just morally wrong. And I literally cry when I see some of our lamps down the tip, you know, they’re called recycling centers.

“Ever since I’ve been at Anglepoise my whole philosophy has been, no product should be designed or destined for landfill. It’s just morally wrong. And I literally cry when I see some of our lamps down the tip”

 

00:10:09:11 – 00:10:40:07
Simon
But fundamentally, a lot of it is a tip, I almost cry when I see this just pointless needless waste of material when all it requires is a bit of love to bring it back and to make it usable product and useful thing. Because in a world of, you know, recycling and all the rest of it, recycling is not going to solve the problems of the world only using the things we make for longer and making the building longevity into our products and the way we live is the only future we can really have as human beings.

00:10:40:10 – 00:11:14:12
Kenneth
And, you know, Simon interrupting at the heart of this is actually detail. The heart of it is actually the minutest concern about the smallest part. And it’s appropriateness. It’s it’s economics. Yeah. And it’s fitting together. So it’s like an ideal jigsaw puzzle. You get all those little bits, they fit one another. And so I’m slightly obsessed and I think I’m not ashamed of the fact that I am obsessed by detail.

“At the heart of this is actually detail. The heart of it is actually the minutest concern about the smallest part. And it’s appropriateness. It’s economics. And it’s fitting together. So it’s like an ideal jigsaw puzzle. You get all those little bits, they fit one another. And so I’m slightly obsessed and I think I’m not ashamed of the fact that I am obsessed by detail.”

 

00:11:14:18 – 00:11:41:15
Simon
Yeah. And I think for me, what’s been lovely about these products, they all fit with, you know, the line we now use, which is Abandon Darkness at Anglepoise. Which is to me all about that thing of being responsible in the world, in the way we behave, in the way we produce and the way we work in the world around us, and not just for our customers, but hopefully as well by the philosophies and the attitude we have that can infiltrate other businesses.

00:11:41:19 – 00:12:13:12
Kenneth
Because if you live if you live with an excellent product day on day, and it is what you will come and what you expect, not only in that thing, in that product and in that moment of what you expect them to be associated with. And, you know, if other things you interface with on your table or in your kitchen or wherever, and if they failed in that, then it’s sort of undermining the basic philosophy.

00:12:13:12 – 00:12:14:01
Simon
Yeah,

00:12:14:21 – 00:12:35:05
Simon
And it’s it’s been fascinating, isn’t it, because we’ve worked together for so long that actually the start of the process, it was bulbs that were very light. They got very hot. Yeah. We then went through a period for compact fluorescents where actually a difficult period for was very heavy and you know, not the nicest light output in many ways.

00:12:35:05 – 00:12:55:21
Simon
And now we end up all the way back in an LED world, which kind of went for a period of being very heavy. But actually we’ve ended up with a weight now where it’s in many bulbs not so dissimilar to the incandescent bulb. And the fascinating thing for me there in bulbs is for every normal lighting product, the weight of the bulb has no consequence whatsoever.

00:12:55:21 – 00:13:24:03
Simon
Absolutely. Light bulbs on their boxes don’t have the weights of the bulbs are essential to us in an Anglepoise mechanism. When balance is critical, the weight is absolutely critical. Sure. So it’s quite interesting, you know, how we dealt with that. And I know in the type three, you dealt with that variation by having adjustable spring caps. So they had these beautiful little dials, which we did on some of our older products, the 1930s.

00:13:24:03 – 00:13:48:22
Simon & Kenneth
But it allows you to change the sort of free length of the spring. And that was one of the most beautiful details that really Yeah, I loved on that product. No, I agree. It’s like having an engine that you’re able to tune yourself. And I know this, you know, fancy, fancy firms, fancy endeavors to tune up the engine of a motorcar.

00:13:49:00 – 00:14:09:07
Kenneth
But we’re talking about adjusting. The tuning is a nicer description of our little engine, which is the heart of the product which are these springs. But it’s a nice thought that, isn’t it. Because, you know, there’s practical uses of that, if you like, on a turntable or something. We have to adjust the weight of the cartridge or the head.

00:14:09:09 – 00:14:31:22
Simon
But actually for the longevity of the product, how do you know what the light source is going to be over ten, 15, 20, 100 years? How do you know how dust or the change in materiality over time? The natural patina over time, how that’s going to change the product? So by sort of building in these components, you’re making a adjustability key.

00:14:32:00 – 00:14:51:11
Simon
And also I think that builds a natural connection between you, the user and the product. And when you increase that emotional connection, it means you grow a relationship with your product. That means you are less likely to throw it away or want to cast it away. You are more likely to hand it over to a future generation.

“When you increase that emotional connection, it means you grow a relationship with your product. That means you are less likely to throw it away or want to cast it away. You are more likely to hand it over to a future generation.”

00:14:51:11 – 00:15:20:13
Simon & Kenneth
So for me, it’s such a beautiful example of building in sort of empathy and love in a product. Well, that’s interesting, Simon, because I think it opens up the discussion about the advent of more and more mechanisms, more and more devices, and to take over our human adjustment of things. I think, you know, we grow up with the luxury of adjusting.

00:15:20:14 – 00:15:47:08
Kenneth
You throw off a blanket if it’s too warm in bed or you change or whatever, you change your clothes and so on. And of course there’s a great deal of talk today about AI the impact of of all these decisions being taken from us. But there will be a lot of decisions left which are absolutely still. And I would want them to be forever in the hands of the owner.

00:15:48:10 – 00:16:10:07
Simon
because it’s also at a level of connectivity in the world. And, you know, if you look at the toaster example that you’re comparing, you know, a mechanism with the quality of toast, with a dial, So with within all those things as a human, it’s allowing you to have decisions, it’s allowing you to think, it’s actually allowing you to use your brain and you get a sense and a feel for how these different

00:16:10:07 – 00:16:29:16
Simon
things interact, which I think can only go to help you in life because if everything is automated, then we as humans are not connecting to the world in our hands and we’re not using our hands. We’re not connecting the head to the heart, which we use the hands, because those we just exist in a virtual world.

00:16:29:16 – 00:16:56:21
Kenneth
Simon I couldn’t agree more. These tactile engagements. Are what make us human? Yes. Yes. I think, you know, if we if we were to rely upon, for example, the use of voice commands to take over from physical commands and therefore judgments, that’s a pretty bleak future up to a point where in 500 years time we won’t have arms, we certainly won’t have the need for fingers.

“These tactile engagements. Are what make us human? If we were to rely upon, for example, the use of voice commands to take over from physical commands and therefore judgments, that’s a pretty bleak future up to a point where in 500 years time we won’t have arms, we certainly won’t have the need for fingers.”

00:16:58:02 – 00:17:20:01
Simon
Can I just talk for 30 seconds on your book. For the book, Kenneth, I’m just so honored and so privileged to see that the Type 75 is the first product on the front cover, when I saw it, I was just like, Wow, that’s just amazing. Well, what does that mean to you?

00:17:20:01 – 00:17:44:05
Kenneth & Simon
Well, it means that it’s one of a one of a few examples of a lifetime’s work. I mean, I’ve had a lot of good fortune and your one of my fortunes. It’s lovely. Kenneth, thank you very much for your time. It’s been a pleasure. Right Adam. We’re done.

 

 

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News & Coffee https://www.anglepoise.com/journal/news-and-coffee/ Thu, 28 Sep 2023 11:11:58 +0000 https://www.anglepoise.com/?p=199193 Anglepoise chatted to News & Coffee; a forward thinking, design inspired independent store plonked in the midst of London and Barcelona.

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  • Describe News and Coffee in 3 words

    CURATED, DEMOCRATIC, TRUE
  • Who, where and how did you come up with the concept?

    In Barcelona, observing the pessimism of the city: paper is dying, neighbourhoods life is dying as every daily ritual is shutting down, there are nothing for locals / everything is for tourists etc… we felt a call to action, as we were sitting on a lot of the tools to put together an antidote: we’re roasters, artists with access to a world wide range of incredible and unique titles, and we knew how to execute with confidence.
  • What’s your best selling item?

    Probably APARTAMENTO. Fun fact: they are based literally across the block patio from us.
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  • How and why did you choose Anglepoise?

    Timeless classic. It brought another touch of class to the small space, and was bringing another level of curation: light.
  • What’s a pivotal value News and Coffee stands for?

    “Give a shit”. Do few things, do the things you care about and know how to do. Do them long enough, and people will recognize you for it. Success will eventually come, after consistency and hard work at perfecting your craft, no matter what it is.
  • Funniest News and Coffee encounter?

    We’re really trying to show our love for hip-hop and have been daydreaming about Hip-hop legends one day showing up at our micro lives, which we do from the newsstands and call LIVE! FROM NEWS & COFFEE. On the second time we were doing one, and still just messing around with the setup… Mos Def randomly walked by the newsstand! We are absolutely NOT ready for that, nor had much to show for, but we definitely took it for a sign that we had to carry on.
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  • Who’s your dream customer?

    We already have them. Im not even being kitsch or gimmicky! Anytime we see someone in the street and think “that’s proper style” or “he/she’s cool”, they end up stopping by, have a chat and tell us to keep going.
  • What’s your biggest challenge?

    Growing, while protecting the soul of the project. Oh, and money.
  • What’s on News and Coffees bucket list?

    New York. The soul of the project belongs there.
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In conversation with Priya Khanchandani https://www.anglepoise.com/journal/in-conversation-with-priya-khanchandani/ Wed, 12 Jul 2023 14:21:44 +0000 https://www.anglepoise.com/?p=132904 We recently sat down with Priya Khanchandan - accomplished curator, writer and commentator. Talking all things design and her role as the Head of Curatorial at the Design Museum in London.

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Photo by Suzanne Zhang

  • Tell us about yourself?

    I’m a curator, writer and polymath at heart. I started my career as a lawyer in London and Milan before leaving to do an MA at the Royal College of Art and have spent the last twelve years working across arts institutions and journalism. I’ve published widely on international design, travelled to places like Jerusalem, Sharjah and Seoul, and curated many exhibitions about subjects ranging from architecture to fashion. I’m fortunate to be part of a thriving design community in London where shared interests have led to deep bonds, learning and collaboration.
  • Describe Priya Khanchandani in 3 words?

    Curious, affectionate, cerebral
  • About your work

    I work at the Design Museum in London as Head of Curatorial, managing the curatorial department and curating exhibitions like The Offbeat Sari, Amy: Beyond the Stay, Yinka Ilori Parables for Happiness and Bethany Williams: Alternative Systems. As a design expert, my work has other strands, too. I’ve contributed to publications like The Guardian, the Sunday Times and Frieze and appear in the national media as a commentator. I also give talks and chair panel discussions about visual culture, which has led me to interview creative people I admire such as the fashion designer Roksanda and the architect Farshid Moussavi.
Priya-Khanchandani-©-Suzanne-Zhang2

Photo by Suzanne Zhang

  • What’s your favourite Anglepoise design?

    It’s got to be the Type 75 – Paul Smith Edition 3
  • Tell us about your studies

    I consider myself a lifelong student of the universe. I’ve always followed my gut when it comes to educational choices, even when they didn’t guarantee me a set path. I grew up in Luton where I did a range of A-Levels across the humanities, arts and maths, then a degree in Modern Languages at Cambridge University, followed by a postgraduate degree in law, and finally a two-year MA in the History of Design at the Royal College of Art joint with the V&A Museum. The latter was a life-altering experience as I learnt to analyse the material world through theory and research a museum collection. The range of my studies has enabled me to have breadth in my career, which has kept me constantly engaged and encouraged me to continue learning all the time – through reading, meeting people, travelling and taking on new experiences and challenges that push me to think in new ways.
  • What’s the best piece of advice you’ve ever been given?

    To be bold with your dreams as you’ll be surprised what is possible if you can manifest it.
Priya-Khanchandani-©-Suzanne-Zhang9

Photo by Prarthna Singh

  • What inspires you?

    I find endless inspiration in books, from poets like Emily Berry and Alice Oswald to non fiction writers like Jia Tolentino, Joan Didion and Rebecca Solnit. I have a passion for literary memoir because it unlocks who we are on a human level and helps us see that philosophically we can go deeper, be more profound and make the right choices when confronted by adversity. Other than this, I go to endless exhibitions, scour online channels and visit international biennales to get to know fresh talent in design and the visual arts – it’s a luxury to be able to consider these activities to be work.
  • What’s your biggest achievement?

    I’m proud of the most recent exhibition I conceived and curated at the Design Museum, The Offbeat Sari, which explores the sari in contemporary India as site for design innovation, an expression of individual identity and a canvas for new materialities. I’m also proud of the book I’ve edited of the same title, in which I’ve commissioned essays by some of the most incredible South Asian writers working today. But my biggest achievement is really salvaging my identity as a writer and curator in the aftermath of ovarian cancer at a young age, since for those who have lived with cancer, having a career isn’t a given.
  • What’s your favourite thing on your desk?

    An old wooden pencil case covered in colourful doodles passed down to me from my Dad and a sand timer I use when focussing on discrete tasks which reminds me of the passage of time.
Priya-Khanchandani-Prarthna-Singh

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9 Qs with Kangan Arora https://www.anglepoise.com/journal/9-qs-with-kangan-arora/ Thu, 01 Jun 2023 15:12:42 +0000 https://www.anglepoise.com/?p=95910 We were fortunate enough to sit down with designer Kangan Arora and bottle up a teeny part of her colourful life. We'll be sharing what we found out: what inspires her, design and her love of a trusty Paul Smith edition Anglepoise.

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  • Introduce us to your beautiful work

    I am a London-based designer primarily working with colour and print – often, but not exclusively, in textiles. My work centres around geometry, abstraction, pattern application and exploring the Indian visual vernacular. With a strong focus on the language of colour and print processes, this manifests itself across a range of products including soft furnishings, rugs, tapestries, stationery and more. 
  • Where do you find inspiration?

    Honestly, everywhere. I’m surrounded by things I’ve collected – photographs I’ve taken, objects I’ve found or scavenged, colour samples and swatches that contribute to my ever growing colour library. Trips home to India, visits to exhibitions or sometimes just a mundane walk to the corner shop are all inspiring – as a designer, you have to always keep your eyes open and your phone on hand to snap it – 19,690 photos and counting…
  • What motivates you?

    Coming to my studio. I look around me and think – I actually get to do what I do and call it work. It’s not always easy, but it is where I’m happiest. You can’t ask for more than that.
FS_Kangan_Arora0966
  • Describe yourself in 3 words?

    Colour-obsessed, Curious & Happy
  • How’s your journey been?

    It’s been a joyful and educational ride. I got started by designing and producing my own products, then finding suitable stockists via trade shows or selling directly on my online shop. But over the past 6 years I’ve transitioned into more of a design studio; collaborating with brands and focusing on the creative process – generally leaving the production to the experts! I’ve been lucky to have worked on some really diverse and exciting projects – print design for IKEA and the Tate, packaging design for REN Skincare, large scale site-specific tapestries for Piercy & Co. As well as an ongoing rug partnership with Floor Story. Every project is different and keeps me on my toes. I also lecture at Central Saint Martins, which was my own alma mater several years back.
  • What’s your biggest achievement?

    Seeing my work appear in IKEA stores worldwide was pretty special. I’m a big believer of design being accessible to all and IKEA manages that better than almost anyone else. I’ve lived in London for 17 years and visited the Tate more times than I can remember, so working with them was also a bit of a dream.
Kangan-Arora-Studio-26-Photo-by-Flore-Diamant
  • What is it about Anglepoise?

    I love that it’s a family owned business. Products are about the people behind them, and I know that Anglepoise is as much about community as it is about the product. I also love how timeless it is – the same form approached through different eyes, whether it’s Paul Smith or the National Trust – something for everyone… the democracy of design coming into play again, as I mentioned earlier.
  • What’s the best piece of advice you’ve ever been given?

    Be the last man standing, keep showing up to work everyday!
  • What’s next?

    The next few years will be spent juggling studio time, teaching and having a young child. It’s challenging but really forces a work life balance that I’m enjoying. There are some exciting projects in the pipeline involving stationery and traditional block print – I can’t reveal too much but watch this space. See work
Kangan-Arora-Studio-2

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The York townhouse turned creative hub https://www.anglepoise.com/journal/the-york-townhouse-turned-creative-hub/ Mon, 17 Apr 2023 10:11:17 +0000 https://www.anglepoise.com/?p=72875 Let's start the week by introducing Kate Semple, ceramicist and Anglepoise super fan (by the looks of it). Located in York, potter Kate and her illustrator husband David make use of many Anglepoise around their townhouse turned creative hub. 

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Kate & David

Let’s start the week by introducing Kate Semple, ceramicist and Anglepoise super fan (by the looks of it). Located in York, potter Kate and her illustrator husband David make use of many Anglepoise around their townhouse turned creative hub.

Kate-semple_home_5web

Desk and Floor Lamps

Kate has chosen the Type 75 design throughout her home, including a slate grey floor lamp and a black desk lamp for the living room. Illuminating the bedside is a mini desk lamp in slate grey, it’s slightly shorter height and smaller shade makes the perfect reading light. Margaret Howell’s yellow ochre desk lamp sits proudly on Kate’s desk, offering a ray of sunshine in her study corner.

It looks like we could all take some inspiration from Kates stunning home, but which would you choose?

Kate-semple_home_2web

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Meet the light that’s just your type … Type 80 Pendant that is. https://www.anglepoise.com/journal/meet-the-light-thats-just-your-type/ Wed, 08 Feb 2023 15:06:59 +0000 https://www.anglepoise.com/?p=16141 Our hearts skipped a beat when we saw this gorgeous extension featuring our Type 80 ceiling lights in Rose Pink. They're a perfect match for the blush pink velvet bar stools, and really pop against the deep navy paintwork.

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Type 80 Pendants

Our hearts skipped a beat when we saw this gorgeous extension featuring our Type 80 pendant lights in Rose Pink. They’re a perfect match for the blush pink velvet bar stools, and really pop against the deep navy paintwork.

The project was a design collaboration between the McGregors and Rick from Knot Joinery in Lancashire, and his reason for choosing Anglepoise was simple. ‘I have Anglepoise pendant lights in my own kitchen and I recommend them to most of my customers.’ he says.

(Stop it Rick, we’re blushing.)

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Type 80 Pendants

Don’t hang about – get the look

The Type 80, with its ingenious halo light escape, brings sharp detail and a subtle contemporary glow to traditional or modern interiors. But it’s not just for ceilings – this sleek design by Sir Kenneth Grange can also add stylist illumination to walls, desks and dark corners. You’re bound to fall for one of them.

Knot-Joinery_51_web

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