free. standing.

m’tab skeletal mark one bench and table

m’tab skeletal mark one bench and table

     This is a bit like spontaneously visiting an amazing place along an unplanned journey. Starts with a feeling really, not a clear idea of the destination and then baam, everything along the way just works and you are sure you are on the right track. 

     After doing the stool and chair making courses with Ambrose, nothing was the same anymore. Yeah, but what? I don't know. I think I took my chair to too many places to sit on. I've got a pretty big van, ok. The exibitionist in me was like: dude, people don't get to see fitted stuff, sharing is caring. One track mind since then. Well, two track. Ok, many track mind, but freestanding stuff was calling. I didn't pick up straight away. 

     Picking up a call in this context is a complicated business. There are distractions that make it impossible. Current projects, what my portfolio consists of, what people know I'm good at. I needed a proof of concept. I needed my pallet developed. I needed my unique style. That is not easy in a field of well sponsored and educated amazing architects and designers. Bills in London chaise me from one end, clients from another. I needed to sponsor my own design sabbatical and/ or develop stuff around my current commitments. Tough. Oh c'mon. 

     The amount of stuff one has to go through, the number of bad designs that end up in the bin... Not that I can really handle things in the bin well, tend to work the materials to the smallest pieces, upcycling every last bit, knobs out of brass bar or spatulas of every wood offcut. Even the brass-framed endgrain herringbone on dibond tops- all minimum-waste-policy inspired. Call it what you will, I just don't have any patience for waste, generating waste.. terrible. Ok, this got a bit sad now. 

     Luckily one day Helen pops up from nowhere. East London super cool interior designer, already with a great understanding of making and design process. Like a life representation of Ilse Crawford's famous (at least to me) quote: "Design is the relationship with the maker". So Helen is asking if I could make that bench, and I say no, then I say maybe, then I say yes, then I say yes please. 

     To start of with, it's a budget project. Then we both end up pouring time and money into it. Why? Because it's fun. So much fun. To explain to the non-creative ones, designers mind can wander and mostly that's what it does. It is invaluable to have someone to bounce off of. Collaboration tends to accelerate and ground you, keeps the anchor down and/or fills the sails, no idea how it works really, and most times it doesn't (let's say because of egos) but when it does, it so does. 

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brief

first idea board

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brief/ page2

dims and construct idea

     So it started of from simple and practical sketch of a ply kitchen-diner banquette with a couple of (ply again) storage drawers under. Possibly even simple castor drawers from Ikea. I agreed to do that at cost, just so we've got a portfolio piece. Then Helen came over to my studio, where were a few development pieces I was working on for my freestanding adventure. She kinda liked it. We changed the bench design to "skeleton" as she called it. Okkey, nice, let's make it work. No, let's not just make it work, let's make it cool. Let us have fun yeah. I said I'll draw it. We've set a budget( which is a great constrain) and within that I set to work. 

IMG_1948 (1).JPG

so yeah, I've got some stuff I was working on...

 

     Skeleton bench. Ok. So steel frame can be bulky and heavy but that is not me. The "skeleton" design that Helen liked in my studio, was already quite a developed thing. It had it's core theme, which was unique, that had to remain constant. Still, to apply that to a new piece, that's a whole new brain storm. I'm on my own in this storm. Not easy, but kind of easier. First what comes to mind is that ply will sag being 18mm and having people sit on it. Ok, so we need a flat bar on edge under, no we can't. Disagrees with the theme of my "skeleton" system. Thing about it is that it's quite minimal. It consists of two 40/10 mild steel flatbar frames on each end, connected by two 20mm round bars tapped on ends. Four pieces and four bolts essentially on a solid wood top desk, which was a first completed development piece I was happy with. 

my first complete freestanding piece

my first complete freestanding piece

         

     Now, this is pure geeking out this. Oh well. So since the ply would sag and the "skeleton" is naturally amazing on horizontal tensile strength, we can arch the seat, so when on compression under a bum- it would want to spread sideways before reaching the critical point and collapsing. Well that would take quite a bum to stretch the steel rods, a baby elephant most likely. Not weight but torsion would probably be cause of death on post mortal... I've gone too far now.

compression & tension

getting a bit excited...

         

     I showed Helen the picture of benches in Tate Modern and was like: dis cool, no? Not apparently. Because of breadcrumbs. Can we have gaps between the ply, so breadcrumbs don't gather.

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...I have not asked permission to use this image..

...asking forgiveness though

     

Back to drawing board. This was precisely the point I was off to The Duke for a pint and Helen was hard at work, driven by the breadcrumbs hatred. She must have really disliked the buggers, and so thank f*** for that. Best solution and the final design was about to be born. She sent me this:

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yeah, my mate in the workshop also made a table like that...

it will work!

     Also along the way somewhere a table was added to the job, so we are now making a set. 

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The chair on the left is left out of the project for now..

design approved, now on with the making...

 

     And then, quite simply, although not simply at all, we've made it! Well, physically I've made it: welded it, cnc'd it, veneered it, sprayed it, assembled. The shape would be different if not Helen though. The shape would never exist at all. It was fun. And I've made a friend. Helen, thank you. 

 

proper photoshoot pictures will follow!

nearly zero power tools and The Dutch Elm Disease

..except for band saw and a pillar drill. Total power tool ON time, 6 minutes, I promise. Other than that, the only noise was mallet... and Ambrose's tractor

Not many makers are lucky enough to get their hands on a piece of Elm nowadays.. It is believed to be extinct. Wikipedia reckons "very few mature elms were left in Britain or much of continental Europe". But what is a very few..? we don't know, what we do know is that 25million of them had died in the 70ties and they don't sell it at any timber merchants. Well, Ambrose got some.. and we made some chairs from it. 

2 inch elm with saw mill and band saw marks

2 inch elm with saw mill and band saw marks

I did pick a difficult piece. The more difficult the nicer looking, but with only hand tools and this mad grain- borderline impossible. It worked though, I am sitting on it. 

Let me give you a bit of the context. 

Having spent most of my making hours working sheet material to a perfect finish, straight lines and a hipster look, I did need something more wonky and organic to make or I'd just explode. I did manage to make a curved front wardrobe last year, and I really enjoyed it, but curved just doesn't seem to be in. Linear, linear, I was seriously considering a pottery course. Ok, there was Mark from SmithDawson asking for 2m diameter conference table, but still, even that, I could not come up with a design I'd be happy to propose.. If I made it out of wood, it'd still show planks and would be directional, only option seemed Shou Sugi Ban charcoaled finish, still, round was calling.. Curvy...  

I've stumbled across Ambrose Vevers at Clerkenwell design week 2015 and had his flyer stuck to my special wall for two years now. I typed it in. Bulls Eye. Not only I love Devon and would take any excuse to go there, now there is an experience I can just book up and live, and it is what I did. The experience is sitting in a perfect peace in a timber framed barn, in the Dartmoor National Park, on a shave horse mostly, with a massive barn doors opened to a view, that has nothing man-made in sight, and making something out of wood. "Something" is an understatement. Now, this dude, Ambrose, had always made things out of wood. I have a picture of a chair he made when he was 12. He lives and breaths wood and design. Wonky wood. He might be one of the last ones! Like an Elm itself! So the design I think is perfected, obviously Ambrose wouldn't think so, maybe, but we agree it's close. 

After gauging out the bulk of it, time to get on the travisher and dish out the shape of my bum in this Elm seat, making sure my knackered ageing pelvis gets enough support there. 

wood shavings aplenty, mad grain

wood shavings aplenty, mad grain

This is all good and well but it's still work. However nice, it is work, and all work no play makes Jack a dull boy, no? So there had to be a bit of getting lost in the moors, getting the van stuck in the tidal beech sands.. and 24knots wind sailing if that wasn't enough...   

But I've made it back to the barn and... no one was there. That's because we needed power that day for steam bending and the boys were already at Ambrose's workshop, another epic location- with 40+ bee hives! and a massive cherry blossom tree. Mobile reception in Devon makes you feel like having a pigeon for sending messages would not be a step too far. 

ok, we have used power for steam bending. 

That day we all had to do 8+2 spindles that support the arm-rest, all from square pieces of timber, with a draw knife and spoke shave and a bit to round off with what looks like a massive pencil sharpener. 

rounding off the bit of the leg that sits in the Elm seat

rounding off the bit of the leg that sits in the Elm seat

I was told to make a picture of all the components when ready... nah, too excited I was.. I want to sit on it, I want to sit on it..

like soo dished out right

like soo dished out right

From here it's a home straight, still possible to get it wrong with glueing but hey, I've done it a few times before..  Walnut wedges, trimming the legs flat, few finishing touches.. 

We've all done it! yes, everyone has made a chair! And on that note I thought it'd be so nice to cook some nice grub out in the open and just nourish the body a bit! We were all in high spirits but it was a week of hard work in the end. So a proper cowboy bean stew, egg and a slice of bread. Ambrose's sister also baked us a cake! 

what a bunch of happy dudes

what a bunch of happy dudes

my very own Elm&Ash Windsor (kind of) chair  

my very own Elm&Ash Windsor (kind of) chair  

...and Ambrose on his tractor

...and Ambrose on his tractor

well done digital, you've made it

 It was a blast. First in music: CD's replaced the tape, I well remember that. Video took a bit longer and had to wait for a DVD to replace old VHS.. Compact Disc, Digital Versatile Disk, Video Home System... all those seem all archaic already! Now we watch HD on our 3G mobile and have SIRI to ask all we wish, from directions to the whole content of encyclopedic knowledge. 30 years ago, we had Pong and Tetris, Pacman was the one I really quite liked and rather advanced. Fast forward 30 years on and we have photo realistic 3D games, with millions of people playing simultaneously, and it's getting better every year. Ah, not to mention the CNC and 3D printing! More and more boys in the workshop don't even bother with a saw- just get CNC to cut it for them.. (Computer Numerical Control, and everybody knows that, right?)

One would think art world would resist the longest, preserving traditional craft, but no, and where do we go with all this.. 

Those that have seen beginnings of Virtual reality and Augmented Reality would be already impressed, and just when my legendary friend Bertie ( of Colab immersive theatre) is letting me try his new VR gear( really freaky..) , Hugo comes in to pick up some tools he keeps at my studio, and since we're on the subject- if I wouldn't fancy giving him a hand the next morning (13meters centrepiece set, with Augmented Reality digital content added through the app). Great day as ever when on set with Hugo, private view invites and lunch at Argentinean, what's not to like:

ABOVE:   DIGITAL PLAYGROUND/maser @2016 moniker art fair /Old Truman's Brewery London

http://monikerartfair.com/installation-maser/

 

I love old records. I love traditional craftsmanship. I love oil paintings. I can be al melancholic about it. Huge respect for those maniacs resisting the digital. Really, you are my heroes.  

But hey, some say our world is digital. Some even say we live in simulation. That all our universe is pixelated and in fact there is more arguments that we do, than that we don't. So... hello digital.

And very, very quickly, very soon, hello A.I. 

Hello Quantum computing. 

Hello mind upload. In our life times.

Crazy. 

“if we assume any rate of improvement at all, the game will become indistinguishable from reality. Even if the rate of advancement drops by a thousandth, from what it is right now, so even if you’d say 10000 years into the future, which is nothing in the evolutionary scale. So given that we are clearly on the trajectory to have games that are indistinguishable from reality, and those games can be played on any PC or games console, and there could be millions or billions of such computers or consoles, it would seem to follow that the odds that we are in base reality is one in millions or billions.” **
— **quote from CODE CONFERENCE 2016

a cat walk

It's always nice to step away from the current focus and get enriched by a bit of a challenge. Katie from brixton has approached me just before my August holiday, if it would be possible to make something for her 3 cats, as a present, and if I'd be interested to help her... I said- sure, sounds fun, and I was sent this:

 

Of course it was going on a plasterboard wall... Great. It didn't take long to get the budget set and agreed, followed by Katie's visit to my studio, to talk materials and finishes, all approved in a couple of days. 

Site visit and layout visual was a blast, and after a couple of hours we had this:

it often helps clients to visualise the imagined 

it often helps clients to visualise the imagined 

pretty quickly I had the working drawing as well:

cat walk planning.png

That was it. But, there's always a BUT.. In all the joy I have forgotten the minimum order value at Latham's... Basically left all the deposit there, had to buy 4sheets of the lovely mouse grey Velchromat, instead of... one. Sure I'll use it for something, such lovely material, manmade but cool. On that note, it was time pull the cutting list of the drawing, put in some grafting and go off on holiday. Took half a day to have the pieces ready, all laid in the shop to greet me back, ready for biscuiting. Time to set to Devon! And what a trip it was! Mind the smug me.. 

That Oak was probably over 4meters circumference! I didn't know if I should have felt guilty for thinking what I could make of it..  ( can't see arrows but this above is a carousel, scrolls it does) 

Anyway, that was that, back to work. Gluing, biscuiting, 2 stages, bit by bit... Incremental is the craftsman way, giving the project time it requires and deserves, no rushing os cutting corners. Also the 40/10 steel flat bar support has to be cut, drilled, tapped and grit coated for that lovely unique mtab signature grit black finish.. 

not forgetting to mention the routing, recesses for invisible mounting must be.. invisible. 

not forgetting to mention the routing, recesses for invisible mounting must be.. invisible. 

Just delivery and installation left, it was a blast, was done and shooting lovely pics before the last light!

TaaDaa!

a little confession

Hi there! 

My name is Mateusz Moscicki and I am a designer-maker. Since 2001 I am providing individual designs to best utilise customers residential and office spaces. 

What is a Designer Maker..? There is no separate category for that on most advertising platforms, as I guess it is a fringe movement common only at Clerkenwell Design Week. There is a belief, that architects and designers are out of touch with materials and craftsman can't design very well so this new breed of Designers Makers can be best explained as "hands on architects presenting exceptional level of craftsmanship " 

To minimise overheads of expensive workshop set up, which in London meant keeping 4 boys working constantly just to pay the workshop rent and machines leases, since 2014 I am a member of #buildingbloqs shared workspace community and workshop in north London, with access to wood and metal working machinery as well as the expertise and mutual support of 160 professional member designer-makers. This means vertically integrated production that is the best choice for bespoke commissions. 
Laser cutting, cnc router and spray booth is also part of the facility. We recently have been granted enormous injection of funds by London Regeneration Fund and are moving to new facility that is to be largest in Europe. Come and visit. 

After nearly two years of development I am ready to offer my new range of fitted furniture from own MODERN FAMILIAR line, it's very clever and offers considerable savings in comparison with traditional carcass-framed construction. 

Other than that, typically an extensive array of solutions and materials is offered for bespoke service, as well as the simplest and most common options. Optimal application of steel, solid wood and/or sheet materials as well as composites, personally designed and fabricated guarantee results second to none. Before you ask the going rates on week plus projects are typically £260 per day but 90% of projects are agreed on fixed prices. Less than a weeks work @£60 per hour. So cheap, no? Car mechanic prices for creative craftsman. Spray finish typically £50m2 with 14 day lead time. 

jedynka( post number one)

checking how to work this thing. it seem to be pretty intuitive. we like that, no prescious brainjuice spent on working out how it works, if only all of our designs could be that sweet