Website Update - Hosoi

June 16th, 2009 by admin

Ive also added a piece I built a few years ago as the cousin to Takai.  Which design do you like better?  Its almost a Chinese versus Japanese thing. This is going to polarize the world.  Its like Republicans vs Democrats, Pro-life vs pro- choice, Lebron or Kobe….  Here is Hosoi.

photo by Anna Campbell

Here is Takai (the older design)

photo by Alleh Lindquist

Jason Hernandez veneer table

May 10th, 2009 by admin

photo by Anna Campbell

Check out this veneer coffee table by chaboo artist Jason Hernandez.  When I visited him in his shop a few months ago he was just starting to lay out the veneers he had cut and told me about his idea.  Now its done and he had the piece photographed by Project Chaboo photographer Anna Campbell.  Im glad people have been connecting through the project.

photo by Anna Campbell

MMMmmm.  Pretty SICK if you ask me!  The design of the pattern is just killer and add to that the figure in the veneers- makes my spine tingle.  You can see Jason’s work on his website here.  Hes teaching a class at OCAC this summer called Elements of Furniture Making for beginning through intermediate woodworkers.  Learn from the master!

process, by corbin keech.

February 17th, 2009 by admin

the design for my chaboo was conceived in a matter of minutes. this is somewhat atypical for someone like myself, whose instincts are to think, experiment, and think some more. instead, my process started quickly and without much deliberation. assuming my chaboo stands and isn’t a terrific failure, i may have turned over a new leaf.

several weeks ago Juno Lackman had mentioned ken’s project to me. it seemed like an interesting idea, but i wasn’t sure if i had the time or the energy to participate. a few weeks and a lost job later, an email from juno arrives, alerting me that ken had one chaboo left and i had better call him immediately or my tiny window would close. within an hour i was in ken’s shop, sharing with him my ideas conceived on the bus ride over. perhaps the stars would align.

despite my complete lack of preparation and thought, this process has been, oddly enough, comfortable. design is occasionally exhausting, but almost always a thrill. the most satisfying work i’ve contributed to thus far has involved a similar ethic - work quickly. collaborate heavily. be physically, mentally and emotionally engaged. presumably good things will result.

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initially, i wanted to make simple adjustments to the original chaboo. i wanted to play with it, manipulate its simple form, and slightly change its elegant proportion. in other words, i simply wanted to compose something.

through this process, i eventually broke the chaboo into three parts.



moving between sketches and 3d study, the ‘playfulness’ started to get a little out of hand, and the whimsy was overwhelming any effort on my part to be clever.

three elements would require a ’spine’ to join them again - too complicated?
perhaps if i reduce the chaboo to two elements instead of three?
how do you reconfigure the chaboo once you split it in half?
do you split it in half?
once the chaboo is split/broken, how much of the original is retained?
does one replicate the original with a similar form/material? different? is it disrespectful to completely change the original piece?
can something this ‘fragmented’ even stand on its own weight?


one sketch provided a sensible resolution >

a simple idea emerges > the chaboo is reconfigured, but includes two ‘foreign’ elements - one that echoes the original form, and another that is completely divorced from the original.

no matter what, the additions to the chaboo cannot dominate the original. such a gesture would be inappropriate, disrespectful, and unnecessary. as a diagram, boldness in reconfiuration must be balanced by a concerted effort to restrain the expressiveness.


Coat Rack in Action

November 29th, 2008 by admin

Ive finally completed my blog posting on my coat rack project.  The posting goes through the project from concept to design to fabrication to completion.  The project was a lot of fun for me.  Especially the part where I got to pour molten lead!

Chaboo Uses

November 25th, 2008 by admin

How will you use your Chaboo?

I originally designed Chaboo for myself.  I like small spaces, I like sitting on the floor, and I wanted a piece of dynamic/versatile furniture.  Chaboo is meant to be furniture that you use in many many different ways and move everyday.

Im having my friend from RISD, Chris Towery do some illustrations demonstrating the different uses.  I sent him photos I took of my mom and brother using the chaboo in various ways.  Chris is an excellent designer who did the original design for my Tomitadesigns logo back in the day.  He is a graphic designer for Quicksilver now and likes to sketch jazz bands in his leisure time.

I like the okapi one the best!  Pretty sweet….