UK furniture brand Efasma will unveil its first collection at this year’s 100% Design in London.
Designed
by London based architects Bureau de Change, the range establishes the
brand’s ethos in creating innovative design products, which are shaped
by a desire for an ecological approach and the use of natural materials,
traditional techniques and quality craftsmanship.
The essence of
the collection is drawn from the brand’s origins in Greece, inspired by
a wish to utilize talented local craftsmen and draw their skills out
from the shadows of industrial manufacture. The country’s basket makers
and weavers - the skills of whom will be used in the manufacture of the
furniture - inspired tactile and three dimensional handwoven surfaces.
Bureau
de Change co-founder Katerina Dionysopoulou comments: “Sourcing
materials and production in Greece gives Efasma and the consumer the
chance to benefit from the craftsmanship of the country’s highly skilled
makers, and also brings business back to the company’s community”
Single
lengths of 100% cotton rope bind chair frames together, giving them
rigidity, a concept which exemplifies the use of traditional techniques
as a platform for innovation. Handcraftsmanship is enhanced by
nanotechnology, which repels dirt from the cotton textile, increasing
its longevity.
The collection is made up of handwoven walnut
framed seating, substantial marble and timber dining tables, a coffee
table and room divider. The depth and richness of the woven surfaces are
amplified by clean, graphic forms across the range and their
combination with highlights of glossy marble and brass.
bureau de
change: The range was inspired by Bureau de Change’s interest in
interrogating materials and manufacture processes, in order to blend
functionality with aesthetic drama and attention to detail - an approach
they typically use in their architectural commissions.
Woven
surfaces are echoed in the geometry of the solid wood dining table,
which plays with the direction and natural grain of solid oak and
walnut. The same technique is used in the coffee table, in which puzzle
like marble panels are rotated and pieced together to emphasize the
veins running through the material.
The dining tables have been
shaped by a slotting system, in which Efasma’s dining chairs appear
pushed into the edge of the table, leaving behind a footprint of
satisfying brass clad notches.
Commenting on the pieces, Bureau
de Change co-founder Billy Mavropoulos adds: “We wanted to create
products in which design content and innovation emerge from traditional
techniques and craftsmanship. Distilling the structures down to their
simplest forms not only creates a strong graphic language within the
range, but also embosses detailing, the textural qualities of the woven
surfaces and the patina of natural materials.”
The Efasma collection was exhibited at 100% Design, London from 23 - 26 September 2015.