Added to 417 ideabooks Last comment "There's no better example of 1970s design than the Frank Gehry Wiggle"
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cardboard gehry chair, flagstone wall
Frank Gehry wiggle chair - Brant
architect, Frank Ghery...he was given the title "starchitect"..anyway, it's eco friendly, made out of corrugated cardboard and he figured out how to make it strong.
than the Frank Gehry Wiggle Chair from 1972.
Frank Gehry Wiggle Chair, 1972.
Made of corrugated cardboard laminated together, the chair celebrates freeform design and recyclable materials in a beautiful way.
There's no better example of 1970s design than the Frank Gehry Wiggle Chair from 1972. Made of corrugated cardboard laminated together, the chair celebrates freeform design and recyclable materials in a beautiful way.
icon. Frank Gehry did the impossible by alternating the directions of several sheets of cardboard and gluing them together for durability and strength, eventually creating the iconic Wiggle Chair. It can throw a curve into a sitting room that's overwhelmed with angles and straight lines.
are by Gehry. The table is from the Cottage Table Company in San Francisco http://cottagetable.com/
Glad you like them.
The chair is called the "Hat Trick," designed by Frank Gehry:
http://hivemodern.com/pages/products.php?view=sub_product&sid=534
The table could be an antique. Here's an extension
Frank Gehry's Hat Trick chair, apple basket inspiration
designed by Frank Gehry:
http://hivemodern.com/pages/products.php?view=sub_product&sid=534
The table could be an antique. Here's an extension table from Room & Board that looks somewhat similar (it comes in a maple or cherry stain too):
http://www.roomandboard.com/rnb/product/detail.do?productGroup=2555&
"Sketches of Frank Gehry," by the late Sidney Pollack. Gehry even allowed access to his therapist for interviews. The friendship and mutual respect between Gehry and Pollack is very touching, and it's fascinating to see those two great creative minds interact.
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Added to 143 ideabooks Last comment "idea for covering deck later on"
Frank Gehry Make It Right Foundation
Frank Gehry NO make it right project
like Frank Gehry, whose design for Pitt's Make It Right foundation is pictured here. The house is fairly subdued for Gehry, but its combination of being lifted up on stilts (not apparently high enough, given the 8 feet of water that inundated the Lower Ninth Ward, where it's located) and having solar