Spot On: FURNITURE

(furniture, interior, lamps etc. )

Archive for the ‘Chairs’ Category

Carl Hagerling

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Carl Hagerling, Sweden

School: Studied Master of Industrial Design at Lund University

Design background

- Graphic + industrial design at own company Hagerling form, Malmö  (www.hagerling.se)

- Industrial designer at Hareide designmill Gothenburg (www.hareide-designmill.se)

- Interface designer at Sony Ericsson Lund (www.sonyericsson.se)

Did you do anything prior to your education to strengthen your skills and to get into your school?

Studied graphic design and multimedia for 2, 5 half years

Project title

 UNO

Length of project

3 weeks

Concept

Furniture collection

Inspiration

Spacecrafts from the 60′ties

Materials

Wood (mdf and oak) and steel

Keywords for the visual design

Space, clean, *light*

How is your work process when you design?

I work very quick to not lose my first instinct. Look allot on inspirational pictures. Find shapes that are interesting. Sketch pretty quick on different solutions. Make it in CAD. Make prototype

Which part of the process is the hardest for you to work through?

When the project is slow and you get bored of the whole thing

In your experience, are there specific skills that would be helpful to master?

Sketch, CAD, Creative, some engineer skills and to be persistent

Do you turn to specific areas for inspiration in general?

Here comes a cliché: I find inspiration in everyday objects. Could be anything from clothes-peg to tree structure

Any designers you find inspirational?

Tom Dixon and Claes Nellestam

Is your work process based on a special approach towards design?

Clean and uncluttered lines

Do you have a dream scenario for you and your design in the future?

Just to be able to continue to create.

Has it always been a dream to work with design?

yes

Do you have any other projects you would like to highlight?

I’m doing new work all the time for different clients. Check out my webpage: www.hagerling.se for latest project

Were can we find more information about you?

www.unoproduct.com

www.hagerling.se

Written by Josephine Dohlmann

February 17, 2010 at 19:51

Benjamin Kolstrup

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Benjamin Kolstrup, 30, Denmark

School: Danmarks Designskole

Department: Furniture & Spatial Design

Specials: Furniture.

Design background  

1 year at the School of Visuel Arts, 1996-1997 Valby – Cph. Denmark.

3 years doing various graphic odd jobs for Skibby Business Travel and Profil Business Travel 1997-2000.

BA in Design and 3 ½ years at Denmark design School, working primarily with furniture design.

Important lessons learned during your education

 Believe in your original intention and idea.

Set your eye steadfast on your goal, but be willing to kill your darlings during the process!

Trust your instincts, work hard – nothing is impossible.

Learn from others and never be afraid to ask for help or advice.

Respect your fellow students and colleagues, no matter what their earlier design experience consists of – don’t be a smart ass, just be smart!

Did you do anything prior to your education to strengthen your skills and to get into your school?

Not really, besides a 2 years student course, this is always good to have I guess!

Took a chance and thankfully got in.

Project title 

Chair Force One

Length of project 

10 weeks

Inspiration

The construction and shape of the fighter planes from World War II, like the Submarine Spitfire and the Messerschmidt, but primarily the Spitfire, which I think is a beautiful aero plane.

I liked the thought of giving a lounge furniture an association to the shape and form of an airplane, so you could sit in your own private ‘Chair Force One’ and get flown away, while you relax. 

Materials

Ash, Birch and pine wood.

Upholstery – cotton, foam and non woven fabric

 

Keywords for the visual design

The wing and back are meant to lean up against the earlier mentioned expression of an airplane. The wooden frame underneath the main body is inspired by old types of undercarriage on propeller aero planes, but also got inspired by some of Finn Juhl’s work with wooden frames on his chairs.

How is your work process when you design?

Very well structured in the initiating stages – I always do a really big bunch of research and sketching, but then my process very often turns into a totally confusing stage, caused by my craving need to reach very far.

But luckily, I’m a solid worker and a very stubborn striker – I love my profession very dearly!

Which part of the process is the hardest for you to work through?

The part of the process, where you have to make some very decisive decisions to continue the innovative development!

In your experience, are there specific skills that would be helpful to master?

Think it’s a huge strength to have good communicative skills, both verbally and visually, so your presentation of a developed design object becomes as informative, simple and interesting as possible.

Besides the above, learning tools and work methods, in order to strengthen your approach to the design process, so you can bring your product development up to a whole new tempo, quality and level.

What are your strengths?

Odd thinking and generating ideas, sketching on paper – I’m way better with a simple pen, creating form and expressions, than working with 3d drawing programs and it’s so much faster for me.

Stubbornness, passion for the trade, humility and respect for my mentors, fellow students and teachers.

What are your weaknesses?

Ohh…there’s many – you’re your own worst critic as known, but I really stink big time at the earlier mentioned 3d computer drawing programs. My patience regarding my own learning capabilities are really bad. Selling myself and my work at fairs – can do with the work of others, but my own…

Do you turn to specific areas for inspiration in general?

Mainly the design area, but besides that I’m trying to keep my channels for imprints open, in my everyday life.

Any designers you find inspirational?

Many – Georg Nakashima, Wegner and a lot of the other Old Danish masters like Wanscher, kjaerholm, Juhl and so on. Of the more modern designers – Jasper Morrison, Naoto Fukusawa, Patricia Urquiola, Konstantin Grcic, Nils Holger Moorman, Patrick Norguet, Ross Lovegrove and Stefan Sagmeister amongst others.

 

Other students you find inspirational?

Jenny palmborg, Erik Mattson, Jonas Lundby Jensen, Laura, Signe, Nina, Maria, Jose’, Martin, Sille, Lisa, Caroline, Mette, Hedvig and a lot other fellow students I see or meet during my day at Denmark Design School.

Is your work process based on a special approach towards design?

Even though the deep plate is invented, as our teachers always tell us, I’m continuously trying to create an original expression or story with my work.

Learning by doing!

Do you have a dream scenario for you and your design in the future?

Get to know a lot of interesting people. Keep on learning, developing and getting better to perform my trade and hopefully live of my work one day, very soon.

Has it always been a dream to work with design?

Noooo! Originally, I thought that I want to be a professional football player and all, then an art painter – that was too depressing and boring though. Then it was a human bowling ball and a chef, but then I realized that the design trade was my call and I bloody love it!

Why did you choose this specific specialization?

It felt natural.

Do you have any other projects you would like to highlight?

I’ve just finished a very cool lounge furniture that can be seen at this year’s Stockholm Furniture Fair, called “Chair Force One” which I’m very proud of.

Soon, I’m finishing a brand new dining room chair inspired by Wegner’s round chair.

Contact info

Benjaminkolstrup@live.dk/bekol@student.dkds.dk

Mobile. +4526393526

Written by Josephine Dohlmann

January 30, 2010 at 12:04

Christina Liljenberg Halstrøm

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Name: Christina Liljenberg Halstrøm, 32, Denmark

School: Graduated The Danish Design School 2007

Department: Furniture and Spatial Design

Specials: Furniture

Design background

After graduating The Danish Design School in 2007 I have participated in numerous exhibitions, lately The Cabinetmakers Autumn Exhibition in Glyptoteket. I also work as a lecturer at PBA Design and Business, Copenhagen school of Design and Technology (Københavns Erhvervsakademi)

Important lessons learned during your education

That litterature is an constant source of inspiration, that trying out all the workshops and learning how to express my ideas in a interesting way.

Did you do anything prior to your education to strengthen your skills and to get into your school?

I was living in Stockholm before I started my education at DKDS. There I went to the Stockholm school of Art and to Nyckelvikskolan. I also worked for one year at a design-studio.

Project title

Mediator

Length of project

2 months approximately

Concept

Two chairs tied together by a piece of textile reminding disagreeing parties to collaborate rather than counteracting. In a case of negotiation, opinions can be very black and white. To reach agreement you have to dare meet your opponent and go into the grey zone.

Inspiration

Dialogue and negotiation

Materials

Steel chairs, organic wool

Keywords for the visual design

The chairs are simple almost pictogrammic so they don´t blur the overall perception of the piece

How is your work process when you design?

I usually start my process by writing and reading a lot, then I start sketching both on paper and 3D.

Which part of the process is the hardest for you to work through?

Probably when I think I am almost there, then I get insanely selfcritic and wonder what the hell I am doing. Then a few days passes with a bad mood and suddenly I find what is missing and I can go on.

In your experience, are there specific skills that would be helpful to master?

I would love to be better at anything that has to do with computers. And practising talking about my ideas and works so that other people find them interesting

What are your strengths?

Working hands-on with many different materials

What are your weaknesses?

Forever computer

Do you turn to specific areas for inspiration in general?

I quite like the french philosopher Gilles Deleuze, who has written some pretty crazy things, but litterature in general is very inspirational. I also like observing how everyday things influence my everyday life and try to work out what to do with that.

Any designers you find inspirational?

I love Henrik Vibskovs weird universe

Other students you find inspirational?

I share my studio with fashion and textile designer Andrea Lehmann Sivertsen, whom I went to school with. We have kind of the same approach to design but we make very different things even though we steal ideas from each other all the time.

Is your work process based on a special approach towards design?

I always have Haptic approach when I design. How materials feel and the way they are connected

Do you have a dream scenario for you and your design in the future?

I would love to go on as I do right now, but with a bit more money involved. And time is also something I lack

Has it always been a dream to work with design?

When I was little I thought I was going to be a fashion designer, then I wanted to be a painter, but I ended up with furniture.

Why did you choose this specific specialization?

I used to carv wood a lot as a child and somehow I remembered that when I got older. I also find working with objects that connects so much to our everyday life very interesting.

Were can we find more information about you?

Soon my website will be up and running again, www.under-opsyn.dk

Contact info

Christina Liljenberg Halstrøm

Marstalsgade 25, 3th

2100 Copenhagen O

chrisliljehal@gmail.com

Written by Josephine Dohlmann

January 20, 2010 at 08:24

Caroline Grebasch

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Caroline Grebasch, 24, Germany

Exchange at DenmarksDesignSchool - Applied Arts School Schneeberg, Germany

Department: Textile Design

Specials: Printing, Knitting, Graphics

Design background

-       2 years vocational Training with certification as “Assistant for Design” Specialization Graphics

-       1 year internship at Moeve Textiles, Germany

-       1 year internship at Rug Star by J.Dahlmanns, Germany

-       exchange semester at the Danish Design School Copenhagen, Denmark

-       in February I will start my final semester at the Applied Arts School Schneeberg, Germany

Project title

Textiled Furniture/ Furniture Textiles

Length of project

10 weeks

Concept

I wanted to create a three-dimensional object out of a flat piece of foam by using an easy roll and pull-over principle.

Setting the focus on the foam as a representation of textiles and working after “Form follows Material”.

Inspiration

Formless Furniture made by e.g. Clas Oldenburg or Piero Gilardi and the look of oversized collars in fashion

Materials

Foam, plywood, bi-elastic fabric and rope

Keywords for the visual design

simple, clean, elegant

How is your work process when you design?

Hard, confusing, exciting and always also refreshing

Important lessons learned during your education

To believe in my ideas and actions as a designer.

Do you turn to specific areas for inspiration in general?

The world I’m living in….

Which part of the process is the hardest for you to work through?

To organize my thoughts and set my focus on the right points.

What are your strengths?

Working hard to reach my aims

What are your weaknesses?

Struggling sometimes by finding out what I really want

Any designers you find inspirational?

At the moment: Smeilinener, Germany

Other students you find inspirational?

It is always inspirational to see the work of others or, if it’s possible, to collaborate with fellow students and learn from them. 

Is your work process based on a special approach towards design?

I don’t think I can generalize it. It’s different from project to project.

Has it always been a dream to work with design?

I wanted to become a princess when I was a child….

But seriously, yes it always was a dream!

Why did you choose this specific specialization?

I think as a textile designer you have the chance to work in many fields like furniture, fashion, graphic or even architecture…you’re not that fixed and that’s what I like.

Contact info

caro@grebasch.com

Written by Josephine Dohlmann

January 13, 2010 at 15:12

Maria Bruun

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 Maria Bruun, 25, Denmark

Danish Design School

Department: Design master

Specials: Spatial -& Furniture design

Design background

Krabbesholm Højskole, Product Design, s06

BA Danish Design School, s09

Maters Danish Design School, s11

Important lessons learned during your education

Trust your instincts. Do the projects that excites you.

Project title

Soft

Length of project

5 weeks

Concept

Working with the combination of textile and furniture design, creating new inspiring conceptual furniture with strengths from both worlds.

Inspiration

My inspiration was an article in Domus 927, September 09 “Textile is the logics of a soft space”, describing how architecture can advantage from morphing with textile. “Textile allows architecture to be defined along the curved geometries of its skin, going beyond the rectilinear logic of the soft set square” (domus 927). My inspiration became to morph the soft qualities from the textile with the constructive qualities of the furniture.

Materials

10mm steel, 200 m rope pollsterd in grey cotton jersey, with “ felt socks”.

Keywords for the visual design

Transparency….. monolith…..tactility…..movement.

How is your work process when you design?

Experimental. In this case the concept developed from free conceptual form to more functional ideas. I mainly experiment through creating 1:5 models, and determine qualities and weaknesses.

Which part of the process is the hardest for you to work through?

For me, the hardest part of the process is where I have to make the defining decisions about design and construction. Striving for a perfect result these decisions are crucial.

In your experience, are there specific skills that would be helpful to master?

Trust your instincts; learn to communicate your design through sketching and modeling.

What are your strengths?

Creating design concepts.

What are your weaknesses?

When I forget my “gut-feeling”.

 

Do you turn to specific areas for inspiration in general?

Right now new materials and skills are great inspiration in creating new concepts and shapes.

Any designers you find inspirational?

Cecilie Manz

Is your work process based on a special approach towards design?

I strive to focus on function, aesthetic and innovation.

Has it always been a dream to work with design?

Working creatively has always been a dream.

Why did you choose this specific specialization?

To create shape and function for human usage.

Were can we find more information about you?

mariabruun.com

Contact info

bruundesign@gmail.com

Written by Josephine Dohlmann

January 6, 2010 at 16:34

Nina Bruun

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Nina Bruun, 25, Denmark

Danmarks Designskole (The Danish School of Design)

Department: Product Design

Specials: Furniture and Spatial Design

Design background

BA in Design from Danmarks Designskole (The Danish School of Design)

Important lessons learned during your education

Follow your instinct and don’t let other people tell you what’s possible. Believe in your idea – that is the most important thing. And don’t be shy to use experts knowledge – it can save you from trouble.

Did you do anything prior to your education to strengthen your skills and to get into your school?

No, nothing other than a short course to improve my drawing skills.

Project title

FOLD

Length of project

5 weeks

Concept

A foldable upholstery chair

Inspiration

Paperfold’s and cuts. Japanese packaging design and origami.

Materials

Plywood, foam, plastic and felt.

­

Keywords for the visual design

Industrial look, folds and cuts. Soft look combined with a sharp graphic look.

How is your work process when you design?

I spend a lot of time on the research and inspiration phase, then I’ll start to sketch out my ideas, first 2D and then on to 3D. When I have a version that I like, that I feel expresses what I mean, I try to build a 1:1 model, for example in paper, cardboard etc. And then I’ll work on that until I am ready to build my “prototype”.

Which part of the process is the hardest for you to work through?

The part where I have to turn my concept models into “the real thing”. Sometimes I find the technical part of my process very difficult. But I don’t let it constrain me.

In your experience, are there specific skills that would be helpful to master?

I would love to have a cabinetmakers’s training.

What are your strengths?

My imagination, drive and gumption.

What are your weaknesses?

Sometimes it’s my ability to take a decision – my indecisiveness.

Do you turn to specific areas for inspiration in general?

Good crafts, classic Danish furniture design, industrial design, japanese culture and design.

Any designers you find inspirational?

Erwin Hauer, Constantin Grcic.

Other students you find inspirational?

Yes many, I find it especially inspiring to work in settings with other design students – it’s very giving and the exchange is invaluable.

Do you have a dream scenario for you and your design in the future?

Yes. To be able to work and live as a designer, without being forced to supplement my income with a job that I am indifferent to.

Has it always been a dream to work with design?

Yes I’ve always been very creative and designing has been a dream since my childhood.

Why did you choose this specific specialization?

I find it dynamic and motivating to end up with a 3D product in my hands. Though I also do a lot graphic design, illustrations and photography

Were can we find more information about you?

www.ninabruun.com

The latest issue (December-January-February) of NYTT ROM (Norwegian Design Magazine), in a design special issue of MS/Berlingske Tidende in the beginning of January and on The Stockholm Furniture Fair 2010.

Contact info

design@ninabruun.com

Written by Josephine Dohlmann

December 25, 2009 at 21:01

Jonas Lyndby Jensen

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Photographs by Peter Hartley

Jonas Lyndby Jensen, 33 years old, Denmark

Graduated from the Danish design school in 2009

Department: Furniture and Spatial design

Specials: Wooden furniture

Design background

Cabinetmaker and 6 years at The Danish Design School including internship at Fritz Hansen design department

Important lessons learned during your education

ECTS points are worthless. If you know which direction your education must go, then make it so – regardless of what the school, the rules or anybody tells you to do

Did you do anything prior to your education to strengthen your skills and to get into your school?

Drawing courses

Project title

Nordic Furniture

Length of project

5 months

Concept

The inspiration for the project came to me after a fabulous dinner at the Danish 2-star Michelin restaurant Noma. Their name is a contraction of Nordisk Mad (Nordic Food) and this is the base for the dogma that is the restaurant’s trademark: All the raw materials come from only Nordic countries (Scandinavia and the North Atlantic islands).
I asked myself: Is it possible to transfer the dogma to furniture design? Can I make a series of furniture which exclusively uses materials from the Nordic countries and builds on, but also seeks to renew, the Nordic furniture tradition?

Inspiration

Gourmet restaurant Noma, classic Scandinavian furnitures and nature

Materials

Smoked oakwood, chair seat is upholstered with woven horsehair and the chair back is covered with salmon skin

Keywords for the visual design

A contemporary collection of furnitures with roots in the classic nordic furniture tradition – made in nordic materials

How is your work process when you design?

Sketching, sometimes scale modeling, 3D drawing and full scale prototyping

Which part of the process is the hardest for you to work through?

It can be hard when you feel the good ideas do not seem to come to you anymore. And I have to work faster, not taking too much time making the decisions

In your experience, are there specific skills that would be helpful to master?

Always good to be hands-on with materials and full scale modeling to see correct proportions.

For my part the 3D work and it-skills could be improved

What are your strengths?

Wooden furnitures, prototyping, a sense for shapes and stubbornness

What are your weaknesses?

My stubbornness and I am not good at selling myself or my work

Do you turn to specific areas for inspiration in general?

Classic nordic furnitures, nature and trying to keep an open mind, knowing that inspiration can come from anywhere or anything

Any designers you find inspirational?

Doshi & Levien, Jasper Morrison, Patricia Urquiola, Carl Malmsten, Finn Juhl, H. J. Wegner …

Other students you find inspirational?

Antonio Scaffidi, Mads Johansen, Jenny Palmborg, Jakob Jørgensen, Signe Møller Jensen …

Is your work process based on a special approach towards design?

I would like to have a more specific approach, but I feel my work process can at times seem quite chaotic. However that is what makes the process exciting and different every time.

Do you have a dream scenario for you and your design in the future?

Own furniture studio and recognition. I will be satisfied though being able to live off making furniture design

Has it always been a dream to work with design?

I have dreamt about doing something creative (drawing), but furniture design only became a goal late during my cabinetmaker education

Why did you choose this specific specialization?

As educated cabinetmaker it was an obvious choice, wanting to go the creative way. Also I think furniture making suits my temper

Do you have any other projects you would like to highlight?

Dune lounge chairs and Wooden Spoon chair. Both projects emphasises my style, giving a twist to new nordic design

Were can we find more information about you?

www.jonaslyndbyjensen.mdd.dk

Contact info

jonas_lyndby_jensen@hotmail.com

(0045) 28125099

Written by Josephine Dohlmann

December 13, 2009 at 20:16

Jessica Svensson

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Photo:2009 Danish Crafts/jeppegudmundsen.com

Jessica Svensson, 28, Sweden

Graduation from The Danish Designschool 2008

Department of Furniture & Spatial Design

Special in furniture

 

Design background

Established my own small company in 2009

The Danish Design School

Art School in Lund

 

Important lessons learned during your education

For me the School has been a fantastic creative environment where I got the possibility and time to find out and develop my approach to design

 

Did you do anything prior to your education to strengthen your skills and to get into your school?

I went to Art School for one year to make my portfolio to get into The Danish Design School

 

Prototype 2008

 

Project title

Home Sweet Home

 

Length of project

Five months

 

Concept

Extension kitchen sofa

 

Inspiration

Traditional Swedish kitchen sofas

 

Materials

Aluminium, ash wood

 

Keywords for the visual design

Contrast and illusion

 

Prototype 2008

 

How is your work process when you design?

It´s depending on how much time I can spend and what kind of assignment it is. Normally I have an expression or a picture on my mind that I would like to achieve. I use pretty much time thinking, writing keywords and sketching before I actually do something that gives a visual or practical result. Next step is to see how the concept can be realized by drawing 3D-model, material research and involving people with the souch knowledge.

 

Which part of the process is the hardest for you to work through?

To make “big” decisions fast is not a favorite as well as feeling confused over to many options.

 

In your experience, are there specific skills that would be helpful to master?

Don´t get stressed up because it´s a final project. You have done successful projects before so of course this one will turn out great too. Just give it some extra power and focus. Talk to other people about your project to get advice and help but listen to yourself.

 

What are your strengths?

Critical but optimistic

 

Prototype 2008

 

What are your weaknesses?

Ambivalent

 

Do you turn to specific areas for inspiration in general?

It´s very different.

 

Any designers you find inspirational?

I get inspired from a lot of different designers and artists but I don´t have a particular favorite.

 

Is your work process based on a special approach towards design?

I want to be able to work wide and make interesting products with a long lifetime and quality.

 

Prototype 2008

 

Do you have a dream scenario for you and your design in the future?

To have my own company running well and to work with projects that I find interesting

 

Has it always been a dream to work with design?

Somehow yes. I didn´t knew exactly in which area but I think I knew that it should be something creative.

 

Why did you choose this specific specialization?

I like form and function

 

Where can we find more information about you?

www.jessicasvensson.com

More about “Home Sweet Home”: www.craftscollection.dk

 

Contact info

E-mail: js@jessicasvensson.com

Mobil: +46(0)706 96 70 32

Written by Josephine Dohlmann

November 26, 2009 at 08:34

Jenny Palmborg

with 5 comments

Jenny_web2

Jenny Palmborg, 28, Sweden – HDK, Sweden

Department: Design master

Specials: Furniture

 

Design background

 2 year at Stenebyskolan, Metal handcraft in Sweden

1/2 year at KV, Art and space

1/2year at Stenebyskolan, Form and design

3 year furniture design Denmark Design school

Right now I’m in my first year at HDK Master in design in Sweden

 

Important lessons learned during your education

Learning by doing and not by thinking.

 

Jenny_Profil_web6

ett-ben-närbild3_web5

 

Project title

Spader Dam

 

Length of project

9 weeks

 

Concept

Not working with textile directly wrapped tight around the furniture item as a last step to give it finish. Instead I want to let the textile be the base for the furnitures form.

 

Inspiration

The fashion world. I’m attracted and lured to fashion designs playfulness with the textile material, how a fashion designer can go in and manipulate the body’s shapes with help of the material.

 

Materials

Form fixed polyester, Velour and black stained Ash.

 

Keywords for the visual design

Feminine, elegant, strong and exclusive

 

Jenny_proces_web7

 

How is your work process when you design?

Hard, frustrating, incredibly exciting and fun

 

Which part of the process is the hardest for you to work through?

The start; sorting my thoughts to put the concept together.

 

In your experience, are there specific skills that would be helpful to master?

To be really good with your hands…. humm… and to be a bit naïve – you can’t ever think that something is to hard, to difficult or takes to long.

 

What are your strengths?

Extremely stubborn

 

What are your weaknesses?

One second every thing is crap next second it’s heavenly perfect and the second after that every thing just useless again ….a bit moody.

 

Do you turn to specific areas for inspiration in general?

Right now I feel like there is a big ocean of inspiration in the fashion industry and world of textiles.

 

tyget_web8

 

Any designers you find inspirational?

Helena Hörstedt 

 

Other students you find inspirational?

Tilde Bay Kristoffersen – Fashion student at the Danish Design School

 

Is your work process based on a special approach towards design?

Design and art mix together.

 

Has it always been a dream to work with design?

It started when I was in my late teens, but it took a couple of years for me to build up the courage to admit it even to my self.

 

Why did you choose this specific specialization?

I’m intrigued by the sculptural tree-dimensional world.

 

bakifrån_web9

 

Were can we find more information about you?

jennypalmborg.com

 

Contact info

jennypalmborg@hotmail.com

Written by Josephine Dohlmann

November 13, 2009 at 10:25

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