Annie Evelyn of New Colony Furniture comes from a line of fine furniture makers, with her grandparents at the helm of Old Colony Furniture back in the 1920s, well before her time. Currently in the midst of a three-year artist residency at Penland School of Crafts in North Carolina, Evelyn takes a novel approach to new design work by “upholstering” seating surfaces with uncommon materials, such as concrete, in an effort to precisely control their surface patterns at rest. At ICFF, the mosaic seats of hard materials set within classic oak, ash, and aluminum frames appeared to be rigid and unyielding upon first glance, but the tough upper crust is backed by a resilient foam pad which conforms to the human backside. While her furniture has little of the colonial-revival appeal of generations past, she maintains the handmade and hand-carved characteristics that still populate her beloved childhood associations with furniture. —Annie
Photography by Mercedes Jelinek via New Colony Furniture
Image above: Cracked Concrete
Image above: Diamond Tufted Chair
Image above: Floe, a collaboration with Ian Henderson
Image above: Scotty in Graphite, a collaboration with Scotty Albrecht
Image above: Scotty in Aluminum, a collaboration with Scotty Albrecht
Image above: Scotty in Powder-Coated, a collaboration with Scotty Albrecht
Image above: Protolith, a collaboration with Ian Henderson
via Design*Sponge http://ift.tt/1Fec1Tz From Annie Werbler
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