10jours10designers ("10 Days, 10 Designers") is the name of a recent design competition held by French furniture design house Minimalist Editions. The challenge was pretty simple: Each designer gets an oak slab, 400mm × 250mm × 28mm—that's roughly 16” × 10” × 1” to us Yanks—access to a CNC workshop and an ebeniste, and has ten days to come up with an oddments tray, or whatever you call that little key-holding dish by the front door of your house.
While the end products are pretty refined, they remind me a lot of those design school projects, where groups of students are given identical materials and yet yield a surprising variety of designs. Check out Lionel Dinis Salazar's artfully-kerfed "PAVO":
Pierre Dubourg's pretty bi-level number leaves no doubt as to what the form was inspired by—it's called "Super Tanker":
Lili Cheng & Romain Jung's "Labour" wears its CNC milling origins on its sleeve:
On the more traditional front, Jonathan le Monier's subtly concave "L'Hexagone" is a classic study in grain orientation:
Bertrand Besnard's "Tangram" was inspired by the Chinese dissection puzzle of the same name:
Florent Degourc's "Arrée" was inspired by the countryside:
To see the rest of them, click here. Alas, the exhibition in Brest wrapped up over the weekend.
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