[Image: Log Chop Bench by the Practice of Everyday Design].
For their project Log Chop Bench (2011), the Canadian design firm The Practice of Everyday Design used "a logger's brute strength and surgical precision to carve out seats on a reclaimed log."
[Image: Log Chop Bench by the Practice of Everyday Design].
Seats made from "fine, hand-sewn upholstery by a motorcycle saddle maker" were then added to the spaces chopped into the log, creating a surreally massive piece of high-end furniture.
Here is the log's chopper—a lumberjill—in action, as well as the sketch it was all based on.
[Images: Log Chop Bench by the Practice of Everyday Design].
Resulting in this:
[Image: Log Chop Bench by the Practice of Everyday Design].
I would love to see a movie theater or lecture hall furnished with two or three dozen of these, with higher backs for long-term seating but each individual perch unique.
Other projects are viewable at the Practice of Everyday Design's website.
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