
Seat height 51 cm, back height 93 cm, width 126 cm.
The sofa is produced in furniture blanks left by Thomas Tempte. Completed by John Funkquist and Joakim Zickert.
The sofa is not included in Tempte's furniture catalogue. Allegedly the model performed in order work.
HISTORIAN:
Thomas Tempte, the art carpenter who went his own way. He has earned his place among carpenters in Sweden as a university of its own. As a designer, he has worked in the hidden.
“My workshop produces the furniture and other products that I design and construct myself. I procure sawn timber in my own inspections in the forest, this is sawn on my own as well as storage and drying. In this way I know my material and obtain suitable pieces of wood in each individual part...” excerpt from Thomas Tempte's furniture catalogue
Dymlingar
The use of dowels is characteristic of Tempte's carpentry. Dowels are square-shaped plugs that are punched into round holes, locking the construction instead of glue.
Construction
In Thomas Tempte's furniture there are deliberate asymmetries and distortions, presumably to reinforce both form and construction. Such deviations are impossible to convey with a drawing, which he probably did not resort to either. It is a way of working that is highly unconventional in a field that has depended on drawing for at least the last hundred years.
To understand Thomas Tempte's methods, we need to go back to ancient Egypt and his reconstruction of Tutankhamun's throne. The reconstruction with the associated workshop and tools is in the collection of Östergötland County Museum. In his book The Glory of Work, Tempte describes the work on the reconstruction:
“The Egyptian carpenter thought in his constructions in a completely different way from what we do today. He wasn't thinking vertically or horizontally or in 90 and 45 degrees, respectively. The performance world must have been very different. No provisions are perpendicular, no parts are parallel. The legs do not go to the ground vertically, but are like the lion's legs, to move forward and to raise the body up and down. The mowers do not run parallel to the ground or floor, but ease slightly at one end. A German researcher has done a study on how the sign for horizon was written over about two millennia. It's a little crooked.”.
Compiled from older furniture blanks, recently completed.
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Seat height 51 cm, back height 93 cm, width 126 cm.
The sofa is produced in furniture blanks left by Thomas Tempte. Completed by John Funkquist and Joakim Zickert.
The sofa is not included in Tempte's furniture catalogue. Allegedly the model performed in order work.
HISTORIAN:
Thomas Tempte, the art carpenter who went his own way. He has earned his place among carpenters in Sweden as a university of its own. As a designer, he has worked in the hidden.
“My workshop produces the furniture and other products that I design and construct myself. I procure sawn timber in my own inspections in the forest, this is sawn on my own as well as storage and drying. In this way I know my material and obtain suitable pieces of wood in each individual part...” excerpt from Thomas Tempte's furniture catalogue
Dymlingar
The use of dowels is characteristic of Tempte's carpentry. Dowels are square-shaped plugs that are punched into round holes, locking the construction instead of glue.
Construction
In Thomas Tempte's furniture there are deliberate asymmetries and distortions, presumably to reinforce both form and construction. Such deviations are impossible to convey with a drawing, which he probably did not resort to either. It is a way of working that is highly unconventional in a field that has depended on drawing for at least the last hundred years.
To understand Thomas Tempte's methods, we need to go back to ancient Egypt and his reconstruction of Tutankhamun's throne. The reconstruction with the associated workshop and tools is in the collection of Östergötland County Museum. In his book The Glory of Work, Tempte describes the work on the reconstruction:
“The Egyptian carpenter thought in his constructions in a completely different way from what we do today. He wasn't thinking vertically or horizontally or in 90 and 45 degrees, respectively. The performance world must have been very different. No provisions are perpendicular, no parts are parallel. The legs do not go to the ground vertically, but are like the lion's legs, to move forward and to raise the body up and down. The mowers do not run parallel to the ground or floor, but ease slightly at one end. A German researcher has done a study on how the sign for horizon was written over about two millennia. It's a little crooked.”.
Compiled from older furniture blanks, recently completed.
Do you have something similar to sell? Get your items valued free of charge!
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