Knotted Chair by Marcel Wanders was “a little miracle”



Marcel Wanders looks back at his chair made from knotted rope, which helped propel the Dutch designer to international stardom when it was launched in 1996, in the first movie of our exclusive new video series.

Wanders’ Knotted Chair is made from lengths of hand-braided aramid and carbon fibre cord, which are impregnated with epoxy resin to provide rigidity.

The chair has the delicate appearance of handcrafted macramé – a technique for making textiles using knotting rather than weaving – but is also extremely durable and light.

“For us, that chair is magic because of its very interesting technological story and its innovation,” Wanders explains in the movie, which Dezeen filmed in Amsterdam.

“I understood that this carbon fibre material is a textile. Instead of making carbon fibre sheets that we then bend to create volumes, I wanted to create a textile.”

Knotted Chair was first presented in Milan in 1996 at Dutch collective Droog’s Dry Tech exhibition, which explored new hi-tech materials and manufacturing techniques.

Wanders received global attention for the design, which is now listed in the permanent collections of a number of prominent design museums, including the Museum of Modern Art in New York and the V&A museum in London.

The cord used to make the chair features a carbon core overbraided with aramid, a strong and lightweight synthetic material commonly used in the aerospace industry.

The knotted pattern forms a space frame structure that is strong enough to support the weight of the person sitting in it.

“I understood that the way to make something light as well as strong would be to work with space frames,” Wanders says. “It’s stable enough to hold a heavy guy, keeping the whole thing up and making it strong.”

Read more on Dezeen: http://www.dezeen.com/?p=818305

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