Design
Naked tables
By:

If consumers like to make their own pancakes, bicycles and wedding rings, it stands to reason that they might enjoy crafting their own dinner tables, too. The appeal gets even stronger, however, when those tables are sourced entirely from the local environment, with an opportunity to meet everyone involved. Such, in fact, is exactly what's delivered at a new series of workshops by Vermont furniture purveyor ShackletonThomas.

Six months prior to each Naked Table event, 100-year-old Sugar Maple trees are locally harvested from a sustainably managed forest in Vermont. They are logged, sawn, dried and machined by various local artisans until they're ready to be made into tables.

Then, on the designated weekend, 15 guests arrive for an experience focused on “connecting people to each other and the environment, making things by hand,” as the company puts it. Assisted by several ShackletonThomas furniture makers and finishers from Vermont Natural Coatings, participants spend the first day assembling, smoothing and finishing their tables. The weekend culminates the following day when people gather around the completed tables (joined to make one 75-foot-long table) for a celebratory, locally grown feast.

Participants also get to visit the woods with a professional forester to see the source of their lumber and identify a replacement seedling tree. The GPS coordinates of that tree are then recorded and attached to the base of the signed, numbered and finished Naked Table. Each table also comes with a certificate stating the origins of the wood and a list of the people who helped create the table — from the logger who cut the tree to the furniture maker who applied the final finish.Pricing for the workshops start at USD 1,600, with a weekend set for October at USD 3,200 per couple, which includes a two-night stay at a local inn, meals, demonstrations and delivery of the resulting table within 300 miles.

It's hard to imagine any better embodiment of made here appeal than a table one makes oneself in this way, and the status stories participants gain along the way are surely valued just as highly. Experience economy, meet the hyperlocal trend — go forth and multiply! ;-)

Website: www.nakedtable.com

Source: www.springwise.com
Images: www.nakedtable.com




More news:
Weaving the future : Thu, 29 Mar 2012
Furniture that Loves Trees : Mon, 26 Mar 2012
Tapestries of Dreams : Thu, 23 Feb 2012
Designing change : Wed, 15 Feb 2012
Time for change with Citizen : Wed, 31 Aug 2011
From Barrydale to Washington : Thu, 13 May 2010
Naked tables : Mon, 20 Sep 2010
Seeds of Love : Thu, 15 Jul 2010
Metal 2009 New Designer Search : Mon, 22 Feb 2010
Hot stuff : Thu, 05 Nov 2009
Driving the green line : Sat, 04 Apr 2009
Free folded furniture : Thu, 05 Nov 2009
Forest creations : Thu, 05 Nov 2009