Chair made in 912 minutes
by Diego Faivre Netherlands

  • Ships in 4 weeks
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  • Can be customized upon request
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  • Certificate of Authenticity A signed certificate from the maker is always included in the box.

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  • 100% insured global deliveries We arrange worldwide delivery, and every shipment no matter the price is fully insured against damages.

  • 14 days return policy In the rare event, you receive a piece that you are not fully satisfied with, you can return it within 14 days of receipt for a full refund except return shipping costs. Made-to-order items are not eligible for return.

Description

Chair made in brightly colored clay, designed in a bid to inject some fun into daily and forgotten objects.

Made in Diego Dough, a special type of air-drying clay that remains pliable once dry, the chair is priced according to Faivre’s “Minute Manufacturing” system, whereby every minute of production time costs €2. That means the product’s final price is a direct reflection of the amount of time it took to make it – in this case, 912 minutes.

Each chair is custom-made, therefore, the colors are unique and made on demand. Feel free to mention the colors of the chair.

Weight (kg)

7

Production Year

Material

,

Color

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Dimensions LxWxH

About Diego Faivre Visit Showroom →

French-born, Netherlands-based Diego Faivre is a recent graduate of the Design Academy Eindhoven. His graduation project, Minute Manufacture, offers complete transparency in the production and manufacturing processes of design in his work, challenging the current fabrication and evaluation of objects. For Faivre, time really is money; the number of minutes spent affects the quality and design of the outcome. It is his response to the rise of mass production and the consequential devaluation of individual expression. Drawing from his experience as a blue-collar worker, Faivre points out that every action in a factory or similar environment is meticulously calculated, recorded and assessed, leaving no room for the human element. At the same time, his project strives to inject a sense of expression and personal identity into manufacturing.
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