New Skin by Studio Pepe Heykoop, photo © Annemarijne Bax
* New Skin by Studio Pepe HeykooDutch Studio Pepe Heykoop based in Amsterdam, saw an opportunity utilizing waste leather and using all the fragments to create a new dimension to old and existing furniture pieces.
New Skin by Studio Pepe Heykoop, photo © Annemarijne Bax.
New Skin by Studio Pepe Heykoop, photo © Annemarijne Bax
New Skin by Studio Pepe Heykoop, photo © Annemarijne Bax
New Skin by Studio Pepe Heykoop, photo © Annemarijne Bax
New Skin by Studio Pepe Heykoop, photo © Annemarijne Bax
New Skin by Studio Pepe Heykoop, photo © Annemarijne Bax
At first glance you don’t know how to react; they seem quite unorganized, perhaps chaotic but still something pulls you in to find out more about its inception and production. From afar the furniture seems to look like they have been layered with plaster or clay; they seem unfinished and unpolished. The reality is the complete opposite. They are finished, they are polished. Reminiscing of cell structures which compound and grow into a complex set of networked geometries, these leather fragments take shape around individual pieces connecting with each other as the edges naturally terminate. There is no value to the isolated pieces. The power and value comes from the connection of many. In this skin network, there is no defined model or concealed termination; the pieces unfold naturally as they were once disregarded. Now they come to play as a protagonist role shaping ordinary pieces into veins of leather with a new purpose and new life.
The aggregation of these leather fragments are exposed, the colors are combined and their imperfections are celebrated for their uniqueness and accentuated as they meet. The binding moment creates beautiful leading lines that give a new dimension of texture and aesthetic to the pieces. The final product is a random skin pattern that slightly connects us to the natural environment as it growths beyond us and without control. This technique also provides new ways to combine different furniture pieces and bind them as one with leather. You would think the pieces are going through major surgery and projecting new combinations through one skin.
New Skin by Studio Pepe Heykoop, photo © Annemarijne Bax
New Skin by Studio Pepe Heykoop, photo © Annemarijne Bax
New Skin by Studio Pepe Heykoop, photo © Annemarijne Bax
New Skin by Studio Pepe Heykoop, photo © Annemarijne Bax
New Skin by Studio Pepe Heykoop, photo © Annemarijne Bax
New Skin by Studio Pepe Heykoop, photo © Annemarijne Bax
www.pepeheykoop.nl
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