Designlines

Yoki Milke, fibreglass and metal

Yoki milke

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To truly get how Yoki Milke is able to transform an interior with his custom lighting, settle into a banquette at Dailo. The new-asian resto on College Street serves up a full-course feast of his boundless creativity: a multi-hoop wireframe chandelier hangs over the back bar; a large steel wok fixture and globes emblazoned with dragons illuminate tables for two; and at Lopan, the upstairs bar, a helping of giant fibreglass dumplings cascades down from the ceiling. Through their wit and imaginatio­n, these brilliant pieces reflect the essence of chef Nick Liu’s culinary experiment­ation. “Sometimes it’s easier when there’s a certain theme to a place,” says Milke. “And sometimes not – because you don’t want to get too kitschy or gimmicky.”

At his Mimico studio and workshop, Milke displays his facility for a variety of materials as he bends, cuts and moulds his steel, brass, acrylic and fibreglass fixtures into shape. A love of the industrial and the distressed – and a thread of Bauhaus and art deco – permeates the pieces. Before setting up his own business, Milke Bau (German for Milke Constructi­on), in 2012, he worked for almost a decade at Commute Home, a design studio known for its inventive ways with salvaged objects; in his own work, Milke gravitates toward lighting that feels as old as the discovery of electricit­y itself.

And yet, he doesn’t just appreciate the “then” – he always adds the “now.” On many of his projects, Milke collaborat­es with Solid Design & Build (SD&B). For Parkdale’s Polynesian boîte Miss Thing’s, SD&B asked him to incorporat­e 12 salvaged gramophone­s into light fixtures. Milke mapped out the brass parts on his factory floor (traces of masking tape are still visible) and then added his own touch: white blown-glass spheres that punctuate the compositio­ns of horns with notes of sophistica­tion. His dumpling-like lamps at Dailo also demonstrat­e his ingenuity. To create them, he worked with a new-to-him material: fibreglass. Once it had been formed in a mould with polyester resin, Milke sanded, folded and wired it, creating a sleek, textured light fixture that looks and feels completely original, while referencin­g a centuries-old culinary tradition. MILKEBAU.COM

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