Times Colonist

Lounge around on designer plywood chaise

- LAURA PEARSON

Plywood tends to be associated with unfinished building constructi­on, so it’s easy to forget that several modernist designers, from the 1920s onward, were obsessed with it as a furniture medium. See, for example, Alvar Aalto’s Paimio chair (1939) and Charles and Ray Eames’ classic LCW or Lounge Chair Wood (1945). Now the versatile, inexpensiv­e material — comprised of thin sheets of wood veneer (with grains layered in alternatin­g directions for added strength) — has become a mainstay in contempora­ry, eco-friendly interiors, seen in everything from wall panels to bookcases to bed frames.

Several furniture makers are taking plywood to new places, but Los Angeles-based designer Shin Okuda, whose furniture line is called Waka Waka, takes a particular­ly ingenious approach. His geometric, spare, utilitaria­n pieces — desks, chairs, benches, shelves and so on, much of it made on commission — reference Bauhaus, Japanese and modern California design but have a personalit­y and presence all their own. One of the best examples is the cylinder chaise lounge composed of sturdy Baltic birch plywood. It’s a piece of furniture histori- cally associated with luxury — we think of upholstere­d Rococo Revival versions from the early 19th century — that has been given a sculptural, minimal feel. It’s comfortabl­e, too!

If you’re not quite ready for bare plywood furniture, the Waka Waka chaise lounge would look great covered with a sheepskin throw.

For more info, see lookatwaka­waka.com and ikoikospac­e.com

 ??  ?? This cylinder chaise lounge from Los Angeles-based Waka Waka is made of Baltic birch plywood.
This cylinder chaise lounge from Los Angeles-based Waka Waka is made of Baltic birch plywood.

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