Bent Ply
Princeton Architectural Press, New York, New York, 2003
Description
Plywood is arguably the most modern design artifact: it is a material born of natural wood and formed by vigorous industrial processes that can assume the most organic of shapes through bending, laminating, and molding. Plywood truly fulfills that most modern of dreams: bridging the gap between technology and nature.
Bent Ply is the first book devoted to plywood in modern design. The book consists of two parts: the first, an illustrated history of plywood (tracing its origins to ancient Egypt, circa 2900 BC); the second, an annotated journal of the making of a piece of bent plywood furniture, from the forest to the showroom.
We were determined to make this book an object in itself. Its form truly follows its function.
Juror Notes
“The tactile experience of the plywood cover gives a sense of what the materials reviewed in the book are about; their weight, surface, and colors.” Jack Woody
Credits
- Design firm
- Princeton Architectural Press
- Jacket designer
- Deb Wood
- Production director
- Janet Behning
- Authors
- Dung Ngo, Eric Pfeiffer
- Editor
- Jennifer N. Thompson
- Publisher
- Princeton Architectural Press
- Trim size
- 7.25 x 10”
- Pages
- 160
- Quantity printed
- 8,000
- Typefaces
- Bulmer MT, Conduit ITC, Egyptian 710BT, Found, Univers Condensed
- Jacket printer
- Asia Pacific Offset
- Paper
- 140 gsm Japanese matte
- Book type
- Image driven