Finnish brand Iittala ventures beyond tableware
Since 2011, Finnish homeware company Iittala has been on a mission to expand. First came the appointment of Finnish designer Harri Koskinen as creative director, and then last year it released Sarjaton, a collection of textured, colourful crockery that marked a departure from the classic glassware for which it is most famous. This September, the 150-year-old company is venturing beyond the tabletop into the home.
The new pieces, four of them in all, were debuted on a scorching day in June in Iittala's 'concept home' in central Helsinki. The venue was an ex-printing-press-turned-family-home, belonging to local stylist Johanna Brun. The aim was to see the small but perfectly formed collection in situ.
Artfully placed between Brun's Artek and vintage furniture was 'Vakka', a series of plywood storage boxes in different sizes by Helsinki-based Aalto+Aalto; 'Leimu', a hand-blown glass lamp with a concrete base by Norwegian designer Magnus Pettersen; and 'Meno', a felt bag by Koskinen. All three have a typically Scandinavian aesthetic and are made by Scandi designers using local materials - pre-requisites for Iittala.
The fourth product is an electrical adaptation of 'Lantern', Iittala's best selling glass candleholder originally designed by Koskinen in 1999. 'Electricity increases Lantern's usability. This lighting fixture can be placed in a range of environments, such as between shelves or in public spaces,' says Koskinen, who decided what the range would consist of and approached designers accordingly.
'Vakka was inspired by the plywood suitcases particularly popular in the Baltic countries,' explain Aalto+Aalto, a husband and wife team who opened a studio in Helsinki in 2010. It was their bicycle bags made from recycled sails for local company SavetheC that caught Koskinen's eye. In 2011, London-based Pettersen created a Concrete Desk Set which marked him out as a Norwegian one to watch. The new range arrives in stores in September.
The 'Leimu' hand-blown glass lamps, designed by Norway's Magnus Pettersen, come with a concrete base
'Meno' felt bags by Harri Koskinen
The fourth new product is an electrical adaptation of 'Lantern', Iittala's best selling glass candleholder originally designed by Koskinen in 1999
Receive our daily digest of inspiration, escapism and design stories from around the world direct to your inbox.
Emma O'Kelly is a freelance journalist and author based in London. Her books include Sauna: The Power of Deep Heat and she is currently working on a UK guide to wild saunas, due to be published in 2025.
-
Taiwan’s new ‘museumbrary’ is a paradigm-shifting, cube-shaped cultural hubPart museum, part library, the SANAA-designed Taichung Green Museumbrary contains a world of sweeping curves and flowing possibilities, immersed in a natural setting
-
Dries van Noten on why he's building a new home for craft in VeniceA year after departing the runway, Dries van Noten unveils his next chapter: the Fondazione Dries Van Noten, a newly announced cultural initiative in Venice celebrating craft in all its forms. Wallpaper meets the designer to find out why he’s not ready to retire.
-
Alexander Wessely turns the Nobel Prize ceremony into a live artworkFor the first time, the Nobel Prize banquet has been reimagined as a live artwork. Swedish-Greek artist and scenographer Alexander Wessely speaks to Wallpaper* about creating a three-act meditation on light inside Stockholm City Hall