Archive for the ‘Random Musings’ Category

Nov
27
2009

Traditional Canadian Storage Boxes, elfa & Gossip Girl!

Friday, November 27th, 2009

I don’t watch an awful lot of telly these days, especially with new arrival baby Will in our household but I did manage to catch a couple of old favourites this week.

Ray Mears visited the Canadian Pacific coast in his BBC2 show Northern Wilderness this Sunday evening and even had time to make some storage boxes during his trip.  Ray was invited to try his hand at a traditional Canadian technique to make a cedar lidded storage box from a single piece of wood.

Ray Mears prepairs for a game of squash

The amazing technique involved taking a single plank of cedar and chiselling out a channel where each corner of the storage box will eventually be, but at the same time leaving a thin slither of wood at each corner intact. The plank is then gently steamed for several hours and this thin skin of wood becomes pliable and can be bent into a right angle to form the corners of the storage box. When dry the malleable steamed cedar becomes very had and forms a very sturdy and beautiful storage box which is graced with traditional eagle, fish and wool symbols.

In search of some decent trashy TV, I also settled down in front of STORE Distribution Manger Julie’s favourite ITV2 show Gossip Girl this week. Sad and mad as I am about clever use of space for decent storage I was delighted to see that Gossip girl’s Patrick Roberts had a walk-in wardrobe full of our lovely wooden elfa decor shelving or perhaps in the vernacular of Gossip Girl herself I should say:
“Spotted! STORE’s very own elfa decor shelving gracing the walk-in wardrobe of bad boy Patrick Roberts, XOXO”

Oct
30
2009

Harrison Ford loves Shelving too

Friday, October 30th, 2009
My favourite film as a child was Raiders of the Lost Arc with Star Wars coming a very close second. As a big fan of (IMHO) the star of both, Harrison Ford, I was pleasantly surprised to hear that he shares my passion for storage and shelving!

A quick ‘Google’ reveals that there’s many a tall tail floating around Hollywood suggesting that Ford got his big break when (working as a carpenter) he was installing wardrobe shelving at the home of George Lucas. The LuscasFilm boss offering him the part of Han Solo in Star Wars off the back of an impromptu on the spot audition in his newly fitted walk-in wardrobe!

Ford was quick to dispel this longstanding myth recently saying in an interview with Mark Lawson on BBC Radio 4 that,

“If I’d have done all the shelving jobs I’ve been credited for in Hollywood I’d be a very rich carpenter”

…instead of a very rich actor of course! So what’s the true story and why does Ford have 27 years’ worth of Fine Woodworking Magazine on a shelf in his home office?

"...and we''ll put the first shelf in about here"

Well Ford was in fact a struggling actor in the early 1970s and yes he was supplementing his income by installing (office) shelving when Lucus bumped into him in a reception area of a Hollywood film company offices. Having worked with Ford previously, Lucus invited him to audition for his new film American Graffiti. Ford went on to work for Lucus as Han Solo in Star Wars and the rest is, well in the words of Lucas, all  “a long time ago in a galaxy far far away”.

Harrison Ford is currently starring in the film Extraordinary Measures which is released in UK on Friday 26th February and doesn’t I’m afraid have a plot centred on shelving and storage.

Sep
19
2009

Paul Smith does home storage solutions!?!

Saturday, September 19th, 2009

I had no idea that pre-eminent fashion designer Paul Smith also owns a rather funky antique / vintage furniture shop in Albemarle Street London selling some really interesting pieces of storage furniture.

Paul Smiths vintage storage solutions!

Situated in the heart of Mayfair on the corner of Albermarle Street and Stafford Street (just off Bond St) the shop  has a really funky range of vintage storage furniture dotted around the place and is, well…er…amazingly expensive but unique of course!

Apart from the various vintage book shelving, my favourite other piece of storage based furniture is Raymond Loewy’s space saving writing desk which is so typically early 1950’s US styling. The desk was designed by Loewy for Megel Furniture Co. and it’s great to see Loewy’s utilitarian design incorporating such useful storage solutions with the fold-down writing area and an array of cubbies and storage drawers to organise your space. In fact the only thing I don’t like about this space saving desk is the price, £6,200, ouch!

For vintage storage solutions and unique pieces of furniture, Paul Smith at 9 Albemarle Street is well worth a look and as www.paulsmith.co.uk says:  “The shop houses a rich and varied selection of original and unique antiques, objects art and curiosities sourced from around the world”

Jul
14
2009

What is the Oldest Storage Solution in the world?

Tuesday, July 14th, 2009

I was watching art historian Dr Gus Casely-Hayford’s BBC4 documentary exploring the pre-colonial history of some of Africa’s more impressive kingdoms this week.  There was a remarkable snippet on the magnificent 16th-century bronze casts that were discovered in the kingdom of Benin in 1897 which many at the time could not believe had been made by Africans! In the same show Gus touched upon a group of sophisticated West African cave dwellers who had constructed and decorated sizable food stores within their caves to store and preserve grains and pulses. These early storage solutions represent an important turning point in history both in terms of the constructor’s abilities to secure and store their food for future use and also the fact that their sophisticated lifestyle allowed time to decorate the exteriors of these giant food storage boxes.

So are these the oldest known examples of kitchen or rather food storage solutions in the world? Apparently not…

The oldest food storage boxes used to store, preserve and cook food in are around 14,000 years old (that’s the Stone Age to you and me) and come from Japan. Known as Jomon storage pots, and heralded (by me) as the world’s first kitchen storage solution, they were crafted from coiled wet clay which was baked and then had strands of wicker or seagrass added to the outside to give a basket-like look.

Joman Pot in the British Museum

I believe that Jomon literally means  ‘wicker-like storage basket’ or ‘cord pattern basket’ in Japanese but these storage pots represent much more than the slightly misleading translation suggests and in my opinion are a remarkable leap in technology. Unlike the contemporaneous crude wicker storage baskets or even large leaves and foliage used to store or eat food off, the Jomon storage pots where both watertight and allowed food to be cooked inside without the risk of burning meat etc or destroying the container in a fire. Further, they also allowed easy and secure transport of whatever was stored inside from one place to another.

It could be postulated that the ability to safely transport stored items was important to the Jomon people who were hunter-gatherers, however they lived in a particularly food rich area which allowed the Jomon to settle in one place for years at a time and (it is thought) thus encouraged the invention of what is in my opinion the world’s first storage solution.

Remarkably some Jomon storage pots still contain burnt food deposits and gas chromatography –mass spectrometry (GC/MS) analysis has revealed the residue of what could also be the world’s first fish stew and remarkable over 65 different mammal species!

So you heard it here first…the world’s first kitchen storage solution was invented by the Japanese 14,000 years ago!
Any other contenders for the oldest storage solution in the world, please let me know!

Si @ STORE HQ