Paint Swatch Chairs

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These Chairs Feature Multiple Color Shades Baked into Plywood

Japanese designer Kazuya Koike has created this paint swatch furniture that uses a unique dying process that involves no actual paint.

These 'Descresc series' of chairs are made from simple plywood that has been colored through a unique and innovative process. Koike partnered with Japanese textile processing company Gisen Company to dye the maple veneer of these plain plywood chairs a series of different color shades actually baked right into the wood.

The unique process created a blue patina resembling different paint swatches that still allows for the swirled natural burl pattern of the maple wood veneer to show through. Through this process, everyday plywood is able to become a unique piece of decorative furniture, and this textile dye also opens up a whole new world of possibilities when it comes to furniture design.
Trend Themes
1. Dyeing Innovation - The unique dying process used in these paint swatch chairs presents an opportunity for disruptive innovation in textile processing and furniture design.
2. Color Integration - The integration of multiple color shades baked into plywood offers disruptive innovation potential in the field of decorative furniture.
3. Natural Material Enhancement - The process of creating a blue patina while preserving the natural burl pattern of the maple wood veneer presents an opportunity for disruptive innovation in enhancing the aesthetics of natural materials.
Industry Implications
1. Textile Processing - The unique dyeing process used in these paint swatch chairs can lead to disruptive innovation in the textile processing industry by offering new techniques for color integration.
2. Furniture Design - The use of a unique dying process that creates multiple color shades baked into plywood can open up disruptive innovation opportunities in the field of decorative furniture design.
3. Material Enhancement - The innovative process of enhancing the aesthetics of natural materials, such as maple wood veneer, through a blue patina effect can disrupt the material enhancement industry by offering new methods of color application.

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