Minimal Aluminum Seating

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Max Lamb's Min Chair for Hem reduces seating to three aluminum panels

Max Lamb designed the Min Chair for Hem as a flat-packed seating object constructed from three bent aluminum panels joined through exposed hardware connections. The chair uses folded sheet aluminum to form the seat, backrest, and support structure without additional upholstery or concealed framing. Lamb developed the design around industrial fabrication methods that minimize material usage while preserving rigidity through angled folds and structural tension across the panels.

The chair is produced in polished aluminum alongside powder-coated finishes and arrives as a knock-down assembly intended for compact shipping and simplified manufacturing. Hem stated that the design continues Lamb’s ongoing interest in reductionist furniture forms and visible construction techniques rooted in material behavior. The Min Chair launches through Hem in 2026 as part of the brand’s expanding collection of industrially manufactured seating and home objects.

Trend Themes

  1. Flat-pack Minimalist Furniture — Reductions in component count and flat-packed delivery models create potential for radically lower manufacturing and distribution costs in household seating.
  2. Exposed-joinery Aesthetic — Visible hardware and structural connections reposition construction details as design features, enabling new product lines that blend industrial manufacturing with premium craft narratives.
  3. Material-driven Structural Design — Designs that rely on sheet metal folding and intrinsic material behavior open avenues for products that use less raw material while maintaining strength and form.

Industry Implications

  1. Furniture Manufacturing — Production workflows centered on bent-sheet metal and simplified assemblies signal opportunities for scaleable, low-waste manufacturing systems and novel supply chains.
  2. Logistics and Packaging — Compact, knock-down furniture formats suggest possibilities for reduced shipping footprints and redesigned last-mile distribution models.
  3. Contract Interior Design — Specification of durable, maintenance-light seating with a modern industrial aesthetic creates room for new procurement standards and lifecycle-focused furnishing solutions.

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