Channel Table
Channel Table
Channel Table
Harvest and Chrome
Harvest and Chrome
Channel Table
Channel Table
Channel Table
Harvest and Chrome

Channel Table

Metal Console Table (ID: A114391)
Designed by Doug Meyer
$1,375
$1,375 $1,375 /
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The artist transforms reclaimed sheet metal into an extraordinary table combining mid-century aesthetics with industrial flair. Shades of orange alternate with segments of gleaming chrome, all tack-welded to a curvilinear framework of steel tubing.

Each piece of furniture is created from a unique set of reclaimed materials; exact colors and arrangement of metal pieces will vary. Due to the nature of reclaimed materials, each table will bear the marks of the metal's history, including scratches and spots that add rich character making every piece a true original.
  • Materials: Steel
  • Dust with a soft cloth.
  • Shipping Charges are calculated for standard delivery to a single address within the contiguous USA and based on original prices, before discounts.
  • You may return or exchange any item within 14 days of receiving it (except for final sale items, ornament gift boxes, and custom orders). Learn More.
Doug Meyer

Doug Meyer

Rustbelt Rebirth
"My work is mostly informed by growing up poor in Ohio and being forced to be resourceful rather than conceptually clever."

Both the materials and styling of Doug Meyer's furniture pieces evoke a sense of history. Post-consumer sheet metal is stretched across frameworks evocative of mid-century science fiction movies. Is it from a parallel past or a parallel future? Let this confusion become the transcendental jumping point from which the work is understood.

Meyer has pioneered a process called "segmenting." His frameworks are made using hand-pulled bends and cut-offs from other frames, resulting in a bamboo-like segmenting and a 99% conservation of material. The frames are then "skinned in" with fragments of recycled sheet metal that has been tack-welded to size and length.

Meyer fell in love with sculpture in high school, pursuing it a full semester in college before realizing that students, not artists, starve. His next move was attending Job Corps, a government-sponsored trade school, where he trained in the arts of welding. He started building furniture upon graduating, and ten years later had enough business to leave the factories of Ohio for greener pastures.

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