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Sean Yoo's Opus Shelving at DWR

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Flashback. Remember Sean Yoo's Opus Incertum Shelving from a September post? The unique shelving system and room divider just popped up at Design Within Reach...

 
 
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The photos look great! We can't wait to see it in person at a local DWR Studio. Available in black and white from Design Within Reach for $450. UnicaHome also carries grey and orange versions.

(Pics: DWR)

Sean Yoo's Opus Incertum Shelving
Shelving & Storage

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shelving & storage, Design Within Reach, screen, Sean Yoo, plastic

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Comments (19)

Only $450? Hrm. I wish my books were that staged and colourful. That's a reasonable price...

posted by gretchen on October 18th 2007 at 11:19am
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Cool looking, but horrible for actual use. Almost as bad as the leaning bookshelf you blogged recently.

posted by Archie on October 18th 2007 at 11:23am
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That is a great way to "antique" the books you abhor. As a person who can't even doggy-ear a page, it's hard for me to see past those sad sagging spines. Somebody save them!

posted by beckerjess on October 18th 2007 at 11:46am
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Just looking at this makes 'my' spine hurt. Love your books, don't use them as decorating props.

posted by phillymama on October 18th 2007 at 11:48am
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Book abuse aside, even with no other clutter in sight, that shelf looks like a jumbled mess. Books arranged standing vertically or stacked on shelves create a nice sense of order, even in an otherwise cluttered room.

posted by Terry B on October 18th 2007 at 12:15pm
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personally i think it's gorgeous, and i like the fact that it looks like the books are a little disordered-- makes you want to use them, move them around, read them!

posted by phoebe (silk felt soil) on October 18th 2007 at 12:33pm
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'desperate', not 'design'.

posted by *heather leaf* on October 18th 2007 at 1:28pm
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When Good Design Goes Bad.

posted by colormyworld on October 18th 2007 at 3:24pm
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really interesting looking with the books in. but i'm a bibliophile too, and that must constitute abuse! if it were filled with colorful paperbacks or magazines rather than those delicate old bindings, i think i'd like it.

posted by godsfool on October 18th 2007 at 9:22pm
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Does one get that bored that they end up making this and call it a book shelve? :?

posted by Pommette on October 19th 2007 at 12:40am
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not for books, please.

but maybe for wine bottles????

posted by david l. on October 19th 2007 at 6:03am
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Books look like a jumbled mess on this. As a divider, I think it's kinda cool.

posted by GHB on October 19th 2007 at 6:12am
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I do not understand people who worship books to the point of not letting them show signs of age or love... unless we are talking about first editions or art books.

posted by patrick (the other one) on October 19th 2007 at 7:39am
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And yet you can see that whoever has arranged the books in this shelving has been somewhat careful to do it in a way that protects their spines (sort of). Having said that, I think there's a reason this shelf is displayed with hardcovers only. If you tried to arrange paperbacks like that, their spines would collapse pretty quickly. "Book worship" aside, this shelf is just impractical to me. A good portion of my books are paperbacks, and I want to be able to re-read them. If the spines are hooped, it's not that comfortable a reading experience.

I do love me a mod quasi-hexagonal pattern, though, and I still like these shelves. I could see them in my toddler's room. I'd put picture books on the shelves best suited for holding them, and I'd put toys in the rest. And then he'd pull everything off and stuff everything back in as he sees fit.

posted by TammyE on October 19th 2007 at 8:51am
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I think it could work well as a divider as well. Unfortunately its hard to get a sense of the quality of materials from the pictures. Its some sort of plastic too...

posted by SeanG on October 19th 2007 at 9:03am
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They're made out of some sort of styrofoam-y light plastic, the same thing bike helmets are made out of. I love how they look, but they feel a bit flimsy in real life (a lot like the inside of a helmet).

posted by Graham on October 19th 2007 at 10:25am
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It is made with "expanded polypropylene"- same material used for the car bumper and motorcycle helmet. It is very light but very strong, can be used indoor or outdoor and 100% recyclable. It wasn't designed specifically to be used as a book case. I've seen some people use it for storing wine bottles, children's toys, CD's, DVD's, records, and even an occasional book or two. For those who are looking for a simple bookcase, I recommend "Billy" from Ikea.

posted by Willow on October 20th 2007 at 11:27pm
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I agree, not really for books. I see something like towels, blankets, stuffed toys, I don't know but something that is soft and will conform to the holes. As a book lover this just hurts. And how would you keep them in good order all crammed in there like that? How would I find a book?

posted by Spiderbite on October 5th 2008 at 6:27pm
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