apartment therapy changing the world, one room at a time


Insipration: Legacy Table

02.26.09 legacy table 1.jpgLaurent Corio is a product designer working in Paris, and asks “what have you done with Grandma’s table?” He has taken a piece of furniture deemed “old & boring” and created a new, updated piece that is “fresh & useful.” With a bit of tenacity and some power tools, this could be an amazing DIY project for that old furniture gathering dust in the garage…

 
 

02.26.09 legacy table 2.jpg
By splitting each leg of the old table and reconstructing them into a sawhorse-type structure, Corio has given this old piece a new life. This simple design gives us all sorts of ideas of what could be done with older furniture.

02.26.09 legacy table 3.jpg

Visit Corio's website or email inquiries here.

Tags

inspiration, DIY, Laurent Corio, Legacy Table

Related Links

Share

Comments (15)

Those are great—whimsical and practical!

posted by madsarah on February 26th 2009 at 3:32pm
view madsarah's profile

If you need a larger tabletop, just replace the top. There is a reason tables were made the same boring way for thousands of years - the legs take up less space and it's easier to sit around the table that way. Different for the sake of being different does not automatically mean practical.

posted by bromelia on February 26th 2009 at 3:41pm
view bromelia's profile

^^huh? what is impractical about this? and who brought up needing a larger tabletop or the practicality of the piece anyway?

posted by amt230 on February 26th 2009 at 3:54pm
view amt230's profile

I just can't get the image out of my head that the piece of glass is on those sawhorse legs to be cut, not to be a functional table.

posted by lilacwire on February 26th 2009 at 4:00pm
view lilacwire's profile

amt230, sawhorse legs are less practical than normal ones because they take up more space. That's why they are only used for sawing.

posted by bromelia on February 26th 2009 at 4:06pm
view bromelia's profile

I think the "old & boring" and "fresh & useful" labels are from the designer and are more than likely just a marketing tool.
It's not necessarily true but in order to sell him object, he chose to use the advertising technique of saying that the former product was defunct.
I like the new table but am not sure I would ever both doing a DIY version of it in my own place.

posted by hessilou on February 26th 2009 at 4:11pm
view hessilou's profile

It's a good reuse of 70s and 80's crappy neo-everything, 40's neo-Edwardian and nastily overstuffed and overdesigned late Victorian, but if he starts cutting up pretty little gothic tables I'm coming for him!

posted by mskk on February 26th 2009 at 4:17pm
view mskk's profile

That "fresh and useful" table is far from useful, but it is "fresh". When I look at it I see the naked behinds of women standing with their legs apart. Am I the only one? I wonder whether this little joke was intended.

posted by Forestdweller on February 26th 2009 at 4:32pm
view Forestdweller's profile

I think they're cute.

posted by littleinkpot on February 26th 2009 at 4:45pm
view littleinkpot's profile

This is so much cooler than just painting and old table white (or red, or whatever). I would love to see the contrast of an old painted or stained finish on the outside of the turned legs against the woodgrain newly exposed by splitting in two.

posted by amed studio on February 26th 2009 at 4:54pm
view amed studio's profile

Forestdweller: naked behinds of ballerinas, en pointe.
Littleinkpot: pervert. : )

To me, they also look a little like dismembered horse.deer legs.... so I guess this Rorshach (sp?) test of a table may indicate that I'm a bit odd, too.

posted by ljbmonkey on February 26th 2009 at 4:56pm
view ljbmonkey's profile

Yeah, ljbmonkey, the feet do look like hooves, which is disturbing. But I'm definitely getting the feeling of "bare bottom" at the top. And that opening at the bottom of the bottom is the shape ususally used for depicting...well, you see what I mean? I think that it must have been the intention of the designer.

posted by Forestdweller on February 26th 2009 at 5:17pm
view Forestdweller's profile

That's basically my kitchen table (old and boring). It is old, I don't know how old. It has a drawer and the top pivots to unfold double its size. Do that, sawhorses!

(I see the butts too).

posted by K T G on February 26th 2009 at 5:46pm
view K T G's profile

When I first saw these I instantly thought "creepy" but couldn't quite figure out why that was my gut reaction. But after reading ljbmonkey's comment I now know - "ballerinas en pointe" and hacked off at the waist! I was a ballerina for years - no wonder they gave me the heebie jeebies.

posted by greta on February 27th 2009 at 10:28pm
view greta's profile

Clever... but creepy. Though it would be fun to see what kind of reactions your friends would have upon seeing it- instant Id, anyone?

posted by SeattleMama on February 28th 2009 at 1:27am
view SeattleMama's profile