Inhabitat











May 10, 2007

MOLO SOFTSEATING: Expandable Honeycomb Chair

by Evelyn Lee

HauteGREEN 2007 Sneak Peek, Haute Green Sneak Peek, Molo Soft Furniture, Molo Paper Furniture, Papersoft, Cardboard Paper, Flat Pack, Collapsible Seat

Molo Designs’ flexible honeycomb paper furniture has been a long time favorite of Inhabitat, starting back when we first discovered them in 2005 at ICFF, all the way to the Inhabitat Editors Choice Award they won at last year’s design week. And now they’re adding another item to their stellar resume- they’re one of the participants in the upcoming HauteGreen exhibition and our next sneak peak!


HauteGREEN 2007 Sneak Peek, Haute Green Sneak Peek, Molo Soft Furniture, Molo Paper Furniture, Papersoft, Cardboard Paper, Flat Pack, Collapsible Seat

Brilliant design ideas always spawn a host of imitators and Molo is no exception. The Vancouver-based designers may have been the origin of expandable paper furniture, but in the last year we have seen the rise of the Expandable Folding Chair, Newspaper Extendable Bench, Cardboard Furniture, and a variety of flatpak honeycomb lights.

Molo’s “Soft” expandable paper furniture is made from craft paper, and uses a flexible-yet-strong honeycomb structure to provide support. Molo’s Paper Softseating comes in the form of stools, benches, and loungers, in natural brown kraft paper and deep black (dyed with bamboo charcoal ink).

Currently on the market there are two types of Softseating : fanning stools (in eight different sizes) and fanning loungers as big as 80″ in diameter. The paper Softseating is held together by magnets that allow you to connect Softseating to one another. The various configurations of extending, stacking, and joining pieces yields endless possibilities only limited to the users imagination. If you find yourself at the end of the day wanting more floor space, each Softseating piece collapses down to the size of an oversized coffeetable book for easy storage until your next soirĂ©e.

+ Molo Paper Wall
+ Molo

Papersoft, Cardboard Paper, Flat Pack, Collapsible Seat

Papersoft, Cardboard Paper, Flat Pack, Collapsible Seat

13 Responses to “MOLO SOFTSEATING: Expandable Honeycomb Chair”

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hanounou Says:
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I see the hand of the girl through the chair, it’s soft despite of dimension, bravooooooo

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shambhavi Says:
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Cool, but I wonder if the magnets would wreck credit cards, etc. in back-pocket wallets. Also, how durable are these things?

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Hun Boon Says:
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Just imagine the hassle of cleaning them..

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cleo Says:
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Nice!

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Ar. Vineeta Merchant Says:
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its a brilliant concept.specially a space can be altered just by changing the dimension of this paper furniture.its amazing.i like it.

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David in Bali Says:
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Expandable paper products bring out the Slinky loving kid in all of us, but does not our experience with party favors, as well as the 1st photo in this article, tell us it is fragile? = short life = waste?

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coprblue Says:
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since it’s carboard, jus ttake out the (refrigerator) magnets and recycle everything else. 0% waste. and as a student who has moved almost every year since highschool, i would love to just recycle all of my furniture rather than move it. Even just folding it up would be wonderful.

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craig Says:
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paper is in no way environmentally friendly. In order to produce pulp and paper huge quantities of toxic chemicals are used which more often than not end up in our rivers, lakes and water tables. These Molo products are great design but as far as I know are not green. I have no idea how or why these guys can be in a so called “green” exhibition?

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Rebecca Says:
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You’re right - paper is not inherently green. But green is not always just about materials (although some of the materials in this piece are recycled as well). Molos pieces use non-toxic adhesives and dyes (bamboo charcoal dye for the black soft seating). They are lightweight, pack flat, and save energy in transport. They are designed for multi-functions and to accomodate changes in living patterns. Although they are paper, they are designed to take a beating and at the end of their lifetime, they can easily be disassembled and recycled. They may not be the greenest pieces on the block, but they certainly exemplify many outstanding green ‘criteria’.

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craig Says:
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I really do want to like these products (especially since I like the design) the problem for me is not only the material its lifespan and manufacturing. I have seen Molo products at a number of trade shows over the past few years and after a few days of wear and tear they are damaged and look awful, spill a drink on them and they turn to pulp. They are a good design concept but they are not practical. I also believe that they are die cut, which means there is a considerable amount of waste and inefficiencies in Manufacturing.

As for the material, I would like to point out that the pulp and paper industry is one of the top three environmental polluters in North America and this includes recycling paper.

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todd Says:
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some facts:

1) we use a high percentage of recycled content for the paper walls and seating
2) we are seeking paper from certified sustainable sources
3) all of our products are designed to be easily dismantled for recycling
4) trade show environments are abusive - who else allows thousands of people to try out and literally kick around their products? I can’t imagine many products would come out of this looking good (it really isn’t normal wear and tear)
5) they do turn to pulp - we like the shapes and broken surface that develops - to us its an interesting contrast to the pure form and material of conventional-type modern furniture which looks abused at the first scratch - even red wine can be fun
6) the pieces are cut with hydraulic cutters and only the corners are die cut - for the lounger shape the cut is mirrored and flipped - there is very little waste in the cutting process - in all of our products we strive for the smallest amount of waste possible in all aspects of the process from making to shipping to marketing
7) paper used in softseating uses the least amount of processing possible in the paper industry
8) we still have a ways to go (hopefully our road has no end) but we are constantly addressing issues
9) we don’t maintain that our products will solve all of the worlds problems but we are very proud of molo and of how we are doing things.

thanks

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Rosie Says:
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Hi, is it possible to fin out any more about this furniture? I’m organising a sustainabilty exhibition and would love to show these!

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Ninehand Says:
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The magnets wouldn’t hurt a credit card I’m sure, MythBusters did a thing on that and had to use an electro-magnet to erase anything.

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