|
July 20, 2005
Make Way for ducduc
When
two guys from The Street decide there's a dearth of good-looking
modern baby furniture out there, they get serious. Lots of market
research, lots of number crunching, lots of hunting down famously
expert advisors (architect and designer Brady Wilcox, for example,
who was the creative director at John Varvatos and has worked with
clients like Donna Karen and Waterworks). Then of course, there's
the implementation of a bulletproof business plan.
The result is ducduc, a new design collaborative debuting six collections
of furniture with an equal number of textile lines waiting in the
wings. Following the recent trend of I'm-fed-up-and-I'm-not-going-to-take-it-anymore
approach of baby companies born out of frustration, founder Philip
Erdoes (who is also CEO of a venture capital firm) came up with
the idea with his wife when they were so desperate to find baby
furniture that matched the contemporary décor of their home,
they wound up transforming a dresser they'd found in Paris years
before into a changing table.
For
its initial launch, the line includes cribs, changing tables/dressers,
storage units, activity tables and seating. The inspirations for
ducduc's furniture range from sculptor Donald Judd to architectural
modernism to the Orient. Sophisticated yet playful details are incorporated
into the designs, including chalkboard paint surfaces, graphic text
appliqués and a gender-neutral color palette. The pieces
are made from strong hardwoods and non-VOC lacquered veneers, and
to ensure that the highest safety standards were applied to each
design, a safety consultant was retained. Perhaps best of all, the
pieces are convertible not simply from crib to youth bed,
but are meant to be used beyond the nursery as the designs appeal
to both adults and their kids. (Which
is probably a good thing since crib prices start at $1,099.)
In other words, there's something for everyone everyone who
wants something different, that is.
Available
by appointment at the New York City showroom, or online at ducducnyc.com.
|