PINO Wooden Box | Antrei Hartikainen

MediumOak
SizeS= 9 x 9 x 5 cm, M= 9 x 9 x 9,5 cm, L= 9 x 9 x 14 cm
Categories

Pino is a wooden box series, complete with refined detail and crafted to excellence by Antrei Hartikainen in Fiskars, Finland. The Pino boxes can be used for the storage of miscellaneous small objects, like stationery or jewellery. They are also suitable as for example tea, coffee, sugar and spice boxes in the kitchen. The small, medium and large boxes are a three-part set; all sizes stacks with each other.

The Pino series is exclusively made by Antrei for Lokal Kollektion.

 

52,00 65,00 


Antrei Hartikainen (b. 1991) is a master cabinetmaker and designer from Fiskars, known for his exquisite works in wood. His award-winning pieces, including functional products and pure artworks, achieve heights of sensuality and elegance, and highlight the importance of craftsmanship. His work constantly challenges and blurs the traditional categorisations between functional objects and visual arts. Hartikainen’s sculptural approach can be studied through his organic body of work, which simultaneously highlights the inspiration drawn from his material of choice — wood.

“I really love to develop and create new things. It doesn’t matter if the piece is one of a kind, limited edition or a product of serial production. I get excited and interested by working with different materials.

I’m doing a lot of modelling and prototyping by hand carving. It’s definitely the best way to design smaller products and objects, as It feels great to make models with your own hands. It’s up to you how far you push the limits of the material while searching for the right proportions and shapes.

It is inspirational to transfer the strong imprint and beauty of nature into wood by bringing to the fore its most fascinating structural and aesthetic features. Shapes, scales and different types of surfaces come into being by studying landscapes moulded by humans, the climate and nature in different seasons is seen from different distances and perspectives.”