Larch
Place Setting
2007 (designed)
2007 (designed)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
"Larch" cutlery has historical design influences from the 18th century but Studio William Welch describes how the flowing form gives this pattern a modern flavour and brings it up to date. Larch cutlery is made using 18/10 stainless steel and is made with either a mirror or satin finish.
William Welch (born 1972) is an English industrial designer. He is the son of the late post-war industrial designer Robert Welch (21 May 1929-15 March 2000). Welch studied design at the University of Central England (now Birmingham City University) where he completed courses in Furniture Design and Silversmithing. From 1995-1997 Welch worked for Pentagram Design London as a junior designer under practice partner Kenneth Grange, and later worked in the same design consultancy for Daniel Wiel (1997–1999). He then completed a Master of Arts Degree at the Royal College of Art, London in 2001. As part of a research and development project he created cutlery for people with physical disabilities called "Adaptable Cutlery", which changed shape to accommodate the user’s physical abilities. This gained the graduating year’s top Helen Hamlyn Award for Design in 2001. The Adaptable Cutlery was also a category award winner for the Peugeot/Oxo Design Awards in 2002 and was crowned overall winner of all ten design categories. Following the death of his father, William was appointed Company Director at Robert Welch Designs Ltd in 2001. William worked alongside his brother Rupert until 2005 when he broke away from the company and launched Studio William Cutlery in 2005.
William Welch (born 1972) is an English industrial designer. He is the son of the late post-war industrial designer Robert Welch (21 May 1929-15 March 2000). Welch studied design at the University of Central England (now Birmingham City University) where he completed courses in Furniture Design and Silversmithing. From 1995-1997 Welch worked for Pentagram Design London as a junior designer under practice partner Kenneth Grange, and later worked in the same design consultancy for Daniel Wiel (1997–1999). He then completed a Master of Arts Degree at the Royal College of Art, London in 2001. As part of a research and development project he created cutlery for people with physical disabilities called "Adaptable Cutlery", which changed shape to accommodate the user’s physical abilities. This gained the graduating year’s top Helen Hamlyn Award for Design in 2001. The Adaptable Cutlery was also a category award winner for the Peugeot/Oxo Design Awards in 2002 and was crowned overall winner of all ten design categories. Following the death of his father, William was appointed Company Director at Robert Welch Designs Ltd in 2001. William worked alongside his brother Rupert until 2005 when he broke away from the company and launched Studio William Cutlery in 2005.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Parts | This object consists of 7 parts.
|
Title | Larch (manufacturer's title) |
Materials and techniques | Stainless steel 18/10, forged and polished to a mirror finish |
Brief description | Place setting, "Larch", stainless steel, mirror finish, designed by William Welch, 2007 |
Physical description | Seven piece cutlery place setting formed of table knife, table fork, soup spoon, side knife, side fork, dessert spoon and teaspoon. Made of stainless steel. |
Dimensions |
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Production type | Mass produced |
Credit line | Given by Studio William Welch Ltd |
Object history | "Larch" cutlery has historical design influences from the 18th century but the flowing form gives this pattern a modern flavour and brings it up to date. |
Summary | "Larch" cutlery has historical design influences from the 18th century but Studio William Welch describes how the flowing form gives this pattern a modern flavour and brings it up to date. Larch cutlery is made using 18/10 stainless steel and is made with either a mirror or satin finish. William Welch (born 1972) is an English industrial designer. He is the son of the late post-war industrial designer Robert Welch (21 May 1929-15 March 2000). Welch studied design at the University of Central England (now Birmingham City University) where he completed courses in Furniture Design and Silversmithing. From 1995-1997 Welch worked for Pentagram Design London as a junior designer under practice partner Kenneth Grange, and later worked in the same design consultancy for Daniel Wiel (1997–1999). He then completed a Master of Arts Degree at the Royal College of Art, London in 2001. As part of a research and development project he created cutlery for people with physical disabilities called "Adaptable Cutlery", which changed shape to accommodate the user’s physical abilities. This gained the graduating year’s top Helen Hamlyn Award for Design in 2001. The Adaptable Cutlery was also a category award winner for the Peugeot/Oxo Design Awards in 2002 and was crowned overall winner of all ten design categories. Following the death of his father, William was appointed Company Director at Robert Welch Designs Ltd in 2001. William worked alongside his brother Rupert until 2005 when he broke away from the company and launched Studio William Cutlery in 2005. |
Collection | |
Accession number | M.34:1 to 7-2013 |
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Record created | July 5, 2012 |
Record URL |
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