Archive for Gates & Railings

Reviving Deco Style in Portland
– a moderne metal gate

We recently installed this art deco gate for clients in Portland.

Lander Gate
Copyright 2009 Cobalt Designworks, LLC

Lander Gate
Copyright 2009 Cobalt Designworks, LLC

Lander Gate - detail
Copyright 2009 Cobalt Designworks, LLC

This was my first time working with the art deco aesthetic, and I must say I’m eager to design more architectural pieces in this style. I love the juxtaposition of modern, clean geometric shapes with rich artistic elements from ancient Egypt and Native America.

Art Deco (excerpted from http://www.decorativearts.com/glossary.html)
Popular decorative design style of the 1920s and 1930s. The name is taken from the exhibitions of Les Arts Decoratifs, where such work was first exhibited. Cubist painting and African and Native American art influenced the development of Art Deco, but the polished, dynamic forms of modern machinery and aircraft were most inspirational. The style is characterized by stepped forms, rounded corners, triple-striped decorative elements, and the use of chromium and black trim. Important practitioners of the style have included (in America) Donald Deskey and Gilbert Rohde. The style was popular for restaurants, theaters, hotels, ocean liners, and Worlds Fair exhibitions, as it did not have the serious theoretical underpinnings that modernism or Bauhaus styles encompassed. The architecture and interiors of the Chrysler Building and the Waldorf Astoria Hotel (both in New York) are good examples of Deco design.

“Art Deco’s ultimate aim was to end the old conflict between art and industry, the old snobbish distinction between artist and artisan, partly by making artists adept at crafts, but still more by adapting design to the requirements of mass-production.”
- Bevis Hillier

To see a related post of this gate in progress go here.

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Art Deco Styling – work in progress

Here are work-in-progress photos of an art deco gate we are creating for clients in Portland. Dave has added the lock box and hinges since these photos were taken. Next stop powder-coat.

art deco gate - wip
Copyright 2009 Cobalt Designworks, LLC

art deco gate - detail
Copyright 2009 Cobalt Designworks, LLC

art deco metal gate - detail
Copyright 2009 Cobalt Designworks, LLC

This is the design rendering we presented to our clients. It was the chosen design from three options we created.
deco gate - design rendering
Copyright 2009 Cobalt Designworks, LLC

To see the finished product go to this post.

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A new metal fence improves our garden wasteland (finally!)

You know that place around your house that you’ve ignored for years?  That one room or corner that fills you with dread every time you look it, and yet you still never do anything about it?  For us it’s the south side of the house; never landscaped, overrun with weeds and a stockpile for all the the things we don’t have a place for in the yard.  It’s our outdoor junk drawer.  When I started referring to it as the ghetto, I knew it was high time we did something about it — 11 years after moving in.  

Last year I got all motivated to fix it up and began sketching some fence designs.  For awhile I was fixated on a lotus flower design, but came to realize it might be a little over the top for our old Cape Cod style house.  Plus, this fence  would divide our house and our neighbors’ along a narrow corridor only 12 feet wide.  Since the neighbors would have the best view of the fence, I was a little concerned it might be over the top for them, too.  Suppose they didn’t like it and planted some tall shrubs to cover up the design we worked to hard to create and wanted to show off to potential clients?  So my design process was put on hold.  Mostly because I needed to spend time on jobs that pay.  The cobbler’s kids never have shoes, and I was beginning to think we’d never have a cool metal fence to call our own. 

But recently I went back to my sketchpad and created a simple design I really liked.  Simpler than I would have ever imagined.  Dave ran with it before I could change my mind again and he gained momentum fabricating it this week.  We now have two panels installed and I’m eager to show the progress:

Metal Fence in Progress
Two out of five metal fence panels installed.

This next photo shows the view passersby get from the sidewalk. Metal fence in progress - view from sidewalk

We will let the fence weather for a year to get a solid coat of  rust.  Then we’ll coat it with linseed oil to add richness & depth of color, and to protect the metal.  To maintain a fence like this we’ll try to add a new coat of linseed oil yearly.  Stay tuned for more work in progress and, hopefully soon, a finished fence. 

So, anyone out there want a lotus fence?

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Ornamental in Astoria

decorative aluminum stair railing

Here are some shots of the finished railing for the historic Astoria, OR home I mentioned in my last post.  Powder-coated aluminum and quality workmanship — this railing will last a long, long time!

wrought iron railing

wrought iron fence

In the studio – fabrication in process

Welding aluminum fence

fabricated aluminum fence

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Aluminum Railing for old Astoria Home

There is functional art like the kingfisher table in my last post, and then there is Pure Function.  This is the design rendering for an aluminum fence we created for a client who is restoring a beautiful old house in Astoria, OR.  Installation is occuring as I type so I will share photos soon.

aluminum fence

Copyright 2009 Cobalt Designworks, LLC

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