Print farm ⏏️
Wooj Design
Home goods and furniture made by robots and people in Brooklyn, New York.
The Pagoda and Orbit lamp started as an exploration of bridging in 3D printing — months of iteration pushing the limits of the medium while balancing form, function, and manufacturability.
The Pagoda and Orbit lamp started as an exploration of bridging in 3D printing—months of iteration pushing the limits of the medium while balancing form, function, and manufacturability.
For those who can’t make up their mind
Introducing the Modular Lighting Studio
A cordless lighting system with swappable shades.
Designed around getting more out of the lamp you own.
Your first cordless lamp is just the beginning. Swap shades to shift the whole feeling of a room in seconds. It’s the easiest redesign you’ll ever do.
Like choosing a favorite child 🙂
Everyone should know about this iconic lighting designer: Ingo Maurer
Even though robots and machines manufacture our parts, fundamentally our business is run by human beings. Last year we printed 30,000 parts. This year so far, (3 months) we’ve printed half of that. We’re busier than ever and excited for what the future holds #.
I’ve hated this light for more than 2 years, so I started replacing it with quick sketch models using B-grade parts.
The goal was to practice ideation freely—no overthinking, no fear of failure.
This is Part 2. I left it too late… so I gave myself 45 minutes to make something work.
Constraints force decisions.
Not perfect—but better.
Do you work better like this or with more time?
💡Studio Sale!💡 Most lamps
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