All Things Cork

Ivy Phanith Ivy Phanith

Cork Decking One of Ethical and Sustainable Teak Alternatives

Cork has been the biggest hang-up. Walking on a cork deck feels great underfoot; soft, comfortable, just like teak. That tactile feel is a big part of why people love teak. Cork gives you that. Visually cork lacks the character that the grain of a natural teak deck has, but it can still have the traditional seams and look great. Conversely, cork does allow total design freedom similar to our composite decking if the designer or owner wants to get creative with a design feature other than the traditional “teak plank look”.

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Ivy Phanith Ivy Phanith

Studio TK Introduces a Trio of Versatile Cork Tables

The cork tables were designed by Michael Sodeau, who first explored the natural material when he was working on a resort project in Sagres, Portugal. Surprised by its special properties, Sodeau soon realized that cork could enhance pieces made for workplace settings. “Cork isn’t commonly used in contract office furniture,” he says. “I embraced its bulkier nature by creating products that celebrate roundness.”

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Ivy Phanith Ivy Phanith

Multicolored Porsche Carrera has a cabin wrapped in cork, denim and flannel

Inside, the car takes on a different texture entirely. Wotherspoon layers the cabin with vintage Levi’s denim, corduroy, and flannel, fabrics sourced from garments dating back to the 1960s. ‘It’s all made with vintage Levi’s denim and flannel shirts,’ he continues. ‘I also used some corduroy in there because it’s one of my favorite materials, and the cork dashboard is also really special. The cork was leftover from the Taycan project, so it has a little bit of modern Porsche running through it.’

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Ivy Phanith Ivy Phanith

Daniel Michalik Elevates Eco-Friendly Cork in Forest for the Trees

When does an object stop becoming simply furniture and when does it become cherished, loved, a keepsake? A strong factor is longevity, childhood chairs, tables, and art sparking memories long buried. Cork represents this almost symbiotic relationship aptly, illustrating a material that doesn’t require the felling of trees, allowing them to live on. In turn, as the forest takes care of us, we must take care of the forest. This circular relationship speaks to responsible stewardship practices, essential in the coming decades. Source material for the pieces featured in Forest for the Trees ranges from reclaimed wine corks to discarded building material, insulation, and upcycled skateboards.

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“The midsole is ReCork Recycled Cork, a breakthrough material made from recycled natural wine corks collected through ReCork’s North American wine cork recycling program”…

“Sole Launches the Ultimate Après-Anything Shoe”

SGB Media Online

“Recycle Cork to Replace Petroleum Based Polymers and Foams”

Earth 911


Cal Poly hosts rare cork harvesting event.

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“In climate change fight, power of cork seen by scientists as the star”

ABC News

“Fairway Touts Sustainability Efforts with New Wine Cork Campaign”

Supermarket News

Eduardo Souto de Moura and Diller Scofidio + Renfro create
cork installations for Lisbon

Dezeen


‍The pilot program, which is part of a collaboration between Endeavour Group,
Amorim Cork and Save Our Soles, aims to repurpose customers’ used corks with a view to create cork-composite anti-fatigue mats.

Endeavour Group trials cork recycling program”

RetailWorld


“Isomi "challenges norms" of sofa design with cork and latex Tejo”

Dezeen