Magis Transit Folding Trolley David Mellor
- Regular price
- £840.00
- Sale price
- £840.00
- Regular price
-
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SKU:ac127
Designed: 1998
Origin: Italy
David Mellor was one of the greatest exponents of British design, known above all
for his extraordinary cutlery sets, but he also worked on various different kinds of
projects over the long course of his career. One of these objects is Transit folding
trolley for Magis, with its chromed steel frame, injection-moulded polypropylene
shelves and glossy die-cast aluminium handle, which enrich even such a humble,
practical item with splendid design value.
Material: frame in chromed steel tube, shelves in standard injection-moulded polypropylene, handle in polished die-cast aluminium.
Size: H 89 cm, L 75 cm, Dept Open 45 cm, Dept Closed 13.5 cm.
David Mellor
David Mellor (1930-2009), Royal Designer for Industry, was one of the best-known designers in the UK. He was unusual in combining the activities of designer, manufacturer and retailer. His great professional expertise was in metalwork, working over a broad spectrum and designing products on both a large and a small scale. His designs ranged from street lighting and the UK national traffic signal system to one-off pieces of handmade silver and the modern stainless steel cutlery he manufactured in his own purpose-built factory. He trained in silversmithing at the Royal College of Art in London, winning a scholarship for further study at the British Academy in Rome. In 1969 he opened the first of his well-known kitchenware and tableware shops in Sloane Square, London. In 1973 he set up his first production workshops for cutlery in Sheffield. Then, in 1990, he built his new factory in the Peak District National Park in Derbyshire, a rural area of outstanding natural beauty, in collaboration with the architect Sir Michael Hopkins. This factory has been described as a ‘minor masterpiece’ of modern architecture. David Mellor’s own designs won numerous international awards, and in 1996 he received the accolade of a retrospective at the Design Museum, London. In 2001 he was awarded the CBE by Her Majesty the Queen.