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Bastogne Walnut Desk

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Bastogne Walnut Live Edge, Executive Desk In-Stock
By Möbius Objects
Located in Calgary, CA
Handcrafted from a single slab of highly figured California Bastogne Walnut this desk features
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Canadian Desks and Writing Tables

Materials

Walnut

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Möbius Objects for sale on 1stDibs

Möbius Objects is a Canadian furniture studio that makes modern centerpieces for the home. Each piece is made by hand using techniques that allow the wood’s natural grain to shine. Möbius Objects is particularly well known for its dining tables with a live edge that preserves the tree’s original shape. The company’s beautifully detailed dining chairs and stools make an excellent pairing with its table designs.

Founded in 2010 near the hamlet of Priddis in Alberta, Möbius Objects was from the start focused on creating timeless, handcrafted furniture from solid wood. A team of skilled artisans and a commitment to exceptional quality contributed to its early success. The company handles the building process entirely in-house, using only the best materials for its one-of-a-kind products.

In 2017, Möbius Objects shifted operations to Calgary and opened a 7,000-square-foot workshop, studio and showroom space. In addition to stock pieces, the company began offering customizable works with options to modify elements like the type of wood, finish and dimensions. Möbius Objects also provides a complete design and build service for tailor-made commissions.

Möbius Objects is now an established furniture manufacturer with many local and international clients in residential and commercial spaces. The company boasts a 14,000-square-foot studio space where it can handle commissions of any scope and size.

On 1stDibs, find Möbius Objects seating, tables, storage cabinets and more.

Finding the Right desks-writing-tables for You

Choosing the perfect writing desk or writing table is a profoundly personal journey, one that people have been embarking upon for centuries.

Queen Atossa of Persia, from her writing table circa 500 B.C., is said to have been the originator of the art of handwritten letters. Hers was reportedly the first in a long and colorful history of penned correspondence that grew in popularity alongside literacy. The demand for suitable writing desks, which would serve the composer of the letters as well as ensure the comfort of the recipient naturally followed, and the design of these necessary furnishings has evolved throughout history.

Once people began to seek freedom from the outwardly ornate styles of the walnut and rosewood writing desks and drafting tables introduced in the name of Queen Victoria and King Louis XV, radical shifts occurred, such as those that materialized during the Art Nouveau period, when designers longed to produce furniture inspired by the natural world’s beauty. A prime example is the work of the famous late-19th-century Spanish architect Antoni Gaudí — his rolltop desk featured deep side drawers and was adorned with carved motifs that paid tribute to nature. Gaudí regularly combined structural precision with decorative elements, creating beautiful pieces of furniture in wood and metal.

Soon afterward, preferences for sleek, geometric, stylized forms in furniture that saw an emphasis on natural wood grains and traditional craftsmanship took hold. Today, Art Deco desks are still favored by designers who seek to infuse interiors with an air of luxury. One of the most prominent figures of the Art Deco movement was French decorator and furniture designer Émile-Jacques Ruhlmann. With his use of neoclassical motifs as well as expensive and exotic materials such as imported dark woods and inlays of precious metals for his writing desks, Ruhlmann came to symbolize good taste and modernity.

The rise in appreciation for Scandinavian modernism continues to influence the design of contemporary writing desks. It employs the “no fuss” or “less is more” approach to creating a tasteful, sophisticated space. Sweden’s master cabinetmaker Bruno Mathsson created gallery-worthy designs that are as functional as they are beautiful. Finnish architect Alvar Aalto never viewed himself as an artist, but, like Mathsson, his furniture designs reflected a fondness for organic materials and a humanistic approach. Danish designers such as Hans Wegner introduced elegant shapes and lines to mid-century desks and writing tables, often working in oak and solid teak.

From vintage desks to contemporary styles, 1stDibs offers a broad spectrum of choices for conducting all personal and business writing and reading activities.