Through precedent research and extensive exploration of flat-stock material applications, Grain Chair represents a personal investigation into how digital fabrication can evolve traditional understandings of craft. The project reframes plywood as a medium capable of both efficiency and refinement, transforming a material often associated with utility into one of precision and invention. By merging computational design, toolpath logic, and hands-on fabrication, the chair demonstrates how digital workflows can yield results that are not only technically rigorous but also materially expressive.
The piece embodies an inquiry into the continuum between drawing, modeling, and making, where each stage informs and refines the next. Grain Chair reveals that the intelligence of fabrication lies not only in efficiency or accuracy but in the dialogue between code and material behavior, the way design intent adapts to the resistance and rhythm of the tool. What begins as a digital construct becomes a tactile artifact that records its own process through surface, grain, and joint. As a result, the project extends beyond furniture design, positioning itself as a study in architectural thinking at the scale of the hand: an exploration of how computation, structure, and craft can converge to produce new forms of spatial and material understanding.