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Industria Edition has a steel grip on artisanal furniture

Last Wednesday, artisanal metal furniture brand Industria Edition opened the doors of its Manila showroom to the public for the first time.

Industria Edition is a homegrown brand. Starting out in the 90s as VICO Manufacturing Corporation, its two owners—Jude Tiotuico, the designer and creative director, and Arthur Viray, the president who manages the business aspects—started making iron-wrought accessories and furniture for a French company. When that partnership ended, the two decided to cast their own stone into the furniture ring. The Pampanga-based owners wisely decided to keep the metal (and as such, the industrial nature) in their brand, marrying “modern design with traditional, handmade production.”

“The thing that attracted me to metal is its unpredictability,” says Tiotuico, explaining that unlike wood, “which you probably can just carve into shape,” metal has to be bent, forged, or hammered, and “sometimes it just doesn’t come out the way you expect it to be,” he says, musing, “sometimes much better, actually.” But because of this, “no piece is exactly the same as the next.” Metal keeps you on your toes, and you can see that it lends Industria Edition’s furniture some playfulness even as it gives it its industrial edge.

The geometric shapes of these ceiling lights evoke the sophistication of the mid-century modern era

Another wise decision: the company chose to take its creative cues from the mid-century modern era, which highlights their creative use of metals like steel. Their metals are coiled into clean, geometric shapes, most notably in their hanging pieces.

The “Starburst” pieces are Tiotuico’s envisage of what a star’s transformation into a supernova would look like

Like the iconic era they take their inspiration from, the brand also takes a page from nature, making pieces that do something as simple as resemble twigs, or the more ambitious fixtures that enact a star’s transformation into a supernova.

Tiotuico is quick to point out that his designs are not so much there to create a statement inasmuch as they try to toe the fine line between furniture and art. “We want to make sure that [our furniture are] unique enough to put into a home but still grounded as furniture,” he says, pointing out that their furniture breathes a sense of harmony into interior spaces. He’d even go so far as to call their pieces “transition pieces” for being able to “bridge the gap between modern and classical pieces, say a modern chair and a classic coffee table.”

The “Loopy Chair,” one of Tiotuico’s personally favored pieces, won him a Katha Award at CITEM

This design philosophy has obviously paid off: Industria Edition has already made a name for itself both locally and abroad, participating in trade shows and exhibitions everywhere, including Milan. Their creations have also won Tiotuico design awards: the Bordeaux lounge chair and the Loopy lounge chair garnered the Katha Awards in CITEM (Center for International Trade Expositions and Missions).

Despite the success, their new showroom in Manila was never really part of their plans, opening it only when they realized that their local clients were clamoring for it.

The “Molave Round Dining” is a collaboration with noted local designer Budji Layug

For their opening, the brand decided to also feature collaborations with four local designers: Budji Layug, Eric Paras, Lilianna Manahan, and Leeroy New. More collaborations are to come. “Every season, every quarter of the year, we’ll be featuring one of the designers,” Tiotuico says.

Their new showroom is located at The Residences at Greenbelt, and is open daily from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. For more information, you can visit their website.

Featured photo courtesy of Industria Edition

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