
New York’s design market, specified by an ever-thriving community of independent talents and studios that perhaps initially emerged during the Great Recession of 2008, is unquestionably resourceful and inventive. Using minimal resources and exorbitant leas, lots of self-governing practices come together to share space, mount group exhibits during and beyond the yearly NYCxDesign celebration, and increasingly team up on fresh designs. Unlike in Europe, where it is somewhat much easier for independent skills to partner with recognized producers, self-production and self-promotion are the name of the video game here. There is, from time to time, help from centralizing galleries and retail principle areas like Assembly Line.

Derived from the extremely effective interior practice General Assembly, this hybrid platform has actually become a necessary resource, purveying various furnishing and finishing services to fellow trade experts and private customers alike. Over the past few years, it has actually also played host to numerous solo exhibits debuting new collections by New york city’s flock of new designers.


With the launch of Kawabi and Christopher Merchant


‘s Amica lighting collection throughout this year’s New York Design Week, Assembly Line is placing itself as a client gallery: one that not just showcases brand-new styles however likewise assists produce them, making important connections in between skills and makers while linking talents with other talents.< img src ="https://design-milk.com/images/2026/05/Christopher-Merchant-Kawabi-Amica-Assemby-Line-2.jpg"alt= "3 table lamps with textured, cream-colored tones and ceramic bases in various shapes and colors are displayed on white pedestals against a neutral background."width= "1280 "height="853"/ > As evident in this deftly imagined offering of pendant, table, and wall-mounted

luminaires, the results of the latter plan are frequently higher than the sum of their parts. There is a pairing, matching, and ultimately fusing of know-how: distinct style vocabularies that match each other. In this case, it is Merchant’s fascinating extruded ceramic process and Kawabi’s– Aaron and Irisa Na-Chan Kawabi’s– masterfully reinterpreted conventional joinery and papermaking methods. Both have actually mostly used their self-developed, proprietary knowledge to lighting design, but this cooperation brings this recently cohered savoir-faire to new heights. Merchant’s earth-tone vessels, determined by their distinctive mold-pulled ridging, function as the base for Kawabi’s tan-hued geometric and


amorphous illuminated structures. The paired studios iterated this counterbalance across a remarkable variety: wood-joined and paper-wrapped sconces anchored by textured, only slightly distorted ceramic surface areas; a large, free-floating hanging pendant held in location by a small, equally ended up ceramic weight. The possibilities of this cooperation appear unlimited.

In the past, both have actually operated Brooklyn studios within earshot of each other however did not recognize it until recently. Nevertheless, in action to the inflated leas pointed out previously, Merchant recently relocated to Minneapolis, where he has the ability to work in a bigger, far less costly workspace.



Photography by Ben DeHaan.< img src="https://design-milk.com/images/2024/07/Adrian-Madlener-Design-Milk-Headshot-100x100.jpg" width="100" height="100" alt =""/ > Adrian Madlener is a Brussels-born, New York-based author focusing on collectible and sustainable style. With a specific concentrate on topics that exemplify the best in craft-led experimentation, he’s committed to supporting skills that push the envelope in various disciplines.