• meterage1
  • meterage2
  • meterage3

Thabisa Mjo Mash T Studio

Meterage: The Act of Measuring

By MashT Design Studio: Thabisa Mjo

Hand carved American red oak; ebony slow stain; water-based sealer

Thabisa Mjo, founder of MashT Design Studio, looked to Umbhaco materials and garments — the traditional dress worn by the Xhosa people of South Africa — for her interpretation of the Future Heirlooms brief. Her table, which was hand carved by Phillip Hollander (the cofounder of the Houtlander studio), is entitled Meterage: The Act of Measuring. In a literal sense, the design approach considers measuring itself, asking how much fabric one needs to make the Umbhaco garment. But in another sense, and with an eye toward sustainable furniture production, asks what the measure is of an object itself as Phillip carves the wood to ‘reveal’ the Umbhaco hidden within the wood.

“In measuring which part is fitting to take or leave behind, it’s as though whatever is taken with you in the design process actually becomes the heirloom,” Mjo says. “The reason I designed a table, subtly, explains why I chose Umbhaco as my heirloom. Tables are utilitarian, and they're diverse; round, oblong, square, for working, for eating, for displaying etc. So tables become objects we tend to gather around for fellowshipping and exchanging ideas with one another. Those ideas influence the stories we tell ourselves and each other and those stories inform what we consider worthy of being heirlooms in our lives, and in our homes.”