After months of anticipation, the folks of Hattery Labs have moved into their space. I had to leave at the beginning of February, but my friend Chris Currie carried on, finishing up the assembly, sanding, oiling, and waxing of the last few tables. He is a consumate professional, and his work speaks for itself.
The last day I was there, we put together the final conference table, a 14' long beast that managed, somehow, to still look fairly sleek relative to its enormous size. I was also excited to see a 200+ pound table top supported on four slender wood legs, with no connecting tensile structure at the feet. You can design all you want, but every time I flip over a table or a chair for the first time and see how it sits my heart leaps into my throat a little bit; design becomes real, and your reputation and ideas hit reality in one concrete moment. I've had that moment turn into splintered wood and clenched fists; fortunately, this time, it turned into high fives and raised beers.
What follows is some final photos of the work, and an illustrated journal of the final assembly of the conference tables, following progress posts here and here and here. Much thanks to Mark Wills, Josh To, and all the folks at Hattery Labs, as well as Chris Currie and Jamie Sartory -- it was a helluva lot of fun. And the tables turned out ok.
The last day I was there, we put together the final conference table, a 14' long beast that managed, somehow, to still look fairly sleek relative to its enormous size. I was also excited to see a 200+ pound table top supported on four slender wood legs, with no connecting tensile structure at the feet. You can design all you want, but every time I flip over a table or a chair for the first time and see how it sits my heart leaps into my throat a little bit; design becomes real, and your reputation and ideas hit reality in one concrete moment. I've had that moment turn into splintered wood and clenched fists; fortunately, this time, it turned into high fives and raised beers.
What follows is some final photos of the work, and an illustrated journal of the final assembly of the conference tables, following progress posts here and here and here. Much thanks to Mark Wills, Josh To, and all the folks at Hattery Labs, as well as Chris Currie and Jamie Sartory -- it was a helluva lot of fun. And the tables turned out ok.
![]() |
Mark Wills at work, photo by James Buyayo. |