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The Veteran
David Weeks, who has been in Dumbo for ten years, offers one model for Brooklyn designers who want to turn start-ups into viable businesses. He’s best known for his modernist lighting, much of which is available through Ralph Pucci. But “I never meant to be the lighting guy,” says Weeks: He’s also produced chairs for Habitat and has a new furniture line in the works. Weeks ran the playful, Droog-inspired Butter brand with Lindsey Adelman from 2000 to 2005, which featured many young Brooklyn designers alongside projects like a vending machine that dispensed design pieces.
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Fire Up the Kiln
Big industrial kilns need space: Yet another reason so many designers flock to Brooklyn. Kiln Enamel platters (2001; $110 to $260 at Bark) are made by firing stained glass onto metal.
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The flowers on KleinReid’s Selfish Giant vase (2005; $6,500 at kleinreid.com) are painstakingly formed by hand.
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John Pomp opened his own glass studio—One Sixty Glass—to more easily make these two-tone Beehive vases (2005; $180 at johnpomp.com).
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Paper Chase
You need space to stamp the hand-carved linoleum blocks that create wallpaper, as Amy Mills of Paper Mills does (Little Havana pattern, 2005; to the trade through Roger Arlington, 212-752-5288).
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Wook Kim’s patterns look traditional but are digitally created with a quirky twist (Jacob pattern, 2005; $16 per square foot at Matter).
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Zen and the Art of Woodwork
Eric Manigian studied Buddhism in Japan and brings that learning to pieces that take weeks to craft by hand (Bandwidth table, 2005; $17,000 at 718-855-9097). The key is “getting in tune with your tools,” he says. “Woodworking evolves you as a sensitive human being.”
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Magic-Carpet Ride
Amy Helfand’s fantastical landscape-inspired rugs (2004; $100 per square foot at amyhelfand.com), created from her Brooklyn studio, are made in Nepal of Tibetan wool.
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Azy Schecter designs rugs hand-tufted with New Zealand wool (2005; $60 per square foot at Kea Carpets & Kilims; 718-222-8087). Next: Piece and Harmony