Previous experiments with lava stone inspired her firepitâs organic form. The intricate stoneware creation also features a gradient that augments light from the flames. âWe did this hot-cool effect where the glaze crackles and you put some black stain into it, so that makes it a bit more volcanic,â Cognet says.
Indeed, the melting effect the ceramic expresses empowers Lava Flow to speak for itself as a sculpture when unlit. âI thought it was super interesting to mimic something like melting,â Cognet adds. âItâs like a mini volcano in your garden.â
Back across the Atlantic, in San Francisco, AD PRO Directoryâlisted studio Orca is creating firepits in the forms of concentric circles, or stitched-together sculptures. Founder Molly Sedlacek sources her metals from within the Bay Areaâand at the moment, she says, demand is high. âAlmost 80% of our projects want a firepit,â she notes. âHumans want fire.â
Orcaâs vessels share a rustic color story but vary in composition, featuring stainless steel or brass. They were an obvious choice, Sedlacek says, either for their reflectivity or the oxidation they earn with age. âTheyâre black and silver and then, after the first rain, they become rust in this wonderful matte silver tone,â she says. âItâs truly the natural elements that patina. The actual fire itself doesnât have an impact on it.â
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A handful of evergreen principles still inform the typology, but an intimate knowledge of materiality and ventilation is principal for newer designers. âThereâs a whole science to airflow and also choosing materials that are correct,â Sedlacek says. âItâs understanding the heat rate and combustion of materials, and also knowing the size of the burner.â
âConsidering the airflow is critical,â Wiseman adds. âThinking of it in terms of a collaboration with the fireâhow does it activate it when the fire is [burning]?âI think is a really exciting way to design.â
Smokeâs impact on both comfort and the environment remains perhaps the largest factor of all. Sedlacek is already seeing an uptick in more alternative models. âI could see a world where we go to more electric starters,â she says. âWhen we first started, we were just doing wood-burning and now weâve switched to gas and we also have an electric starter that you can modify.â
For Wiseman, however, the primeval poetry of building a fire remains his muse. âThereâs something about the ritual of creating the fire, of putting the logs on, and creating the kindling, and then the natural process of it burning through as opposed to just pressing a button,â Wiseman says. âIt takes away the magic.â