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Cardboard Cantilever Chair

Cardboard Cantilever Chair
This cardboard chair explores variations on some techniques first thought up and worked through here. The structure uses a hybrid of two types of cardboard: traditional corrugated from boxes and sheet stock, and hexagonal-cell cardboard used in packaging of imported stainless-steel sinks. I combined stack lamination with embedded threaded rods to provide clamping pressure, tying the layers together. To further unify the structure and reduce the variations in the layers, the whole thing is wrapped in five layers of paper-mache, which was polyurethaned and waxed.

This chair is unusual in that it is a cantilever chair, a traditional modernist form first pioneered by the Bauhaus. Cardboard can be very strong, but the cantilever form presents several challenges in using a paper material.

First, the entire chair is essentially in tension: the weight and force of the sitter is pulling on all three of the critical joints, at the floor, the knee, and the junction of the back and the seat. Corrugated cardboard is very strong in compression, when the force is aligned with the grain of the corrugations. However, it has very low tearing strength, especially when the force is perpendicular to the corrugations. I partially overcame this by using the hex cardboard, which is strong in all directions because it has no directional grain.

Second, there are no back legs, meaning the force has to find a path to the ground that is circuitous, winding along the seat to the front legs. The runners along the ground also have to be long enough to prevent the chair form overturning backwards when the sitter leans back. Most cardboard chairs have mass positioned directly under the sitter to add support where there is the most weight.

Last, unlike the cantilever chair featured in my other instructable, this chair only has two legs, instead of a continuous face across the front. To overcome all these structural challenges, it is key that every piece of cardboard become a unified whole. There are no continuous pieces of cardboard; the whole thing is made out of strips, as opposed to cutting out big pieces make the whole profile. The strips are not nearly as strong, and are susceptible to tear-out. The threaded rods at all the critical junctions provide pressure to overcome this tendency.

 
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Step 1Cut Cardboard

Cut Cardboard
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I ran corrugated cardboard through a table saw set with a combination blade. I cut strips 5" wide, both with and against the grain of the corrugations. Only the legs need to be with the grain, so I made substantially less strips with that orientation.

Instead of drafting on paper or in the computer, I just measured out a grid on the floor of my basement and sketched it freehand, full-scale, in chalk. The seat comes to about 14" off the ground. The end of the runners on the floor come even with a vertical line dropped from the top of the back piece. They have to be at least this long to keep the chair from tipping over.

I laid strips over the drawing and cut them with a boxcutter to get all the angles. I marked each one, and they became my templates. For strength, you'll want to overlap each alternating layer, meaning each joint should resemble a log cabin in section as you stack the pieces on top of one another. This also means you'll have to make two different back pieces and two different floor pieces, one short and one long. To save time on all the cutting, I bundled strips together with masking tape, scribed the angles from my templates, and cut them all at once with a handsaw. The last photo shows how strong the cardboard is, supported my weight with just ten inches of corrugated cardboard.
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29 comments
Aug 9, 2009. 11:46 PMTurnip123 says:
http://craigslist.com I have about a 1/4 of my guest bedroom filled right now with cardboard flat squares I got for free. Lots of companies want to pawn off their used cardboard palette covers, as well as boxes (sometimes they'll even flatten them for you).
Sep 4, 2009. 4:16 PMquesoman says:
my dads work uses tons of cardboard so i can get pallets any time!!!!!!!!! yay
Aug 6, 2009. 11:43 PMpiper1234 says:
is quite simple putting it in a swimming pool .. it gets wet :P
Aug 6, 2009. 10:34 AMrick.leasure says:
Great instructable! Great thinking. So, what's next: the couch, the kitchen table? How about a whole house furnished with your cardboard construction?!!!
Aug 1, 2009. 6:59 AMmickey_shimitz says:
id like to see what happens when you put that in a swimming pool
Dec 15, 2008. 9:01 AMcoolpizzadude says:
where can I get this heavy card board.
Jul 24, 2009. 10:01 PMppatches24 says:
there is a box company called reli-a-pak that is were i get mine from they sell boxes with cardboard walls about 1 1/2 thick I forgot how much they cost but one box goes a long way sweet project by the way i have made a chair like yours and I love it
Jul 23, 2009. 7:14 AMhu008 says:
enter this instructable into the gorilla glue and tape cardboard contest, reckon it'l do quite well!
Jul 6, 2009. 4:05 PMvihrnes says:
great!
Jun 11, 2009. 8:53 AMmc_artist says:
For a cleaner look, you could assemble the chair completely and then trim the all-thread rods before putting the paper mache on. After the mache is on, it'll look like just one big solid piece.
Dec 22, 2008. 8:25 AMstrangebike says:
fantastic It always amazes me what can be made out of cardboard. and probably fully recyclable
Dec 22, 2008. 1:04 AMluke says:
i like it !
Dec 20, 2008. 11:16 AMuncle frogy says:
I love cardboard construction, nice chair. strength could be increased by changing the steal fender washers for larger plywood washers. before the paper-mache is applied you could apply some urethane directly to the laminations then the shaping with a sander would be easy but I like the uneven texture.
Dec 19, 2008. 6:20 AMrejectcarp says:
I love this! I remember seeing an exhibit of similar structures a few years back at the High Museum in Atlanta and thinking, "I really need to make one of those!"
Dec 18, 2008. 12:12 PMbeartoe says:
The use of cardboard in furniture like this did not strictly come from the Bauhaus, it came from Frank Gehry, the well-known architect. He was experimenting with "common materials" in the late '60s and early to mid '70s. See an example here.

The form (especially of Gehry's work) is a little deceptive -- corrugated cardboard should flex about an axis parallel to the corrugations. However, his work (and this Instructables example as well) have a "flexing" form that is perpendicular to that axis.

I wonder what would happen if you could get a hold of one-sided corrugated, stuff that was really floppy, and just built up a lot of well-glued laminations. Could you develop the structural strength required?

As a student, I wrote Gehry (via snail mail, ca. 1977) about the adhesive technology that he was using in his chairs. I was interested in doing some experiments at the time. Gehry actually wrote me back, telling me (in a polite way) to go take a flying leap. Man, I wish I had that letter today!
Dec 18, 2008. 2:09 PMbeartoe says:
Regarding much of Gehry's oeuvre, I don't disagree with you. If you look at Bilbao, you can see his learning curve. The titanium "scales" of the building are buckling....
Dec 15, 2008. 2:07 AMstringstretcher says:
I thoroughly enjoyed this! Perhaps plywood as the endpieces would let you spread the clamping forces (at least during the drying period) so as not to damage the cardboard (dimples). Nice work and good instructable!
For more inspiration see Cardboard Sculptures
Dec 13, 2008. 7:17 PMpotaderantor says:
cardboard...the most important building tool =D
Dec 12, 2008. 5:42 PMcaitlinsdad says:
This are the kind of projects that gave me the inspiration to work with laminated cardboard, on a smaller scale of course. Thanks. Since you were skinning over the entire thing, you could have carved out a more curvy or form-fitting bottom for the seat and back to make it more comfortable. At least it would be more like an airport waiting room seat than a park bench. I've found that cross laminating the sheets of cardboard - interior grain in alternating cross lapping directions - seems to be pretty strong and may resist the tearout if built massive enough. I might imbed small scraps of wood on the ends where the bolts go through. It would compress better without that dimple crushing the first layer of cardboard and is hidden by the paper mache. Maybe you could also embed a "C" shaped piece of pipe or metal to help with the bend. Then again, if this was pure cardboard, then you would not use structural tricks.
Dec 9, 2008. 8:34 AMSoE says:
Very nice!!! I'd like to see how it's holding up after use. This is something that I *should* make.
Dec 8, 2008. 7:20 AMjeff-o says:
Instead of paper-mache, could you just glue a flat sheet of cardboard to the seat and back? This is a fantastic idea, thatnks for posting. :)
Dec 5, 2008. 3:53 PMchiok says:
That's a great artisan design, I love the look of it. Good instructible too. Any photos of it in use at all? Perhaps you could fit some stops on the bottom of the seat to prevent it from bending too far down and ripping the material. How heavy would you say it is?
Dec 5, 2008. 5:23 PMchiok says:
I imagine 3 litres of glue would have something to do with the weight. Guess it shows how strong cardboard can really be, especially in tension. Good stuff!
Dec 5, 2008. 4:31 PMuguy says:
Excellent, I love it. Well done instructable.
Dec 5, 2008. 3:38 PMradracer says:
Nice RTX.
Dec 5, 2008. 1:37 PMKiteman says:
That's a nice project - I bet a lot of the unevenness could be eliminated with a belt-sander when the glue was all dry. Does it flex much when you sit on it? I imagine that the angle at the front edge of the seat will be the first to give way with use. Oh, for a future project, make that bottom edge a curve - this looks like it would make a brilliant rocking chair.

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Author:wholman
I am an artist, writer, and designer who graduated with a degree in architecture in 2007.