With his
exciting new Cubic range, designer Anders
Nørgaard has stepped into a new world of design.
“A wood-burning stove should be a beautiful and
functional feature in a room,” he says. The man
behind Jydepejsen’s hot new winter collection
for the coming season, furniture designer Anders
Nørgaard, worked intensively on the striking
Cubic series for a year and a half before he was
happy. But before even so much as drawing a
single line in his sketch pad, he spent three
intense months studying the technology behind
the principles of the modern stove.
THE MANTELPIECE REVISITED
“I wanted it to be more than just a wood-burning
stove,” says Anders Nørgaard, who believes that
a wood-burning stove should be both a beautiful
and functional feature in a room. The seven
models in the range each have their own very
different look to suit a multitude of different
interiors; from the discreet stove to the tall
or the oblong stove, both of which can be
freestanding or wall-mounted. “A wood-burning
stove can certainly be a large element, in the
way that the old-fashioned stoves were. In one
of the oblong models, part of the stove is
simply decoration. The surface does not become
hot. |