Vindel
ChairAfter the Vindel — the river that was never dammed.
- Wood
- Oiled oak seat, turned birch legs
- Size
- 46 × 52 × 78 cm · seat height 45
- Price
- 9 800 kr
- Lead
- Made when ordered — six weeks
Umeå, Sweden — est. 1954
We are a joinery workshop on the Ume river. We build furniture when you order it, from trees we can name, and we would rather make one chair well than a hundred quickly. Every piece is drawn here exactly as it is built — part by part.
01The pieces
Rivers that were never dammed, parks where the pines are older than the country's borders. Hover over a drawing — or press exploded view — to see how a piece comes apart, because everything we make is meant to come apart, and be repaired, and go back together.
After the Vindel — the river that was never dammed.
After the park with no roads and no marked trails.
After the valley where the sky stays clear.
After the quiet river valley east of the mountains.
After the river that carries the timber down to the sea.
After the river where the whitefish roe comes from.
After the park where the old pines carry fire scars from 1655.
After the border river — half Swedish, half Finnish, wholly itself.
02Materials
We buy whole logs from thinning cuts inside Västerbotten and Norrbotten counties, saw them ourselves, and dry them for two winters in the loft. Offcuts heat the workshop. Sawdust beds the neighbour's horses. Nothing is stained, so nothing can pretend.
Heavy, tannic, patient. We quarter-saw it so the boards stay flat for the next fifty years, not the next five.
Pale and tight-grained, cut within forty kilometres of the workshop. It turns beautifully and takes soap like linen.
Springy and dead straight — the wood of axe handles and sled runners. It forgives daily life better than anything we know.
Slow-grown Norrland pine — grown slowly enough that you can count the winters. It dents, softens, and yellows honestly.
03The workshop
Gunnar Ehrling was a boat joiner who ran out of boats. In 1954 he swept the shavings out of a shed by the Ume river, built himself a bench, and started making chairs with the same joints he had used for hulls — joints that expect water, movement, and fifty years of use.
Three generations later we are six people in the same shed, with better windows. The catalogue has been eight pieces since 1989, and it will stay eight. When a new design earns its place, an old one must retire — it has happened twice.
We don't keep stock. Your piece is started when you order it, which is why it takes six weeks, and why it is exactly the wood, the oil, and the size we agreed. Slowness here is not a style. It is just how long the work takes.
Gunnar Ehrling opens the workshop in a former boat shed. One bench, two apprentices, a stove.
The first Vindel chair. Gunnar makes fourteen. Twelve are still in use; we know where.
The big lathe arrives from a closed shipyard in Härnösand. Every leg since has been turned on it.
Margit Ehrling takes over from her father and retires the catalogue to eight pieces. “Fewer, better, forever.”
The kiln is converted to burn workshop offcuts. The oil radiators are given away, gladly.
Third generation: Jonas and Elin. Still six people. Still eight pieces. Still six weeks.
04Care
Norrland · Umeå · read once a year
Wipe with a cloth wrung out in warm water. Once a year, a little cold-pressed linseed oil on a rag, worked in with the grain. Lay the rag flat outdoors afterwards — oiled rags folded up can self-ignite, and we would rather you didn't find that out.
Scrub along the grain with natural soap flakes in lukewarm water. The wood will lighten and dry matte, like a scrubbed kitchen table — which is the point.
Air, don't wash. Brush crumbs out with a stiff brush. Spots: cold water, patience, no rubbing.
Dents are memory, not damage. When in doubt, write to us — repairs are free for the first owner, forever.
05Enquire
Write to us instead. Tell us which piece, which wood, and where it is going — a landing, a kitchen, a reading corner. We answer within two days, usually sooner, and always a person. Your piece is started the week we agree, and finished six weeks later, give or take a hard winter.
Write to the workshophej@norrland.se · Strandvägen 3, Umeå · Thursdays the workshop is open to visitors, 14–18