Indesign catches up with a Sydney-based industrial designer making his mark in Australia and overseas.
January 28th, 2011
Following stints in Paris and Milan working with design greats George Sowden, Jerzy Seymour and Marc Newson, David Caon now has his own studio in Sydney’s Surry Hills.
Although very much independent, Caon’s cornerstone projects have arisen out of interesting collaborations with other designers and companies.
Last year’s collaboration with commercial interior designers Juicy Design led to the creation of what Caon calls a ‘soundscape sofa.’

Built for Japanese electronics brand Audio Technica, Caon and Juicy Design’s Tom Williams used layer upon layer of Echo Panel – 60% recycled PET in sheet form – to create a cross between a sofa and a listening station for testing sound equipment in-store.
To create the form, Caon mapped out a 3-dimensional layered shape – “imagine a topographical map that you can slice horizontally,” he explains – and was then faced with the task of recreating each shape with the chosen material, layer by layer.

“I pared it back to as little as possible – and that’s when it became really complicated,” says Caon of the painstaking process involved.

“When you do something like this, you don’t know what the problems are until you come up against them.”
Caon also works with Qantas on a range for the airline’s business class lounges, combining his passion for furniture design with the strong relationship he has developed with the global airline.

“Design is very much a part of who they are as a business,” says Caon. “It makes them easy to work with. It’s hard to find clients like that.”

This year is sure to see some more exciting projects for Caon, as he develops furniture pieces both for the big brands and for himself, experimenting with new materials and finding new outlets and collaborators.
INDESIGN is on instagram
Follow @indesignlive
A searchable and comprehensive guide for specifying leading products and their suppliers
Keep up to date with the latest and greatest from our industry BFF's!
True luxury strikes a balance between glamorous aesthetics and tactile pleasure, creating spaces rich in sensory delights to enhance the experience of daily life.
Now cooking and entertaining from his minimalist home kitchen designed around Gaggenau’s refined performance, Chef Wu brings professional craft into a calm and well-composed setting.
In a tightly held heritage pocket of Woollahra, a reworked Neo-Georgian house reveals the power of restraint. Designed by Tobias Partners, this compact home demonstrates how a reduced material palette, thoughtful appliance selection and enduring craftsmanship can create a space designed for generations to come.
In an industry where design intent is often diluted by value management and procurement pressures, Klaro Industrial Design positions manufacturing as a creative ally – allowing commercial interior designers to deliver unique pieces aligned to the project’s original vision.
From the Minosa Design team, a home for a family of five promises those precious holiday memories will never be forgotten.
There’s little point in owning something that works perfectly, if it doesn’t look good too. Capiche?
The internet never sleeps! Here's the stuff you might have missed
Architect Soo K. Chan restores the shophouse typology, informed by the memory of growing up in one within the UNESCO World Heritage Site of George Town in Penang.
At The Lands by Capella, Hassell and Purcell take a restrained approach to adaptive reuse — working with the existing building to reintroduce it as a public, mixed-use destination.