Life beyond the Tractor Stool. We check in with Craig Bassam and Scott Fellows.
From their Tractor Stool and Lifestyle Gallery to their Creative Direction for Herman Miller, and restoration of a Philip Johnson house, BassamFellows brings a focus on craftsmanship, detail and quality to design for contemporary living
Since 2003, when BassamFellows debuted its beautifully crafted and versatile Tractor Stool, Craig Bassam and Scott Fellows have applied their refined and artisanal aesthetic to furniture, architecture, interior design, creative direction and lifestyle objects. With a focus on exceptional craftsmanship, detail and quality, BassamFellows’ work is underpinned by a search for timelessness, perfection and functionality.
Craig, an Australian, and Scott, American, spent their early careers in Europe where they were drawn to “quality and craftsmanship and attention to detail.” Now based in New Canaan, Connecticut – in a house designed by architect Philip Johnson directly across the street from his famous Glass House – the designers are by the “optimism, honesty and sense of possibility” they find in their native lands. “These sets of values drive everything we do in life and every product we make,” Scott explains.
In 2014, BassamFellows opened its first Lifestyle Gallery in Milan showcasing furniture and lifestyle products together in one space. Based on the success of the Milan venture, last year BassamFellows launched an extended collection of lifestyle objects in a temporary exhibition at New York’s Atelier Courbet gallery. The elegant environment, titled ‘Object Lesson,’ featured BassamFellows-designed shoes, sunglasses, bags and leather accessories alongside seating and tables in an intimate lounge-like space. “This was the culmination of years worth of work finding the right suppliers and developing these products using the same philosophy of our furniture collection,” says Scott. That philosophy is what Scott and Craig call Craftsman Modern: “It merges the core principles of Modernism with the warmth and comfort of natural materials and exceptional craftsmanship.”
Whether they’re designing lifestyle products, buildings or furniture, Craig and Scott privilege long-term design over the faddishness of fashion. “We don’t want 10 pairs of sneakers. We want just one that we really love and that just works.” The same can also be said for their clients, who, like themselves, they describe as collectors. “We all care deeply about the things we buy and the objects we choose to live with. We like fewer things, but the right things.”
Problem solving drives Craig and Scott’s creative process, and the desire to resolve needs with designs that don’t exist on the market. The BassamFellows Asymmetric Sofa Series includes three sofa units, a corner unit, chaise and ottoman and evolved from Craig’s need for a stylish and scalable sofa for his personal study. “Solving for the constraints of the room resulted in a unique planning module with armed, armless and backless elements that can be combined to vary the horizon line of the sofa, and wooden ‘blade’ legs that allow the sofa to float,” Craig explains.
Craig and Scott not only design furniture for their own brand, but have also worked with a number of large companies – “to refresh a brand or give it renewed focus,” Scott says – and in 2010 took up the role of Creative Direction for Herman Miller’s Consumer and Specialty Division. Their role has since shifted to focus solely on design projects and in May they launched the Wood Base Sofa Series and a textile collection for Herman Miller at NeoCon in Chicago.
Craig and Scott are currently working on two high-profile hospitality projects as well as a BassamFellows panelized house designed to improve efficiency and quality and reduce the cost of building. Certainly, Craig and Scott’s values – craftsmanship, quality and detail; and optimism, honesty and a sense of possibility – continue to be the cornerstone of BassamFellows work as they look to the spirit of mid-century American design; a spirit they liken to that of Australian design today. “The incredible optimism that was so prevalent in the Eames/George Nelson era in the mid-century in the US – that ‘new worldness’ – still feels alive and well in Australia. It has evolved over time, but the roots are still there.”
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!
Schneider Electric’s new range are making bulky outlets a thing of the past with the new UNICA X collection.
To honour Chef James Won’s appointment as Gaggenau’s first Malaysian Culinary Partner, we asked the gastronomic luminaire about parallels between Gaggenau’s ethos and his own practice, his multidimensional vision of Modern Malaysian – and how his early experiences of KFC’s accessible, bold flavours influenced his concept of fine dining.
Gaggenau’s understated appliance fuses a carefully calibrated aesthetic of deliberate subtraction with an intuitive dynamism of culinary fluidity, unveiling a delightfully unrestricted spectrum of high-performing creativity.
In this candid interview, the culinary mastermind behind Singapore’s Nouri and Appetite talks about food as an act of human connection that transcends borders and accolades, the crucial role of technology in preserving its unifying power, and finding a kindred spirit in Gaggenau’s reverence for tradition and relentless pursuit of innovation.
Pairing his honed expertise with a unique design language, Zachary Frankel is shaping his own world his way.
The workplace strategist and environmental psychologist was in Sydney earlier this year to give a talk at Haworth on the fallacies of the ‘average’ in workplace design.
The internet never sleeps! Here's the stuff you might have missed
In an era where the demands of modern work often clash with the need for restoration, The Commons Health Club in Melbourne sets a new precedent.
Mandi Keighran explores the streets of London’s Clerkenwell district to uncover the standout installations, product launches and moments from Clerkenwell Design Week 2025.