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This Whiz-Kid Forged Her Own Toronto Lighting Brand

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Concord Custom Lighting introduces a dazzling collection of luminaires to the city

Kate MacNeill, the dynamo talent behind Concord Custom Lighting, a new Toronto design and manufacturing studio, got her start cutting, bending, threading and welding custom luminaires at Commute Home.

“At that stage,” she says, “I had no experience with electrical or metal working at all.” That changed when Yoki Milke, who now runs his own lighting studio, Milke Bau, began mentoring her in Commute’s busy west end workshop.

She’s a quick study: within five years, the PEI native and graduate of Humber’s Cabinet Making program went from tinkering with wire sockets to coordinating complex lighting orders with local shops and fabricators. “I would be taking a drawing and figuring out the sum of its parts – essentially building myself an Ikea kit. When all was said and done, there might have been four or five people producing elements for a single piece.”

Roscoe pendant by Concord Custom Lighting

Concord, launched in mid 2018, is her first solo venture, although, she still recruits the expertise of this city’s top manufacturers, from glass blowers to laser cutters.

But that isn’t to say that she’s done making things herself. Her debut collection includes the Art Deco-inspired Roscoe pendant ($1,650, shown above), a harmonic composition of powder-coated steel tubing with a frosted globe, diffused by an assertive mirror-plated steel disc. “A light can be so many things,” she muses. But no matter the parts or process, Concord is all her own. thisisconcord.com

Originally published in our Small Spaces 2019 issue as Headlight.

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The industrial designer and textile artist shares the inspirations that keep her loom whirring

In a seaside cottage in Shediac, New Brunswick, the soft hiss and swish of high-tide molds my mood like putty. Breathing in the deep calm—and the smell of last night’s seafood—my mind is miles away from my home in cosmopolitan Toronto. Here, craft feels as grounded as the clams they dig for each morning, and as I prepare for my call with textile artist Laura Carwardine, I can’t help but wonder *Carrie Bradshaw voice* what is the future of textile art in Toronto?

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