The
Hold-N-One® Golf Bag Holder is the first fully self-generated and self-funded project by The Other Edge Design Studio based in Raleigh, NC. After being inspired by a devastating mishap with a bag full of clubs in Donald's (founder of The Other Edge) garage, we decided to take the plunge and do something about it. The result was the Hold-N-One® which was designed (product, graphics and packaging), patented and manufactured by The Other Edge.
The Other Edge Design Studio, a firm history
Donald Corey, a member of the Industrial
Designers Society of America and Assistant
Professor of Industrial Design at
Appalachian State University in Boone,
North Carolina, started his own high-end
custom furniture company in 1996 after
receiving his Masters degree from North
Carolina State University in Raleigh, N.C. His
award-winning custom designs and
furniture series were sold in galleries
throughout the Southeast.
After five years of primarily working in steel
and wood, Corey decided to change the
direction of his work to create more massproduced
consumer items. He partnered
with interior designer Vanese Clough, and
together they launched The Other Edge,
Inc. in 2002.
Working for such clients as Commonwealth
Aluminum, Global Pet Products and
MeldUSA, The Other Edge soon gained a
reputation for creating innovative design
solutions for their customers' needs.
When time allowed, Corey and Clough
worked on their own designs. The first utility
patent Corey received was for Hold-NOne®, a golf bag holder. This signified a
decided shift in the company's focus.
"It is rare that a design firm does all of the
activities for a client," Corey noted. "A firm
may design an object and pass it off to
engineering, or marketing, but having the
whole experience, including financial and
budget implications, will make us much
better designers for our clients."
In addition to Hold-N-One®, The Other Edge
is ready to roll out a furniture line, which
debuted at ICFF in New York in 2005."We're working with the manufacturer to
mass produce a bent bamboo piece of
furniture," he said, pointing out that it is
nothing like the inexpensive bamboo
furniture that you might currently be familiar
with. "It's something no one has really ever
done in mass production before, so it's
requiring some trial and error testing. But it's
looking great."
Bamboo is the ultimate sustainable material,
Corey pointed out, because it has a sevenyear
harvest cycle during which the roots of
the plant are not destroyed. So it
immediately grows back to be reharvested.
Corey said The Other Edge is proud to be
on the forefront of using this environmentally
sensitive material.
For more information, visit www.theotheredge.com.
Questions? email us at info@theotheredge.com
or drop us a line at (919) 601-8326.