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Thursday, March 20, 2025

Used, In Wonderful Situation


“If it was ok to placed on the hull of a ship, it was ok to place a steak on it,” mentioned Richard Cohen, Dansk’s former head of gross sales, in reference to the 1000’s of teakwood carving boards he offered all through the 1970’s. “When you used it—and didn’t abuse it—it lasts eternally.” The 5, 50-year-old, Jens Quistgaard-designed carving boards Richard nonetheless incessantly makes use of are, seemingly, on monitor for eternally.

Picture by James Ransom

So are most of the different unique Dansk teak merchandise. On eBay, the search question “Dansk teak” yields greater than 3,500 outcomes, together with ice buckets, serving trays, salad bowls, and the extremely collectible peppermills. Regardless of lots of this stuff exceeding a half-century in age, it’s widespread, if not anticipated, for these listings (very similar to Richard’s carving boards) to indicate that its teak stays in “glorious situation”—a declare every itemizing’s accompanying photographs practically at all times help.

Picture by James Ransom

Picture by James Ransom

This sturdiness isn’t some completely happy accident. As Richard talked about, teak—due to its tight grain and excessive oil content material—is of course water repellant, lengthy making it a shipbuilder’s most well-liked wooden. Whereas salad bowls gained’t endure the aquatic pounding of excessive seas journey, kitchens are moist. Sinks exist. That means, for Dansk, the extra a picket kitchen merchandise might stand up to moisture, the higher. “We approached teak as a practical product,” Richard mentioned.

“And it had character and it will age properly,” added Barry Ginsburg, the previous President of Dansk. The character—a deep, omnipresent grain coursing by way of each inch of its easy and impossibly sturdy floor—is unrelenting. Growing old properly, nevertheless, requires some, albeit comparatively minimal, effort. “Teak must be oiled periodically,” Barry mentioned. “You’ll be able to’t put it out in zero diploma humidity within the desert and count on that it’s not going to dry up.”

Classic Dansk commercial

For Richard, whose teak assortment features a small and huge ice bucket, eight serving trays, 4 peppermills, and the aforementioned 5 carving boards, upkeep is bifurcated. “I oil my teak with mineral oil not less than twice a yr,” Richard advised me. “For items that we use incessantly, I’d oil them six instances a yr—however that’s my very own fetish.”

Though teak requires some upkeep, per Richard, Dansk’s preliminary success with the wooden got here in response to their prospects’ waning curiosity in a fussier materials. “Within the seventies, the folks I knew getting married and beginning to become profitable wished to maneuver away from sterling silver plates and equipment—so all of them purchased Dansk.”

Fifty years later, teak kitchenware—due partly to a resurgent curiosity in mid-century design—is, once more, in vogue. Marrying sturdiness with magnificence, shoppers, like peppermill collectors Alex Severin and Maren Lankford (and Christopher Walken’s character in Severance), entrust these highly-functioning items of kitchen tools to double as inside design items. “They’re little picket sculptures,” Maren mentioned throughout our current interview.

Alex Severin and Maren Lankford’s assortment of Dansk peppermills

Picture by Armando Rafael

Shoppers new to teak will discover that the wooden Dansk used all through the 60’s and 70’s is completely different from what’s obtainable right this moment. For a lot of the twentieth century, the world’s teak predominantly got here from 4 nations—Burma, Laos, Thailand, and India. Nevertheless, as a result of rampant deforestation and severe human rights considerations, old-growth teak (which has the tightest grain and darkest colour) harvested from these nations has successfully vanished from the market. In flip, right this moment’s teak, which generally comes from plantations unfold all through the globe, is commonly harvested youthful, subsequently sporting a lighter colour and extra dispersed grain.

Whereas, for good motive, its colour has shifted, teak’s sturdiness persists. The wooden stays waterproof, shapeable, and—to the contact—undeniably sturdy. Or, simply as Richard described Dansk’s teak from fifty years in the past, “It’s practical and it really works.”


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