- Thomas Lamb
Thomas Lamb (1896 – 1988) was an American industrial designer. He is best known for his innovative handle designs closely modeled on the mechanics of the human hand. [ Delphia, Rachel E., Design to enable the body : Thomas Lamb's wedge-lock handle, 1941-1962 (2005) ]
Biography
Lamb was born in New York City on September 18, 1896. From the age of 14, he apprenticed himself to a plastic surgeon, doing medical drawings in exchange for anatomy lessons, and worked in a textile design shop. In the evenings he studied figure drawing and painting at the
Art Students League of New York . Lamb also studied merchandising atColumbia University . This combination of anatomy, art, and business was integral to Thomas Lamb's career as a designer. [ [http://invention.smithsonian.org/resources/MIND_Repository_Details.aspx?rep_id=1388 The Lemelson Center for the Study of Invention & Innovation ] ]Textile Design
At seventeen, Thomas Lamb opened his own textile design firm, specializing in advertising, fashion, and magazine illustration. His bedspreads, napkins, and draperies became very popular in the 1920s and were featured in many of the New York Department stores including Lord & Taylor, Macy's and Saks Fifth Avenue.
Children's Books and Commercial Tie-ins
In 1924 he began illustrating children's books, including "Runaway Rhymes", "The Tale of Bing-O", and "Kiddyland". Shortly after his success with Runaway Rhymes, Lamb signed a contract with
Good Housekeeping magazine to illustrate a series of Kiddyland cartoons. Lamb developed an extensive line oftie-in s, including Kiddyland textiles, soaps, and talcum powder. There was even a Kiddiegram designed forWestern Union and endorsed byShirley Temple .The Effect of the War
Like many other U.S. designers, Lamb re-examined his design philosophy during the
Second World War . Among his first responses to the economic and social realities of the period were a line of Victory Napkins and the "Adolph the Pig"piggy bank , which was used to encourage the purchase ofwar bonds .Like
Charles and Ray Eames , Lamb noted the inadequacy of thecrutches used by wounded and disabledveterans . Initially focusing on the armrest, Lamb quickly noted that the hand bore the main burden, and began to experiment with ways to redistribute the pressure and make the crutches easier to handle. After extensive study anatomical and medical textbooks he developed his Lamb Lim Rest crutch.Becoming the "Handle Man"
Lamb applied the patents developed in designing the Lim Rest to cookware, cutlery, surgical tools, luggage, sports equipment, and industrial equipment. His designs culminated in his unique "Wedge-Lock" and "Universal" handles, and were a major influence on the
Universal Design movement.By the late 1940s Thomas Lamb was known as the "Handle Man". In 1948 his work was featured at theMuseum of Modern Art during the period when the design establishment were focused onBauhaus -inspired functionality. This publicity led to contracts to produce a line of cutlery forCutco and cookware for Wear-Ever.Thomas Lamb died on February 2, 1988 at ninety-one years of age.
Resources
* Thomas Lamb's [http://www.hagley.org/A2181toc.htm papers] at
Hagley Museum and Library
* [http://www.hagley.org/univdesignexhibit/index.php?page=Home Digital exhibit on Universal Design] Features items from the Lamb Papers at the Hagley Museum and LibraryReferences
External links
* [http://www.historictheatres.org/ Theatre Historical Society of America]
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