Albert Henry "Woody" Woodfull (17 September 1912 – 24 June 2011) was an Englishproduct designer. Laying down many of the ground rules of industrial design in plastics while heading British Industrial Plastics' Product Design Unit,[1] his work had international influence.[2]
Woodfull visited the United States in 1948 to investigate the newly developed melamine formaldehyde material, whose greater water resistance was to lead it briefly to threaten ceramics as the dominant material in tableware.[8]
In 1951 Woodfull was appointed to head BIP's newly formed Product Design Unit, where he was to remain until his retirement in 1970. As well as developing designs for BIP itself, the unit's Design Advisory Service aimed to provide design consultancy to companies developing products in plastics, with the aim of improving the public's perception of the quality of plastic products and increasing demand for BIP's materials.[4] As a result, Woodfull and the team he built up were responsible to some degree for most of the designs for tableware in melamine that developed in the 1950s and 1960s, including the Gaydon and Melaware ranges that are now recognised as being among the pinnacles of 1960s plastics design.[8]
References
^Tilson, Barbara (1989). "The Plastics Industry in Birmingham and Design in Bakelite, Beetle and Melamine". In Tilson, Barbara (ed.). Made in Birmingham: design & industry 1889-1989. Studley: Brewin Books. pp. 222–234. ISBN0-947731-56-3.
^"BIP key people". BIP (Oldbury) Limited. Archived from the original on 6 December 2008. Retrieved 12 December 2008.
^"Albert Henry Woodfull". Plastiquarian (34). Plastics Historical Society: 10. Summer 2005. Archived from the original on 15 October 2006. Retrieved 12 December 2008.
^ abAkhurst, Steve. "AH 'Woody' Woodfull". plasticsnetwork.org. Arts Institute at Bournemouth. Retrieved 12 December 2008. [dead link]