Jeff Weber is a quiet man, as low-key, modest, and unassuming as you might expect from a guy born in Blue Earth, Minnesota. The soil there is so rich that people say it's blue, and it also proved to be fertile ground for the curious mind of young Jeff.
"As a kid, I was very interested in the way things worked mechanically," he recalls. "I was always tinkering--building things or tearing things apart."
He also spent a good deal of time with his grandfather, an eccentric ad agency art director whose rebellious ways, as well as his fine tastes, made a lasting impression. It was his grandfather who first told him about the field of industrial design.
Once Weber learned more, "I never really thought about doing anything else," he says. "Creatively, it was a good niche for me."
Indeed, that innate curiosity he had as a boy has turned into a full-blown passion for finding better ways of doing things as a designer. His interests range from "human-powered vehicles"--bicycles, that is--to water-purifying systems to systems furniture. "I'm continually fascinated by design and how it affects people," says Weber. "It's with me all the time."
He particularly relishes the conceptual development stage--understanding the problem and devising a solution. "When the light bulb goes on--that's my favorite part," he says. "I become very anxious to produce something physical, whether it's a quick mock-up or just a sketch to analyze."
Weber credits his love of furniture design to working with Bill Stumpf, who designed for Herman Miller for 30 years. "Bill was so knowledgeable and enthusiastic, I always learned so much from him."
It was his position with Stumpf's Minneapolis firm, now Studio Weber + Associates, that led Weber to his association with Herman Miller. As the principal designer of the Caper seating family, Weber's goal was to make the chairs not only functional and comfortable, but affordable. "Too often, good design is expensive," he says. "I wanted to break that cliche."
The knowledge Weber has gained in the contract furniture industry has fueled his current quest for more thoughtful designs in home furnishings. "I'd really like to take what we've learned about things such as seating comfort and apply that same technology to residential furniture," he says. "We live much differently than we did 20 years ago, and we need to address those changes."
Sounds like fertile ground for the curious guy from Blue Earth. |

Herman Miller Designs Avive Table Collection Caper Chairs The Intersect Portfolio
Office/Studio Studio Weber + Associates, Minneapolis, Minnesota
Awards/Recognition Gold Award, Best of NeoCon, 1999 (for Caper) Best of IIDEX/NeoCon Canada, 1999 (for Caper)
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