2023 · LEAD DESIGNER

Grandstand

The Beautiful Music Stand

Quick Facts

  • Successfully funded on Kickstarter ($170k+)

  • End-to-end development from brief through manufacture and delivery

  • Visited and selected manufacturers in China

  • Designed across welded sheet metal, overmolded and injection molded plastics, and machined wood parts

  • Defined brief, incorporated user feedback, and set aesthetic direction

  • Prepared patent drawings and applied for patent

Opportunity

Music stands haven't meaningfully changed in decades. Meanwhile, how musicians engage with their music has - sheet music, tablets, laptops, and books all live side by side in a modern practice space. And yet most stands are still the same utilitarian black metal tripod, designed to disappear rather than belong.

Grandstand started from a different premise: a stand worthy of sitting alongside a beautiful instrument. One that could adapt to how a musician actually plays - at a desk or at full standing height, with traditional sheet music or a tablet - without compromising on the aesthetic that makes it worth displaying in the first place.

Brief

  1. Display-Worthy Design

  2. Modular Media System

  3. Tabletop to Concert Height

Display-Worthy Design

The earliest explorations pushed for something distinctive - including a fold-flat architecture that worked well enough mechanically to patent and develop. But the structural compromises required to make it fold undermined the stability that a home stand needs. I made the decision to abandon that direction and refocus on the in-home use case.

The result was a tripod - not as a default, but as a deliberate choice. Wood legs rather than metal kept the aesthetic consistent throughout, and the three-point base delivered and visual communicated stability to customers.

The visual signature of the final design is the wood and metal relationship. Precision-machined inlays seat the metal swapping mechanism and plate lip flush into the Baltic birch, and the legs meet the central twist-lock joint with the same considered detailing. Nothing feels bolted on.

Modular Media System

The Quick Click swapping mechanism was the most ambitious part of the project. The interaction had to be effortless - push the plate on from the front, no secondary lock, no fiddling. The mechanism needed to capture and secure the plate automatically, with enough reliability to last years of daily use.

Two decisions shaped the design from the start. First, any part likely to wear over time had to be user-replaceable - cheap and simple enough that a failure wouldn't mean returning the whole product. Second, the mechanism had to be manufacturable at a price point that kept Grandstand accessible.

Getting there required material selection for every individual component, extensive 3D print iteration, and close collaboration with our sheet metal prototypers to keep the locking teeth consistent within tolerance. I stayed at the factory until it was right.

Tabletop to Concert Height

Grandstand has the largest height range of any music stand on the market - from 20.5” in tabletop seated mode to 63” at full concert height. For most instruments that range is convenient, but for singers and certain wind players like trumpeters, it's essential - looking down affects breath support and technique directly. The full standing height also accommodates playing on risers, where standard stands often fall short.

Achieving that range in a compact, stable form required a different approach. Most stands use a single adjustment mechanism - either friction telescoping for quick adjustment, or a twist lock for precise positioning. I combined both into a single concentric assembly: the friction pole sits within the twist-lock column, axially aligned so the two systems share the same footprint. Each can be adjusted independently, but together they double the effective height range without adding bulk or compromising stability.

Finding a manufacturer with experience in both mechanisms was a pivotal decision - it ultimately defined the primary manufacturing partner for everything except the wood components, and the final assembly partner. The concentric assembly wasn't just a design solution; it was the constraint that structured the entire supply chain around it.

Outcome

Grandstand was awarded Gold at the Scottish Design Awards in 2023 — the same year it launched on Kickstarter, raising $170k+ and going on to sell 1,600+ units globally.

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