Sometimes you need more than one cutting surface, or one board is just too big to manage while another is too small to serve its purpose. Modeled after the classic peace symbol shape cut like pie-piece sections, this combination of cutting boards cleverly addresses such issues.

This design by David Weatherhead lets keep all of the parts together to use as a single board (and for flat-and-easy storage), but break them up as needed too in order to cut or serve food.

Clearly a fan of bold modern colors, perfect circles and other geometric shapes, his other designs follow similar principles of clear simplicity – these include decorative objects, office supplies, calendars, shelves and other useful wall-mounted accessories.

Of particular interest are Weatherhead’s simple yet supremely stylish time pieces, which come in all shapes, colors and varieties, from cuckoo clocks and wall clocks to unusual finds like “toymaker’s clocks,” which are small and rectangular. In fact, if you’re ever searching for just the right clock for a modern space, you’d do well to search among his creations for inspiration.

About the designer:

“David Weatherhead provides Creative Direction & Product Design for brands including MADE.com. Graduating from the Royal College of Art’s Design Products course in 2007, David designs clocks, stationery and home accessories; providing Creative Direction, Strategic Design, Product Design, Package Design, and Design for Manufacture.”

“David’s broader experience spans Homewares, Product, Packaging, Signage & Wayfinding for brands including, Anthropologie, Arco, BlackBerry, ByShop, Conran, Ettinger, Heal’s, Liberty, Museo Nacional Del Prado, Teroforma, The Design Museum, Prada, On&On, Sainsbury’s, Seletti, Wagamama and The Dorchester Collection. He has featured in Elle Decoration, The FT, The Guardian, LSN:Global, and Wallpaper*magazine.”

“David is Course Director at Kingston School of Art, MA Product & Furniture Design, Visiting Lecturer at The Royal College of Art, Krabbesholm Højskole (Denmark), and Cambridge School of Visual & Performing Arts (CSVPA).”