Designed by Space Copenhagen
Space Copenhagen’s Fly series signals a sculptural approach to design without sacrificing comfort. Referencing a classic Nordic aesthetic, details and techniques, seen in the slatted wood backrest, organic shapes and solid craftmanship. Fly is a series that allows the users to sit, lie, rest, and relax. Unlike many of the sofas and easy chairs in Scandinavian design history, Fly does not impose any particular posture onto the sitter. The seat itself is optimized for comfort, with loose cushions for the back that can be arranged according to the user?s own needs.
Variation
$500
Space Copenhagen?s ambition was to design a lamp with a simple industrial feel, but which was still elegant and poetic. The Copenhagen Pendant is an exercise in contrasts. Combining the classic and the modern, the maritime and the industrial.
$540
Space Copenhagen?s ambition was to design a lamp with a simple industrial feel, but which was still elegant and poetic.
$260
This elegant portable lamp, inspired by the golden glow of the Tuscan city of Lucca, mimics the warmth of the city?s nocturnal light. Intended as a multipurpose piece, the battery-powered Lucca easily transitions from indoors to outside.
$990
$1,280
Inspired by the Japanese pine tree in the ground, the BrichetZiegler studio carved this lighting object with mastery and precision. Niwaki is an artificial plant. Carved for the wind, it seems to float and glide through the air. Its finish reflects a balance between work and humility, this lamp is orga(mecha)nic.
0
Tizio features articulated design that is always perfectly balanced thanks to the counterweights formed by a revolutionary structure that supports the head and at the same time powers the light source, originally a low-voltage halogen bulb, today also a LED. Thanks to the intelligence and elegance with which Tizio combines these two elements, the lamp […]
$1,200
Minimalist and modern, the new Rely table have been designed for outdoor use. Featuring a top in compact laminate, it is supported by a powder coated metal base with four legs skewing out for stability.
In 1952, on the shores of the French Riviera, Le Corbusier built ‘Cabanon’: the absolute archetype of essential living. The project, executed according to the rules of the Modulor, is found just a stone?s throw away from the sea and served as a refuge for the architect in his final years. Lampe Cabanon, named after […]