Designed by Ludovica & Roberto Palomba
Virginia is a collection designed by Ludovica + Roberto Palomba for Arrmet with a decisive and tangible sign, rich in modernity, sensuality and awareness. The solidity and softness of upholsteries draw near the simplicity and lightness of bases. Virginia plays the eternal duality of reality, in the coexistance of solid and concrete but at the same time light and soft just like the “sulfur-yellow butterflies” described by Virginia Woolf .
Finishes:
Legs in steel in chrome or lacquered white, grey brown, black, copper or brass, upholstery in a selection of fabrics, vinyl or leather
Dimensions:
W520 x D520 x H740 mm SH450 mm
Note:
Minimum order of 4 pcs
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The sectional sofa is the theme characterizing typological design since the 90s of last century. Ludovica and Roberto Palomba confront it, emphasizing the sense of suspension from the ground, thanks to a thin metal structure and developing, in the version with terminals, a great peninsula from the gracefully asymmetric shape.
Virginia is a collection designed by Ludovica + Roberto Palomba for Arrmet with a decisive and tangible sign, rich in modernity, sensuality and awareness. The solidity and softness of upholsteries draw near the simplicity and lightness of bases. Virginia plays the eternal duality of reality, in the coexistance of solid and concrete but at the […]
Design has recently begun to reread the last 80s, a period full of hedonistic sings. Ludovica and Roberto Palomba embrace this input in a collection for driade that combines some of this aesthetic hallmarks as straight cast-aluminium structure elegantly painted and damier decoration.
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Naoto fukasawa develops a big pouf precisely by a small stone. A naturalistic form first tamed then alienated with the use of innatural colors.
Camouflage is an outdoor collection that includes a high and low armchair, a table and small table, all made of aluminium. in these sculptured elements the geometrical design of the structure frames the elaborated fretworked decoration.
Neoz sofas, bed and day-bed emphasize the formal charateristics of the collection they belong to, by building a sort of living nest marked by the hem-stitched tissue whiteness, like past laundry, and the cushions’ softness. Large wheels, though, suggest it as an only termporary luxe.
Antonia Astori calls ‘memory furniture’ those pieces which tell something about people attention to indoor living. An attention expressed both by the recovery of disappeared archetypes, eg. canopy bed, and in precious materials manufacturing, eg. pleached roped steel headboard.