Visit us in store for a wider selection of items not found online.
Designed by Philippe Starck
Characterized by the embracing shell and stiletto legs, Lago is enhanced by it’s intensifying bright colors that deliberately smooth the entire surface.
Finishes:
Legs in aluminium with seat in polyurethane lacquered white, black, red, ultramarine blue, orange, green, blue, burgundy, greyish beige, dark beige, saffron or dark blue
Dimensions:
W600 x D570 x H805 mm SH450 mm
0
A chair deliberately abstract in its composition and, for this reason, comfortable in unpredictable ways. Seemingly carved into a block, Toy speaks a language of sharp and broad plans that make it different from other molded polypropylene chairs. In this connotation Toy is unique even within the design corpus of Philippe Starck.
Created to complement the homonymous chair, Toy table, lives, indeed, an independent life thanks to the elegance of its stem, strongly tapered. A detail which, combined with the soft lines of connection with the top and the base, gives the piece an intense classical connotation.
An armchair/character, with an organic outline, perhaps anthropomorphous, conceived with leather directly fixed on a fiberglass skeleton. A tribute, to the great Carlo Mollino and to the Danish design of the 50s, led by Starck with impeccable mastery. The frame is the result of a complex and skilful construction: a first outer shell made of […]
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.
Kristalia is always proud to present the cutting edge of Italian design to the public and this rocking chair is very much part of that tradition. It is hard not to see this product as anything other than a potential design classic. Its flowing lines make this an ergonomically sculpted functional rocking chair that make […]
$3,800.00
When Jaime Hayon started working on Catch, he drew a man with open arms, like a chair that wants to catch you – and the chair works like that. &Tradition’s collaboration with Jaime Hayon dates to when the company was founded in 2010, and Catch was the first product to come out of the exchange […]
This project is born from the wish to recover rattan as a fine material and reclaim Spain?s rich craftsmanship tradition. Oscar Tusquets tries to give a new look to an ancient technique replacing the brackets and bonds traditionally used as connecting elements by the twinning of one cane to the next.