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Designed by Philippe Starck
lou eat is not a chair, it is an animal-like sculpture that could eat you.’ Philippe Starck Lou eat and lou think, along with lou read, form the lou read family, a seating collection that features plastic sculptural shapes. lou eat is the easiest and most versatile item in the collection, a small armchair upholstered in leather. conceived as a dining room seat, it is also ideal as the sole protagonist of spaces.
Finishes:
Structure upholstered in leather
Dimensions:
W590 x D570 x H840 mm SH470 mm
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Even a classical image, as a railed chair, in the hands of Philippe Starck acquires a particular connotation. In Pip-e, the sequence of horizontal elements, which create the seat and back definetly, takes on a strong chiaroscuro and goes, unexpectedly, to accompany the bending of the knees.
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.
Characterized by the embracing shell and stiletto legs, Lago is enhanced by it’s intensifying bright colors that deliberately smooth the entire surface.
This armchair with an open backrest comes from TON’s traditional line of products. Typical are: its timeless shape and versatile usage.
A design chair that combines strength and beauty with practicality and reliability; Elephant, pushes the boundaries of innovation and sets new standards for design and usability. Despite its relatively short lifespan, Elephant has already received international recognition from audiences and critics alike, and was awarded with the “Best of Best Winners of the Interior Innovation […]
$600.00
Once upon a time, small, useful objects existed in homes. For smoking rather than sewing, for serving rather than displaying: they dotted the living spaces. Giuseppe Chigiotti, in designing ?Ping,? thinks back to those now-obscure times.
As a master in architecture, the Japanese, Ito has proposed few but extraordinary design works. Suki armchair, designed in 1987, is one of them: an object made mysterious by the use of a double steel mesh row intersected by many springs. This is an ideological Manifesto but, unpredictably comfortable.