Visit us in store for a wider selection of items not found online.
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
0
Costes chair debuted in 1984, marking the beginning of the partnership between Philippe Starck and Driade. A designer, formerly unknown in Italy, creates one of the world’s most iconic object. Designed for the once homonymous, now disappeared Parisian cafe, owes its timeless success to the absoluteness of forms: a dark wooden embracing structure with three […]
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 […]
Characterized by the embracing shell and stiletto legs, Lago is enhanced by it’s intensifying bright colors that deliberately smooth the entire surface.
As a reinterpretation of Costes chair, King Costes alters its size and increase its firmness while confirming the absolute recognition of this image and its durability against trends alternation.
$630.00
A symbol in the history of design, spaghetti is the first Alias chair to appear in the MoMA collection of New York. The Spaghetti chair is an excellent example of material and formal simplicity that multiplies, in its many variants, the opportunities for use.
The Tokyo-Pop collection marks, in 2002, the debut on the international scene by Tokujin Yoshioka, now considered one of the masters of contemporary design. The sofa, the armchair and especially the chaise longue and the stool, forget the banality of rotational molding to become sculptures. Unforgettable and unusual shapes.
The chair, inspired by a model from 1930 by Josef Hoffmann, blends his interest in Art Nouveau and simple shapes with manufacturing processes applied in Bystrice pod Hostynem since 1861. The armchair is therefore more geometrical, but bears the clear features of the manual bending technique of TON.
The Pikaia chair is designed to support the back fully. The curve of the backrest easily and comfortably follows the natural curve of the spine. The polyurethane shell, however, also allows for flexibility letting you lean back slightly. Like the human body is constantly in motion, the chair moves with it in a natural and […]