Visit us in store for a wider selection of items not found online.
Designed by Mario Ruiz
If there is something that defines the Kotai table collection, it is precisely its soundness, as its own Japanese name denotes. Made of solid wood, its most distinctive feature is the bevel alongside its four edges and the cleavage dividing it into two identical halves and highlighting the unique possibilities of this noble material.
Finishes:
Structure in solid oak in natural or stained in a selection of colours
Dimensions:
W1800 x D1000 x H900 mm W2000 x D1000 x H900 mm W2200 x D1000 x H900 mm W2400 x D1000 x H900 mm W2600 x D1000 x H900 mm
$0.00
0
Huma chair is a project trying to preserve the classic philosophy of rattan production process while engaging in a research for greater comfort through the use of flexible ribs in its shell-shaped backrest and its upholstered seat.
The Huma upholstered chair series takes the form of the rattan version, the open arms create an open invitation to sit, dine, work or relax.
The Dunas xs seating sellection arises from the pursuit of a transversal design that can take its place amongst the most diverse spaces and styles. Refinement, neutrality, formal clarity and essential elegance are the marks of identity of this versatile collection of chairs and armchairs designed by Christophe Pillet.
Kabu, curve in Japanese. With this name, I stress the conceptual process of the collection design. The light structure is dressed up with a technical fabric that becomes skin and wrap. The curvature generated as a result of the fabric tension on the structure highlights the desire for a lightweight, upholstered frame.
The deep and rounded seat invites to relax and talk. A perfect balance of the volume of the body which perfectly combines with the characteristic support structure, thus defining a new idea of ??the “cockpit” type. Balù provides numerous chromatic variations and ton sur ton or neutral shades foreseen by the colors of the collection. […]
$3,890.00
With Lanuda chair, Riccardo Blumer evolves his design research on seats, moving from the wood of Laleggera designed in 1996 to aluminium. Even if Laleggera and Lanuda embody the same principle of essential subtraction – the former employing minimal wood thicknesses in a box structure, the latter using aluminium sheets crafted following a reticu- lar […]