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:
DIA1000 x H750 mm DIA1200 x H750 mm DIA1400 x H750 mm
$6,560.00
Its oblong structure reminds that of Neolithic dolmens with two vertical pieces supporting a large flat capstone, but very much lighter as it is made of thin aluminum sheets and wood slats. Hence its name. Thanks to its simple design, as clever as pleasant, Slats blends smoothly into any kind of background.
0
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.
Nori is a modern design table which can either be fixed or extended with multiple possibilities of finishes and colours. The legs are available either painted or in anodised aluminum, creating sharp lines to really create an impact in your home and a great talking point for guests. The tabletop extremely thin and lightweight, but […]
You must surrender to its embrace if you want to live it intensely. This is what Livit, the new outdoor sectional sofa by Lievore Altherr Molina Studio, suggests: A welcoming piece with soft cushions buoyed up by a slender aluminum frame, which balances comfort and lightness with the aim of providing a blithesome relax”. It […]
With its round, enveloping shell, Armadillo is a revision of a furniture classic in rattan: the papasan. But this is a radically free and wonderfully postmodern version. Armadillo has the sympathetic shyness of the animal from which it gets its name and the unmistakable signature of the Valencian studio in its silhouette.
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.