Visit us in store for a wider selection of items not found online.
Designed by Studio Expormim
Compact and easy to handle, with its cone-shaped legs and tops of lively colours, the Trio collection carries us back to the Mid-Century modern age. Its main appeal lies in the simplicity of its design as much as in its insouciant personality, a piece as funny and charming as practical and versatile.
Finishes:
Structure in solid oak in natural or stained in a selection of colours
Dimensions:
DIA450 x H400 mm
0
Altet is one of those timeless classics deserving to be reedited because of its elegance and the simplicity of its shape. Without giving up on its roots or losing a tiny bit of its character, this updated version of Altet keeps showing how to successfully survive the passage of time.
Benasal, also known as the armchair that won Jaime Hayon?s heart, is a simple and functional design seeking for comfort without any further ado. Pomposity aside, it is just an armchair inviting to sit and relax. Being thus conceived, how could it not be suitable for any given place at any given time?
Nautica is a hanging seat that pays homage to one of the first pieces produced by Expormim in the 70?s. Our commitment to the creation of a unique design that would recover and rethink the traditional use of rattan was matched by the will of delivering something different, unexpected. Natural world is filled with contrasts […]
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.
The Split chair with arms links our more than 150-year-old technology with contemporary design. It is based on manually bent split lengths of massive wood; which, at the same time, are both a design and functional element of seating furniture – it supports the seat and also the backrest. It is elegantly slid in, behind […]
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.