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Lazada
Designed by Simon Pengelly
Unnia is a versatile and extensive collection of chairs with a unique mix and match concept of colours and finishes. The chair design allows the combination of different finishes and colours for the seats, backrests and frames. This means that endless combinations can be made. In addition, the collection offers chairs with a range of bases and frames that increase possibilities for customisation and allow a broad spectrum of use in all kinds of spaces, settings and decorative styles. The result is essentially a collection of highly customisable chairs.
Finishes:
Swivel, base in aluminium lacquered or in polished, seat and back in polypropylene, optional seat upholstery in a selection of fabrics or leather
Dimensions:
W660 x D660 x H805 mm SH460 mm
Note:
Minimum order of 6 pcs
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Unnia is a versatile and extensive collection of chairs with a unique mix and match concept of colours and finishes. The chair design allows the combination of different finishes and colours for the seats, backrests and frames. This means that endless combinations can be made. In addition, the collection offers chairs with a range of […]
$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 […]
$1,130.00
Originally created to seat visitors in the dining rooms of the Royal Festival Hall, the RFH Armchair by Robin Day is charactericed by the softly curved backrest and outwardly reaching arms. Rich in materiality, the chair’s striking form is achieved through a process of form-press moulding layers of beech and walnut veneer.
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 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.