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Designed by Lievore Altherr Molina
The iconic Piktor coffee table, expressing with its design Sovet’s philosophy and skilled handcrafted processes, is now proposed in new glass and ceramic finishes that highlight its essential lines in the living spaces.
Finishes:
Structure in metal in chrome, lacquered mocha, black or burnished brass, top in glass in clear or tinted smoke, lacquered or frosted lacquered, textured materia or in ceramic polished or matt finish
Dimensions:
DIA550 x H450 mm
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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 […]
Curved glass and metal profile are joined together to create a single form, able to create different chromatic combinations and types of furniture: from the coffee table to the console. An idea that can satisfy different needs with a unique style.
The new shapes and sizes of the Visual mirrors create original reflections thanks to different shades and to their modularity. They furnish private and public spaces with a refined simplicity making possible the creation of large compositions.
Lievore Altherr Molina, the Barcelona-based design firm typically designs harmonious and balanced items as well as intense shapes balanced in a peaceful tension. For Driade they have designed Verlaine, a sofa complete with a pouf sporting an exceptionally expressive versatility that reminds of organic and flowing shapes. Its fascinating silhouette is an irresistible attraction inviting […]
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.
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.
In this very essential canonical dimensioned table, works plastic as if it was stone or concrete, insisting on the polite rounding of edges and the softness of junctions.