Visit us in store for a wider selection of items not found online.
Designed by Lievore Altherr Molina
Spider is a coffee table made up with a single sheet of glass, artfully cut and bent: a pleasingly original presence in the living area. Matching freely the shapes and finishes it is possible to create infinite able to convey different emotions.
Finishes:
Structure in glass in clear, tinted smoke, lacquered or 2 tone lacquered in a selection of colours
Dimensions:
W1220 x D720 x H240 mm W1220 x D720 x H360 mm W1000 x D1000 x H240 mm W1000 x D1000 x H360 mm
0
A complete collection of coffee tables and consoles that allows to create original compositions in the living area. The ceramic tops, offered in a wide range including marble-effect ceramics, mirror, frosted mirror or Materia, are perfectly and naturally completed by the minimalism of the metal structure.
Sila is a chair project from which a lot of different versions take form, starting from simple shapes and natural materials.
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 […]
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 quality of being modest: The freedom from vanity, the respect for discretion in the conduct, in the language, in the clothing, the simplicity, the moderation, designed to prevent the accidental exposure of a body part, a strip of modesty, of meekness.
Anapo’s collection of tables, in the rectangular and circular version and in different sizes including a side table. Its inspiration lies in the Sixties and in a specific idea of middle-class home torn between rigour and softness, luxury and functionality, indifferent to passing fads.
Laudani & Romanelli choose to rediscover the discretion of volumetric restraint. The armchair thus becomes an easy chair and a place of the individual, passepartout to forgotten customs: easy chairs around tables, in bedrooms or in vestibules.