Online Exclusive - 10% off &Tradition with code AT10
Visit us in store for a wider selection of items not found online.
Designed by Lievore Altherr Molina
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.
Finishes:
Frame in aluminium lacquered mocha, black or burnished brass, mirror in clear, tinted grey, bronze, rose or gold
Dimensions:
W440 x D50 x H380 mm W600 x D50 x H520 mm W900 x D50 x H780 mm
0
Different geometric shapes and various combinations of materials, create infinite uses and setting possibilities. A simple concept from which arises a complete collection of tables and accessories for the most varied environments and situations.
Frog tables are made from a single glass sheet curved and shaped with skillful technique. The purity of its design belies its exceptional strength for each setting and use, thanks to the use of a very thick bent glass.
Palace dining table and its unique design become the outright protagonist of the living area, thanks also to the new shapes. An important element that sets the mood of the whole room.
Sila is a chair project from which a lot of different versions take form, starting from simple shapes and natural materials.
Mei is a lacquered wood chair that distills the Ming archetype into a clean, rectilinear silhouette with a quietly modern stance. Pared-back details are softened with an upholstered seat. It reflects a universal elegance that feels both familiar and new.
Since 1859, when chair No. 14 was first introduced, more than 80 million units have been sold all over the world. Its iconic shapes are created by six manually bent beech rods, two bolts and ten screws. Thanks to its low weight, attractive price and legendary strength, this chair quickly found its place in the […]
$2,910.00
The design of the armchair combines, in a hybridisation process, two parts that are only apparently separate from the point of view of formal memory: the rotating tripod made of light die-cast aluminium, furnished with a visible shock-absorbing mechanism, and the enveloping shell made of Vienna cane stretched over a frame of hot-bent and machined […]