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Designed by Emilio Nanni
A collection of important dining tables with a rounded and regular imprint of the top and trestle legs reminiscent of the workbenches and the archetypal shape of the table. A pleasantly minimal aspect revisited by a calibrated sizing, an evident materiality and a declared solidity.
Finishes:
Base in solid ash in natural, stained or lacquered in a selection of colours, top in solid ash or beech or in ash veneer stained or lacquered in a selection of colours, HPL or fenix laminate
Dimensions:
W600 x D600 x H750 mm W700 x D700 x H750 mm W800 x D800 x H750 mm W900 x D900 x H750 mm W1000 x D1000 x H750 mm W1250 x D1250 x H750 mm
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The Julie collection is the skilful reinterpretation of the archetype of the chair and stool in which memory, quotation and modernity come together in a new seat. The combined effect of the formal cleanliness of the structure combined with the simplicity of the materials, with a wide range of colors and finishes, they amplify the […]
Kirk is a new system of armchairs and sofas conceived as a game of constructions in which the container and the contents change the interlocking game on minimal asymmetries, unexpected openings, compositional subtleties. Kirk sofa adapts perfectly to all spaces that want to fix the living room area with refinement and originality and redefines the […]
The overall vision created by the harmony of the beveled shapes, the full volumes and the soft but minimal design is recreated in a more rock, metallic version, thanks to the structure that lightens the seat. A wide range of colors for the padding, covered in velvet, or leather or eco-leather makes it suitable for […]
$650.00
“The Symbol of a new era focused on plastic”. That’s how Plia chair was presented in 1967 at the Fiera del Mobile in Milan. During the Fair, the Plia got so much acclaim from audiences that many visitors moved away from the stand with some samples without asking for permission… As a result of this […]
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.
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.