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Lazada
Designed by Robin Day
Influenced by the notion of flexible design, the Daystak Desk highlights Robin Day’s skill for blending form with utility. The addition of a drawer box with visible dovetail joinery to the Daystak Table expands the functional potential of the design to create a desk that embodies Day’s singular creative focus. The drawer box can be ordered separately and placed on either side of the table.
Variation
$3,290.00$2,796.50
Showcasing a soft, inviting character, the RFH Lounge Chair follows the same design principles as the RFH Armchair. Small in footprint, part of the chair’s charm lies in its low and compact form, offering a lounge piece with a striking silhouette that can be placed in the most modest of spaces.
$720.00$612.00
Designed with stackability in mind, the Daystak Side Chair by Robin Day is a lesson in functional utility and the beauty of simple forms. Exhibiting the designer’s dedication to craft, the side chair’s complex construction belies its visual simplicity and minimalist mid-century silhouette.
$1,130.00$960.50
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.
$2,020.00$1,717.00
Designed in 1951, the Daystak Table exemplifies Robin Day’s meticulous attention to detail and celebration of the material at hand. Showcasing the same striking, A-shaped legs as the Daystak Side Chair and Desk, the table sits in tandem with the rest of the collection to create a distinctly mid-century ensemble.
$2,060.00$1,751.00
After experimenting for years with the concept of a laminated wooden frame inspired by old wooden tennis rackets, Danish design duo Hvidt & Molgaard released X in 1959, a lounge chair with a distinctive sloping silhouette and understated aesthetic.
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Tables, for a designer, are somehow suspended between architecture and sculpture. Littman visualize this suspension in Lybra project, by emphasizing the steel supporting beam, making it evident through the top transparency and giving it the value of a craftwork.
Viva was designed with a base inspired by letter V, an expressive and architectural form in coluored lacquer finish. Balanced with the sleek wooden top, VIVA is a piece that anchors any room.
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.