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Designed by Nichetto Studio
Floema is a family of low tables whose minimalist design is embodied by the absence of edges, offering a feeling of welcoming elegance. The elliptical or circle roundness of the tops available in stone or wood, mark a feature repeated in the curved details of the steel structure. In different heights and shapes, the four versions of Floema low tables offer a variety of surfaces to satisfy different needs and uses in a contract environment, from work to moments of relaxation.
Finishes:
Base in steel powder coated black, top in solid walnut
Dimensions:
DIA600 x H400 mm
$6,190.00
Floema is a family of low tables whose minimalist design is embodied by the absence of edges, offering a feeling of welcoming elegance. The elliptical or circle roundness of the tops available in stone or wood, mark a feature repeated in the curved details of the steel structure. In different heights and shapes, the four […]
$2,140.00
$3,590.00
This innovative design is an extremely comfortable lounge chair that has a shell inspired by the elegant leaf of an aloe plant, hence the name. This shape is lightly suspended on a steel frame ? both light and sturdy at the same time.
$3,190.00
A family of seatings that share an aesthetic and functional DNA. Every material is found to fit the best for each product, both for structures and surfaces.
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The Hari XL chair, inspired by the world of textile looms, with a very industrial aesthetic combined with the delicacy of the threads to create a subtle and elegant chair.
$6,000.00
Deriving from Latin, the term vector literally means ?to carry? ? and the name thus refers to the typology of a table in its simplest form. Playing with perspective, when viewed from the end, the frame in black powder-coated aluminium appears dense, adding weight to the design, whilst seen from the side, the slender silhouette […]
This project is born from the wish to recover rattan as a fine material and reclaim Spain?s rich craftsmanship tradition. Oscar Tusquets tries to give a new look to an ancient technique replacing the brackets and bonds traditionally used as connecting elements by the twinning of one cane to the next.