Visit us in store for a wider selection of items not found online.
Lazada
Designed by Christophe Pillet
Brew a coffee, sit back and let your imagination take you to the delights of a Parisian Boulevard café with the TNP from Kristalia. Introduce cool French design to your home with this classic outdoors iron coffee table. Originally produced for the Theatre National Populaire, the TNP bears the embossed logo of one of France’s most celebrated theatres. The TNP classic outdoors iron coffee table combines classic, minimalist design with superb production values.
Finishes:
Base in cast iron with steel column and top in black, red or white
Dimensions:
W700 x D500 x H750 mm W700 x D700 x H750 mm
0
The Dunas xs seating sellection arises from the pursuit of a transversal design that can take its place amongst the most diverse spaces and styles. Refinement, neutrality, formal clarity and essential elegance are the marks of identity of this versatile collection of chairs and armchairs designed by Christophe Pillet.
This table base can be assembled with tops of various types, according to the taste and needs.
Two industrial-inspired elements that merge in a composition that reminds a railway crossing. This is the basic design idea of Cross, a table that represents a meeting point between the concepts of stability and dynamism, strength and harmony, thought and material.
Part of a collection made of painted metal, this outdoor coffee table is available in two heights and is characterized by its stylized form and multiple colors that make it fresh and playful.
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. The color range offers the natural tones of ash, bleached […]
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.