Visit us in store for a wider selection of items not found online.
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 H1000 mm
Note:
Minimum quantity required
0
This high table base can be assembled with tops of various types, according to the taste and needs.
A diamond changes into a seat: faceted from a thousand veins that reflect light, Meridiana transforms the lines of construction and power in lines of poetry. Suspended in its thin metal structure, it shines in its transparency or its sophisticated nuances.
This coffee table can be matched with tops of various types, according to the taste and needs for both the indoors and outdoors.
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.
The seat section of uniform plywood is broken by the unconventional connections between the legs. The legs pass through the seat emphasizing the structural construction which is also a design detail. The effect is outstanding in the two-color version.
This minimalist and highly elaborate chair is a re-design of the classic model No. 14. The designer divided its six pieces by two and 002 emerged – a chair made from only three pieces. Two of them – the manually processed bends – are identical and form legs, backrest and armrests all in one.
Even a classical image, as a railed chair, in the hands of Philippe Starck acquires a particular connotation. In Pip-e, the sequence of horizontal elements, which create the seat and back definetly, takes on a strong chiaroscuro and goes, unexpectedly, to accompany the bending of the knees.
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.