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Designed by Charles Pollock
In 1982, the designer Charles Pollock created a real design classic: Penelope. The American designer developed for Castelli a revolutionary chair from a technical and formal point of view: a steel-wire sled base supports a seat permeable to air which consists in a steel-wire fence coated with synthetic resin. The elastic effect of the base is stressed by an integral polyurethane tube that acts as a shock-absorber. The armrest coverings are made of the same material providing additional comfort. With Penelope, Pollock translated into reality a new form of seat. That’s why this timeless classic still enjoys fame in today’s design world.
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Beech rods bent according to a modern technology, seat shaped by modern production methods and contemporary design. The Tram chair connects everything that is typical for TON today. Its lines simplify any interior and are available in a version with armrests or upholstery.
A chair deliberately abstract in its composition and, for this reason, comfortable in unpredictable ways. Seemingly carved into a block, Toy speaks a language of sharp and broad plans that make it different from other molded polypropylene chairs. In this connotation Toy is unique even within the design corpus of Philippe Starck.
$840.00
Designers Jakob Thau & Sami Kallio turn things inside out with their chair that features usually hidden seat webbing as a design element. Crafted using natural linen fibers, the flexible webbing seat cradles the the body for maximum comfort. BettyÕs single-piece wooden frame is lightweight yet inherently stable and the chair is stackable.
$520.00
What makes the Wire Stool indicatively Verner Panton is the use of stainless-steel wire to create a simple geometric shape with repeated patterns, in a stackable stool that doubles as a side table. An icon from the archives destined to become a collectible, the airy transparency makes it a versatile design suitable for a vast […]