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Designed by Ludovica & Roberto Palomba
Arrival is a complete lamp family with dynamic, flowing shapes that sculpt light with delicate, graphic lines. Branching out from a central joint, common to all the different versions, each model has three arms that form a soft, organic geometric shape through a profile that is both light and structure. Each element has a section that leaves the aluminium profile visible from the outside while generating a light-diffusing surface inside. The resulting elements blend into spaces with a presence that is discreet yet distinctive thanks to the shape and quality of the softly diffused light.
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Virginia is a collection designed by Ludovica + Roberto Palomba for Arrmet with a decisive and tangible sign, rich in modernity, sensuality and awareness. The solidity and softness of upholsteries draw near the simplicity and lightness of bases. Virginia plays the eternal duality of reality, in the coexistance of solid and concrete but at the […]
Design has recently begun to reread the last 80s, a period full of hedonistic sings. Ludovica and Roberto Palomba embrace this input in a collection for driade that combines some of this aesthetic hallmarks as straight cast-aluminium structure elegantly painted and damier decoration.
A table that plays on an apparent imbalance, supporting a strongly materic top, especially in the version, by a sequence of three structures placed in a totally unpredictable way. Built as parallelepipeds and fixed either perpendicularly or parallel to the surface, the three base frames are configured rather like a “vacuum†that seems to let […]
Laudani & Romanelli choose to rediscover the discretion of volumetric restraint. The armchair thus becomes an easy chair and a place of the individual, passepartout to forgotten customs: easy chairs around tables, in bedrooms or in vestibules.
Kabu, curve in Japanese. With this name, I stress the conceptual process of the collection design. The light structure is dressed up with a technical fabric that becomes skin and wrap. The curvature generated as a result of the fabric tension on the structure highlights the desire for a lightweight, upholstered frame.
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.