Effortlessly enriching both classic and modern interiors - Germany-based designer Deniz Aktay innovatively crafts ‘Bookgroove’ - a multifunctional sculpturally shaped side table that also serves as
Barbora Žilinskaite's first collection features a foot-shaped table, hand-shaped magazine rack, and face-shaped table inspired in part by Klee and Miró.
Archaische Formen und dolce vita: Mit „Enamorados“ präsentiert Designer Joris Poggioli eine Möbelkollektion, die ebenso urwüchsig wie zeitlos erscheint – und ein bisschen romantisch.
The designer talks to "Interview" about his latest collection, "Temperature’s Rising," now on show at Casa Perfect in L.A.
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ele.Box - hang up, let go, give in The clever organizer on your shelf, your desk, your wall board, ... The ele.Box loosens up the look of your furniture and helps you to have important things always at hand. You can also turn the ele.Box over and use it as a shelf and newspaper holder. Or you simply take the ele.Box with you and carry your important things from one place to another. The small but fine home accessory is an eye-catcher with purpose and function. The box has a slot width of 29mm. Recently there is the ele.Box with a slot width of 35mm. That means it can also be hung in thicker tabletops. New delivery is in progress! The silver shade is a silver metallic shade. Unfortunately, I had to adjust the prices because the metal prices have doubled.
Mut Design created the GRILL furniture collection for Diabla. It's distinguished by linear, pure, & visually appealing design.
Enjoy a bountiful harvest year-round when you display this kitschy table lamp shaped like a juicy red tomato. Equipped with a fabric-wrapped cord, this table lamp brings a warm red glow to your shelves and displays. Available exclusively at Urban Outfitters. Features - Kitschy table lamp from UO Home - Tomato silhouette that’s so fun - Fabric wrapped cord - Plug in; inline switch - Requires one E12 bulb - not included - UO exclusive Content + Care - Glass - Wipe clean - Imported - Made in compliance with US electrical standards. To use this item outside of the US, pair with an outlet adapter and voltage converter made specifically for use in your location. Size - Wattage/Voltage: 7W/110V - Overall dimensions: 8"dia x 8"h - Cord length: 7 ft, inline switch is 1 ft from base -Shipping package dimensions: 10"l x 10"w x 10"h - Shipping package weight: 2.6 lbs
There is no doubt that acrylics are finding their rightful place in the marketplace, the darling of designers, homeowners, and architects. What makes acrylic so desirable is its versatility and its advantages. By that I mean that acrylic is crystal clear and free of distortions. Tough and shatterproof, it’s
Design forward and beautiful low table for your home interior. Colorful lowtable with a contemporary design. Available in various color combinations. Shipping worldwide. Made to order. Carefully handmade in our atelier. A design that adds value to every modern and contemporary home and interior.
The donut-shaped Boa Pouf by Sabine Marcelis is perfectly sculptural; a bold graphic form that interrupts interior landscapes with its faultless chunky geometry. This piece of upholstered occasional furniture is rounded and soft, encased in a seamless outer layer that gives it an air-brushed finish: The smooth shape-knit textile that covers the Boa Pouf is a milestone in technologically innovative furniture making. Boa Pouf is as perfect for perching on, propping up feet, lounging against, as it is for making a sculptural statement and is the ideal expression of designer Sabine Marcelis, whose work is characterised by resonating clear, single, notes of absolute material, textile and colour. Product Overview Designer: Sabine Marcelis Color: Sulfur Yellow Dimensions: 44.9 Seat: 17.30"H Weight: 52.9 lb ...Read More *This item is excluded from sale events and not available for additional discounting or promotional offers.
A PLAYFUL EXPLORATION OF COLOURS AND GEOMETRIES THAT IS THE WORK OF THE INTERIOR ARCHITECT AND FURNITURE DESIGNER.
handmade pieces raw iron pieces
nature inspired modern living
Jumbo launches Creature Comfort collection with a mirror inspired by toilet paper, a chair inspired by Chinese takeout, a lamp inspired by a mop, & more.
QUESTION: I inherited this chair from my mom but have no information on it. The only markings on the chair are “AT2-232” written with a marker on the bottom of the seat and “678” stamped into the wood on the bottom of the seat. Can you provide any information on the chair? ANSWER: Your chair is made in the Art Nouveau style. It would have been a dining or desk chair in its day since it doesn’t have a padded seat. The number 678 on the bottom is probably the manufacturer’s model number. Many pieces of Art Nouveau furniture were mass-produced even though your chair looks as if it was handmade. Art Nouveau or Jugendstil is an international philosophy and style of art and applied art—especially the decorative arts—that was popular from about 1890 to 1910. Art nouveau literally means "new art" in French. Those two names came Gallerie Maison de l'Art Nouveau in Paris and the magazine Jugend in Munich, both of which popularized the style. Maison de l'Art Nouveau, or the House of New Art, was the name of the gallery opened in 1895 by German art dealer Siegfried Bing that featured exclusively modern art. In 1900, Bing produced an exhibition of color-coordinated modern furniture, tapestries, and objets d’art at the Exposition Universelle. Because his decorative displays became so strongly associated with this style, the style, itself, took on the name of his gallery, "Art Nouveau." Inspired by natural forms, such as flowers and plants, Art Nouveau was a reaction to academic art of the 19th century and artists used lots of curved lines in their designs. Though the Art Nouveau movement was innovative, it didn’t last long. It was important in American furniture history, however, because it heralded the end of the dismal darkness that was the close of the Victorian era. Rebelling against the overembellished furniture that flooded the furniture marketplace of the late 1890s, some European designers developed new ideas that found immediate approval with wealthy collectors. They began designing furniture and accessories with simple, flowing, fluid lines, taking their cues from nature, with its motion, curves, and endless cycling. Fairylike tendrils wove in, out, and around the leaves and stems of flowers, fruit, and nuts. The entire effect was one of delicate sensuality and naturalness, with faint overtones of sentimental decadence. The Art Nouveau years found their greatest expression in accessories, not furniture. This was the era that fostered the whirlwind careers of Louis Comfort Tiffany and others who worked in glass, china, pottery, and metal. Those substances were far easier to shape into the undulating styles of the time than was wood. Most wooden furniture during this period was custom-made and therefore usually of good quality and fine woods, featuring asymmetrical lines, as well as stylized animal and plant forms. Art Nouveau is a "total" art style, embracing architecture, graphic art, interior design, and most of the decorative arts including jewelery, furniture, textiles, household silver and other utensils and lighting, as well as the fine arts. Artists desired to combine the fine arts and applied arts, even for utilitarian objects, such as tableware, cigarette cases, and silverware. Art historians consider it an important transition between the eclectic historic revival styles of the 19th-century and Modernism. Three international art exhibitions—the Barcelona Universal Exposition of 1888, the Exposition Universelle of 1900 in Paris, and the Esposizione Internazionale d'Arte Decorativa Moderna of 1902 in Turin, Italy— showcased an overview of this modern style in every medium. Like most design styles, Art Nouveau sought to harmonize and modernize forms of the Rococo style, such as flame and shell textures. Artists and designers also advocated the use of stylized organic forms as a source of inspiration, and expanded their use of natural forms with seaweed, grasses, and insects. But unlike the craftsman-oriented Arts and Crafts Movement, the artists of the Art Nouveau Movement used new materials, machined surfaces, and abstraction in their designs. The stylized nature of Art Nouveau design made it expensive to produce, therefore, only the wealthy could afford it. Unlike furniture handmade by the craftsmen of the Arts and Crafts Movement, that of the Art Nouveau Movement was produced in factories by normal manufacturing techniques. Finishes were highly polished or varnished, and designs in general were usually complex, with curving shapes. Several notable designers of Art Nouveau furniture were also architects who designed furniture for specific buildings they had also designed, a way of working inherited from the Arts and Crafts Movement. One such designer is Antoni Gaudí, who produced many notable buildings in and around Barcelona, Spain.
As Bethan Laura Wood marks ten years of collaboration with Nilufar, her Ornate furniture collection is inspired by the boudoir, jewellery design and colourful bugs
NOOM furniture is a tribute to the great thinkers who formed the modernist principles and brought them to life. The designer has “gathered” the shape of this chair from the cylinders. This piece has been handcrafted in Ukraine and is soft and comfortable despite the geometry of shapes. Available to order in a variety of fabric options About NOOM The NOOM furniture collection is dedicated to the 100th anniversary of the founding of the Bauhaus School in Germany. Ideas of functionalism and conciseness, the combination of craft and art, buildings and objects formed by a composition of simple geometric shapes, are still relevant. Ideas of functionalism and conciseness, the combination of craft and art, buildings and objects formed by a composition of simple geometric shapes, are still relevant. All products in the collection are called by names of famous modernist artists and architects.
In a world full of mass-produced goods and cookie-cutter designs, DIY (Do-It-Yourself) shines differently. It's a creative craft that lets you make stuff on your own. Home is everyone's safe place, and having things you've made there adds something extra special. But sometimes, people's ideas can get so wild that their creations become a bit silly. Particularly during 2010, there was a phase when anything created through DIY was thought to be cool and aesthetic.
The designer talks to "Interview" about his latest collection, "Temperature’s Rising," now on show at Casa Perfect in L.A.
Sofa designed by Michel Boyer -1971.