stump stool by Eberhard Bosslet

This collection of stump like indoor or outdoor objects are made from black polyester-fiberglass. German artist, Eberhard Bosslet, refers to a single ..

S-08 BENCH by Timothy Schreiber

S-08 bench is an additive bench/stool system made from coloured acrylic. The design allows for a plenitude of different shapes, lengths and colour sch..

Bird Hanger

Parrots perched on the top of the hanger. You don’t need to feed it or put it in a cage. Just watch it swing on the pole. This cute, unique des..

Stagger Bookshelves

The Stagger line of bookshelves combines open shelving with glass-doored showcases, and lower drawers for storage. Unique to this line is the stagger ..

Strala bartok

amazing concrete table in a limited edition created by t.m.schmid

Occidorient by François Mangeol

Occidorient tries to cross oriental and western cultures and offers a second reading and an update of a know-how. The format kelley is very close of 1..

Tapparello by playdesign

Handmade carpet made by rolling cord

Stereovision by John Nouanesing

The Stereovision table is all about 3-dimension. Adding 3D system to an already 3 dimensional object is like saying the same thing twice.Indeed, that ..

Gruff by Arno Mathies

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Milan 09: Gruff is a collection of cardboard furmiture by Arno Mathies of Real-Made, exhibited as part of Designhuis at Spazio Rossana Orlandi in Milan last month. (more…)

Anna Wintours Office Chair of Choice

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While we didn’t appreciate Morley Safer‘s mocking of the fashion industry, last night’s 60 Minutes segment did settle one burning question: What kind of chairs does Anna Wintour prefer? In the fleeting shots of her office at Vogue HQ, we recognized the trio of steel chairs circling her desk as the cafe classic “Chaise A” designed in 1934 by Xavier Pauchard for Tolix, which still manufactures them by hand in its Burgundian factory. Longtime bistro staples, the chairs appeared on the decks of the S.S. Normandie (for our money, the most stylish ocean liner of all time) and at the Paris Exposition of 1937. Meanwhile, Design Within Reach, which sells the chairs for $250 each, spreads the rumor that “the chair was created for use in the weather forecasting room on a battleship,” and notes that it “was supplied to bars and brasseries by breweries in exchange for selling their beer.”