Topic
Pretty daring!
There is furniture and products like this: Real types that stand out and dare to be noticed. What's behind them? They usually take something to the extreme: an idea, a material, proportions or manufacturing processes. Then a chair is folded from punched sheet aluminum, the square tube is bent into a vase and the jagged chair becomes a defining object.
A beautiful little thing: ÎLE is a clamp lamp, but it can also be free-standing and wall-mounted.
A bending template and the application of force. You don't really need any more words to describe this original candle holder.
Strikingly inconspicuous
Standing mirror Friedrich 21, Glowing red
Typical objects of our time: the FRIEDRICH 21 standing mirror is strikingly inconspicuous and yet has what it takes to characterize an entire room. The fine curved silhouette and its proportions are somewhat reminiscent of Art Deco shapes - the bright colors and flat design bring the mirror unmistakably into the present - and arm it for the future.
Reduced to the maximum
Pressed Chair, RAL 1018 Zinc yellow
Reduced to the maximum: the PRESSED CHAIR is a masterpiece of material efficiency. In a single pressing process, an aluminum sheet just 2.5 mm thick is transformed into a fully-fledged, load-bearing chair. It owes its stability to precisely placed, circumferential indentations and curvatures, which also characterize its striking appearance.
No compromises
Splügen Bräu pendant light
Achille and Pier Giaccomo Castiglioni designed this futuristic pendant light for the Splügen Bräu brewery in Milan, which was built in 1960 and demolished in the 1980s. The brothers also designed other objects for the pub, including mirrors, furniture and glassware. The luminaire was therefore originally part of an overall concept.
Cleverly constructed
Container DS, RAL 3015 Light pink
The CONTAINER DS in the proportions of a sea container is virtually the archetype of the CONTAINER DS series. It is used as a cabinet in the living room for china and tableware, and in the office for storing standardized file folders or paper and office utensils. As a chest of drawers for linen and as a piece of furniture in the hallway and checkroom.







































































