COLLECTIBLE DESIGN
Browse our gallery to discover more about our latest selection of exclusive design pieces and the inspiration behind them.
Meet the designers and hear their stories to learn more about how they think design is shaping our lives.
Laurids Gallée
In ancient cosmologies, the Empyrean was believed to be a heavenly place in the highest of heavens, occupied by the element of fire. The warm glow of the ceiling light Empyrean suspended 02 pays homage to this antiquated concept, as Gallée experiments with light through material hues, transparency, and luminosity.
Delcourt Collection
Material Brushed spruce / Brushed oak / Brushed elm Finishes Choice of brushed spruce tints / brushed oak tints / brushed elm tints
Draga & Aurel
From Draga & Aurel’s Heritage collection, which transforms midcentury pieces into bespoke creations, Morse is a 1960s Italian chest of drawers reimagined with vibrant, epoxy resin detailing. The mahogany frame, polished by hand, features a central storage compartment and a sleek black back-painted glass top, blending classic design with modern flair.
Draga & Aurel
Ernst, part of Draga & Aurel’s Heritage collection, revitalizes a 1950s teak wall unit with bold, contemporary touches. Inspired by Italian icons like Osvaldo Borsani, this piece offers three spacious shelves and a suspended cabinet with epoxy resin accents, brass handles, and detailing, merging vintage elegance with fresh artistry.
Caste
The Fergus Lounge Chair, designed by TY Best, is a contemporary and stylish seating option designed by TY Best. It features a comfortable seat and backrest, making it perfect for lounging and relaxation. The chair is available in a combination of fabric and leather upholstery, providing both comfort and durability. The frame of the chair is made of high-quality walnut, which gives it a sturdy and timeless look.
Manu Bañó
Tempered by fire, copper abandons its two-dimensional form to occupy a three-dimensional space through human manipulation. Its surface reflects the material’s journey, the piece retains the marks of its production process. The table, with concentric hammering, creates a support surface that, when duplicated on its underside, shapes the base. The separation between the two sheets not only aims to display books but also, in an aesthetic and deliberate act, reveals the two sides as distinct, detached, symmetrical, and identical.
Manu Bañó
This series explores the reflective property of copper, which, when polished, generates a mirror surface. With the purpose of being sculptural pieces, they occupy the space that would normally be taken by a painting on a wall. Copper, tempered by fire, abandons its two-dimensional form to occupy a three-dimensional space through human manipulation. In its finish, the marks of the material’s production process are evident, without patinas or polish.
Manu Bañó
Two suspended copper sheets, parallel to each other, are hammered to create openings at their top and bottom, allowing light to be projected both upward and downward. The design strikes a balance between indirect light which illuminates the ceiling and a focal light which projects onto the table, with both light sources independently controllable. The exterior of the lamp is patinated in a dark graphite shade, while the interior shows the natural, warm color of copper, offering a visual contrast that enhances its presence in the space.
Manu Bañó
The design of OBJ-10 originates in the doors, two symmetrical rectangles that, when hammered in their central area, deform to create an opening: a slit that invites you to slide your hand and discover its interior. The cabinet is a mono-material piece of copper, both on the outside and inside. The external surface retains the raw finish of the copper, allowing the marks of the production process, the heat of the fire, and the artisan’s fingerprints to express themselves. In contrast, the mirror-polished interior reveals a glint of copper in its purest state.
Ewe Studio
The Táas desk is constructed out of patinated brass, with its curvatures offering a blend of the enigmatic and functional. Inspired by architectural steppes and collumns from Mesoamerican constructions, the piece’s geometry is made up of folded metal surfaces. In a direct allusion to the act of piercing or cutting, the metal sheets have been transformed into a sculptural entity that links traditional metallurgy practices to a contemporary design expression.
Ewe Studio
The Táas cabinet draws inspiration from traditional metalwork in Mesoamerica. The piece is made up of openings and stepped geometries which reveal and conceal both form and content, offering a balance between the pristine and raw. Comprised of sculptural forms, the cabinet is shaped with curves of patinated brass. The piece embodies the transition between the solid and void, open and closed, light and shadow, concrete and imaginary.
Hector Esrawe
The Frecuencia Chairs are built from a single silhouette and intention, they introduce subtle variations in height and length, providing both structure and a sense of rhythm. These continuous bent steel bars vibrate along its length and polished surfaces, creating a visual effect that the piece is fading. Through repetition, the bars define the chairs’ form and evoke the idea of an endless functional vibration.
Hector Esrawe
The Gear Desk is constructed out of cast polished bronze with patina finish. The honeycomb-shaped cardboard grid is the source of inspiration, when cut into irregular shapes it reveals aleatory vertical patterns along the edges, creating a sculptural expression. These patterns, materialized and contained in bronze with radial cuts, take on different formats and scales, defining objects with utilitarian functions, such as coffee tables, light sculptures, and now The Desk, all expressed as over-scaled jewels or geared ornaments.
Hector Esrawe
The Gear Side Table is constructed out of cast aluminum with an aged finish and cast polished bronze with a patina finish. The honeycomb-shaped cardboard grid is the source of inspiration, when cut into irregular shapes it reveals aleatory vertical patterns along the edges, creating a sculptural expression. These patterns, materialized and contained in bronze with radial cuts, take on different formats and scales, defining objects with utilitarian functions, such as coffee table, light sculptures, and now The Side Table, all expressed as over-scaled jewels or geared ornaments.
Hector Esrawe
The Gear Side Table is constructed out of cast aluminum with an aged finish and cast polished bronze with a patina finish. The honeycomb-shaped cardboard grid is the source of inspiration, when cut into irregular shapes it reveals aleatory vertical patterns along the edges, creating a sculptural expression. These patterns, materialized and contained in bronze with radial cuts, take on different formats and scales, defining objects with utilitarian functions, such as coffee table, light sculptures, and now The Side Table, all expressed as over-scaled jewels or geared ornaments.