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LR2020_SPUS_Lexique_177_224.indb 201
21.08.19 16:13
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Lexicon Occasional tables
Ponton — Osko + Deichmann
Place a vase on the glass bottom to allow plants to pass
through Ponton’s slatted top, creating a river scene.
Rosis — C. Dondoli & M. Pocci
A set of three low tables in thick clear curved glass can be
arranged in geometrical formations.
Prado — Christian Werner
The Prado occasional table is designed in a height that
continues the legacy of versatility from its parent product.
Rythme — Angie Anakis
A colorful, sinuous lacquered steel base supports a clear
glass oval top.
Astair — Pierre Charpin
Pair the Astair seating collection with the complementary
the marble and tubular steel occasional tables.
News Table — Frédéric Ruyant
This sensuous bent glass side table also functions as a
floating magazine rack or a bedside table.
Azabu — Marie Christine Dorner
Azabu drum tables of metal wire transform into storage,
waste paper baskets and lamps with Murano glass globes.
Low Lands — Böttcher & Kayser
A geometric, four-level steel table stacks its surfaces to
create a spiral-like graphic Illusion.
Inamma — M.-A. Stiker-Metral
A double-deck design, that features poetic earth materials
of perforated sheet metal and brilliantly polished marble.
Liam — Eric Jourdan
Coffee table with structure and legs in bronze lacquered
steel and gray smoked tempered glass top.
360 Degrés — Roberto Paoli
Modern and flexible, the smaller lower surface rotates 360
degrees and can be concealed beneath the upper surface.
Saldo — Nick Rennie
A crystal glass box table doubles as a storage space with
three partitions underneath.
Black & Blue
Evangelos Vasileiou
A tri-level multifunctional glass and tubular steel piece
serves many purposes: coffee table, TV stand or bookshelf.
Alster — Emmanuel Dietrich
Coffee table with a Carrara marble square top and rounded
corners.
Yuragi — Junpei & Iori Tamaki
Making a play with the chaotic appearance of the steel
structure of its base, Yuragi is both simple and complex.