• Just Landed: Louise Roe

    Architectural lines meet everyday function. Designed in Copenhagen, Louise Roe’s tableware is sculptural yet grounded — crafted to elevate daily rituals without overstatement.

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  • Tekla At Home

    Tekla’s essentials are made to last — and made to live with. In the bathroom, long-looped terry towels offer a quiet balance of absorbency, softness and strength.

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  • A LITTLE BIT

    Use Bit as a pedestal for a floral arrangement, as a side table for a lamp, or as impromptu seating for that unexpected dinner guest.

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  • PENDANT LIGHTS

    Say no to ceiling acne. Light your space in a different way with our range of pendant lighting; increase the drama, set the scene, radiate romance, or create intimacy.

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  • FLOOR LAMPS

    Sculptural. Ambient. Luminous. Create your own style of lighting and add that finishing touch to your space with our collection of floor lamps.

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  • portable lamps

    Move them around. Take them with you.  Let them alter your atmosphere. Explore our range of portable lighting and strengthen your ambience game.

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Design Dialogues: Faye Toogood

Faye Toogood has emerged as one of the most prominent women in contemporary design today. Her furniture and objects demonstrate a preoccupation with materiality and experimentation. All of her pieces are handmade by small-scale fabricators and traditional artisans, with an honesty to the rawness and irregularity of the chosen material.

With an academic training in the theory and practise of fine art, and a vocational background at the forefront of the magazine industry, Toogood approaches product design with a singular and acutely honed eye. Her highly sculptural work, while showing an astute respect for the past, is derived from pure self-expression and instinct.

Toogood’s objects are grouped together into her trademark numbered ‘Assemblages’. This allows her to avoid the formulaic, to experiment with the materials and processes that dominate her thinking at a particular time. With each Assemblage, she engages not only with the products themselves but also with the three-dimensional space in which they are exhibited, working across multiple disciplines to create a single body of work with an intuitive and unified narrative.

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