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3 results for Console tables
Console tables are taller, narrow side tables which can be often found in the hallway. Combining practicality with aesthetics is of great importance: after all, console tables are perfect for setting up displays to create a welcoming atmosphere, but also offer a small storage surface near the front door where keys, gloves and mail can be put down. It is not surprising that many console tables include a designated space to store these items.
Marcel Breuer’s elegant, thoroughly modernist, tubular steel ‘B 9 d/1’, designed at the Bauhaus in 1925 and manufactured by Thonet, offers a small shelf beneath the tabletop. Following in this practical spirit, Andreas Janson’s 2013 ‘Lowrider 56’, a reduced wooden console table offers multiple compartments with sliding doors. More minimal designs are available, too. Yael Mer’s and Shay Alkalay’s wall-mounted ‘Deskbox’ for Arco is a narrow, discrete volume that can slide open diagonally to reveal storage within, and when opened it can even be used as a small desk. ‘LOLA’, designed by Beat Glässer for Mox, is essentially a narrow shelf with two slanted chrome legs, which can be simply placed against a wall without any additional support.
Going even further, Jasper Morrison’s ‘Mirror Mirror Consolle’ for Glas Italia mimics the archetypical form of a table and is constructed out of double-sided mirror slabs, effectively dissolving into its surroundings. ‘Cricket’ console table, designed for Sovet by Gianluigi Landoni, is an understated composition combining thin bent glass and a thick wooden bar, which hides a practical drawer.
A more austere, sculptural approach is evident in the bulky ‘Consolle BD38’ by Laurameroni. Conversely Opinion Ciatti ‘Graal’ dissolves the console table into a series of stacked, rectangular boxes, with the topmost elongated one serving as a tabletop, and the ones underneath offering storage. Finally, in the more traditional corner, we have Kirsty Olby’s colourful ‘Chingeling sideboard’, or a more ornate ‘Trinity console’ by Boca do lobo, completing our short introduction to this small, but diverse, product type.
Console tables are taller, narrow side tables which can be often found in the hallway. Combining practicality with aesthetics is of great importance: after all, console tables are perfect for setting up displays to create a welcoming atmosphere, but also offer a small storage surface near the front door where keys, gloves and mail can be put down. It is not surprising that many console tables include a designated space to store these items.
Marcel Breuer’s elegant, thoroughly modernist, tubular steel ‘B 9 d/1’, designed at the Bauhaus in 1925 and manufactured by Thonet, offers a small shelf beneath the tabletop. Following in this practical spirit, Andreas Janson’s 2013 ‘Lowrider 56’, a reduced wooden console table offers multiple compartments with sliding doors. More minimal designs are available, too. Yael Mer’s and Shay Alkalay’s wall-mounted ‘Deskbox’ for Arco is a narrow, discrete volume that can slide open diagonally to reveal storage within, and when opened it can even be used as a small desk. ‘LOLA’, designed by Beat Glässer for Mox, is essentially a narrow shelf with two slanted chrome legs, which can be simply placed against a wall without any additional support.
Going even further, Jasper Morrison’s ‘Mirror Mirror Consolle’ for Glas Italia mimics the archetypical form of a table and is constructed out of double-sided mirror slabs, effectively dissolving into its surroundings. ‘Cricket’ console table, designed for Sovet by Gianluigi Landoni, is an understated composition combining thin bent glass and a thick wooden bar, which hides a practical drawer.
A more austere, sculptural approach is evident in the bulky ‘Consolle BD38’ by Laurameroni. Conversely Opinion Ciatti ‘Graal’ dissolves the console table into a series of stacked, rectangular boxes, with the topmost elongated one serving as a tabletop, and the ones underneath offering storage. Finally, in the more traditional corner, we have Kirsty Olby’s colourful ‘Chingeling sideboard’, or a more ornate ‘Trinity console’ by Boca do lobo, completing our short introduction to this small, but diverse, product type.
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