Showing all 9 results

Milos Carpet

13,365 

Milos is a handmade pure wool carpet. It is available in a rectangular version in three standard sizes, with the possibility of having it also made to measure. Two the colours to choose from.

Walking on Clouds Carpet

11,393 

Carpet Walking on Clouds by Front is a collage of mixed-media clouds from different eras. The clouds have been a source of inspiration for artists for centuries. Front studied the clouds in all kinds of paintings, finding hundreds of different tones and shapes. Walking on Clouds brings the warm colours of numerous sunsets inside your home.

Hello Sonia Reloaded

13,361 

Himalayan wool and bamboo silk, Handloom.

Campo

A design which plays with the idea of superimposed layers and which was inspired from a bird’s-eye view of wheat fields, hence the name “Campo”, which in Italian means field. A playful rug that combines a low flatweave, a high-pile and a clever design creating the effect that there are two rugs overlapping, but doesn’t let your eyes deceive you, it is one rug.

 

Pitagora Outline

In the Flatlandia Collection by Elena Salmistraro rugs are transformed into two-dimensional universes inhabited by geometric shapes, just like in the novel Flatland, the fantastic story in multiple dimensions, written by Reverend Edwin A. Abbott in 1884. Triangles, lines, circles and squares overlap, meet and collide becoming conscious of each other, just as they do in the novel, unaware of the colors and the magic they hold. The collection has two faces; one more tactile and “rough”, the other softer and lighter, one more intense and crowded, the other sober and sublime. A series of rugs which play with contrast emphasizing duality and the craftsmanship involved in their creation. It is no coincidence that the rugs have the names of famous mathematicians: Cartesio, Pitagora and Eulero.

 

Back to School

6,355 

The subtle and abstract nature of the design is the result of Garth Roberts’ research and experimentation. Exploring contemporary and traditional graphics and texture, the haphazard nature of the design was inspired by the world of celebration, confetti and life’s fleeting moments. Creating a subtle and abstract graphic where the apparent randomness of the design has been translated by Tibetan artisans with over 152 000 individual knots per square meter. A randomness which has been custom- made and born through experimentation.