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COLLECTION
MILK
Materials: Opal glass shade on solid oak stand
Dimensions: Ø:200mm x H: 250mm
Story: With the MILK lamp, NORM architects Kasper Rønn & Jonas Bjerre-Poulsen find exciting new ways in an ancient Nordic tradition of wood and glass. Though perfectly suited as a lamp, MILK adds more than light to your home. MILK can be placed anywhere and lights up both body and soul and let?s the mind drift of to the zen of a Japanese spa.
&: MILK is the first item in a series of sensory design for the home.
Milk - white cord
Milk - black cord
Milk NA1.pdf
Product Sheet
Milk_work01.jpg
Carpenter - MILK
Milk_sketch4_205.jpg
MILK Lamp
Milk_work02.jpg
Carpenter - MILK
Milk_work03.jpg
Carpenter - MILK
Milk_sketch3_205.jpg
MILK Lamp
Milk_work04.jpg
Carpenter - MILK
Milk_work08.jpg
Carpenter - MILK
Milk_work09.jpg
Carpenter - MILK
Milk_sketch2_205.jpg
MILK Lamp
Milk_work07.jpg
Carpenter - MILK
Milk_work10.jpg
Carpenter - MILK
Milk_work11.jpg
Carpenter - MILK
Milk_sketch1_205.jpg
MILK Lamp
Instructions Milk NA1.pdf
Manual
FLOWERPOT VP1
Materials: Steel with lacquered finish and matching fabric cord.
Dimensions: Ø:230mm x H:160mm
Story: In 1968 the students? revolts in Paris, Rome and the United States were overthrowing stiff, old values, initiating the Flower Power-generation of peace, love and harmony. Same year, Stanley Kubrick pictured the future of the year 2001, featuring the Verner Panton Chair, and man was soon to set foot on the moon. In the world of design, a colourful, playful pendant hung in restaurants and exhibitions, and, very soon, in everybody?s homes. The FlowerPot with its two semi-circular spheres facing each other has long proved its lasting design quality and is just as much a synonym of our time, too.
& The diameter of the upper sphere is twice as large as the lower one, making a perfectly balanced form. No wonder, the FlowerPot won Gute Form Bundespreis in 1972.
Black
Vanilla
Red
Yellow
Green
Orange
Chrome
Brushed
White
Blue
Purple
Turquoise
FlowerPot VP1.pdf
Product Sheet
VP1_varna_restaurant.jpg
FlowerPot Restaurant
FPP05.jpg
FlowerPot Production
FPP07.jpg
FlowerPot Production
FPP02.jpg
FlowerPot Production
FPP09.jpg
FlowerPot Production
Instructions FlowerPot VP1.pdf
Manual
SPINNING LIGHT
Materials: Spun aluminium shade with gloss lacquered exterior finish, silicone top and PVC cord.
Dimensions: Ø: 230mm x H: 450mm
Story: The spinning-top toy, a childhood favourite, inspires to the joyful form of the Spinning Light along with the process of metal spinning. Here, form truly meets function in an innovative way. It?s sleek, it?s sexy and it?s sure to become a new classic.
Black
Purple
White
Spinning Light BH1.pdf
Product Sheet
Spinning_sketch03.jpg
Spinning Lights
Spinning_produktion06.jpg
Spinning Light Production
Spinning_produktion04.jpg
Spinning Light Production
Spinning_sketch02.jpg
Spinning Lights
Spinning_produktion05.jpg
Spinning Light Production
Instructions Spinning Light BH1.pdf
Manual
HOOK
Materials: Solid steel in brushed, polished or powder coated finish
Dimensions: L:40mm / 150mm
Story: For baseball gloves and ballet slippers; for fur coats and rain coats; for big shoppers and small shoulder bags; for towels and robes; t-shirts and trousers; you can hang your hat on that!
& A hook is a hook is a hook
4cm Polished
15cm Polished
4cm Brushed
15cm Brushed
4cm Powder coat
15cm Powder coat
Hook.pdf
Product Sheet
&traditiondesign_205x571.jpg
&Tradition Design
SPINNING LIGHT
Materials: Spun aluminium with gloss lacquered exterior finish, silicone top and PVC cord.
Dimensions: Ø: 400mm x H: 340mm
Story: The spinning-top toy, a childhood favourite, inspires to the joyful form of the Spinning Light along with the process of metal spinning. Here, form truly meets function in an innovative way. It?s sleek, it?s sexy and it?s sure to become a new classic.
Black
White
Purple
Spinning Light BH2.pdf
Product Sheet
Spinning_produktion05.jpg
Spinning Light Production
Spinning_sketch02.jpg
Spinning Lights
Spinning_produktion04.jpg
Spinning Light Production
Spinning_sketch03.jpg
Spinning Lights
Spinning_produktion06.jpg
Spinning Light Production
Instructions Spinning Light BH2.pdf
Manual
HOTEL ROYAL
Materials: Acrylic or glass shades with aluminium frame and PVC cord
Dimensions: W: 210mm x H: 190mm
Story: Liza Minelli's Eyes have reflected in the sides of this pendant and the smoke from Frank Sinatra's cigarette swirled through the light in the intimate snack bar at Hotel Royal in Copenhagen, considered one of Arne Jacobsen's masterpieces. The 'Gesamtkunstwerk' included almost every little detail from the wall-mounted curtain holders to the furniture and lamps, and right down to the tableware, all designed by Arne Jacobsen.
& Yet it is a very simple lamp: four pieces forming a cube around the bulb, but this simplicity just may be what makes the Hotel Royal pendant a lasting design item.
Smoked
Cognac
Frosted
Clear
Royal Pendant - variant
Hotel Royal AJ1.pdf
Product Sheet
AJ_Hotel_snackbar01.jpg
Hotel Royal
AJ_Hotel_03.jpg
Hotel Royal
AJ_Hotel_snackbar02.jpg
Hotel Royal
instructions Royal AJ1.pdf
Manual
PANTON DISH
Materials: Moulded glass
Dimensions: W: 320mm x L: 350mm
Story: Seeing new possibilities was fundamental to Verner Panton, going his own way among the Danish designers. Many of his famous designs have a time-less quality, as if they were just created. As if an idea, when put down on a piece of paper just wasn?t good enough and the paper therefore was crumbled and thrown in the bin. And a great master?s hand picked it out again, looked at it and got an even better idea.
&The Panton Dish servers equally well for fresh fruit as for a reminder of always seeing the possibilities.
Smoked
MEGA BULB
Materials: Clear mouth blown glass with clear cord or fabric cord, both with porcelain lamp holder and ceiling rose.
Dimensions: Ø: 180mm x H: 230mm
Story: Mega Bulb, though superior in size, is actually the younger sister of Bulb, first blown five years after in 2006. Just as beautiful, just as elegant, Mega Bulb is the answer to all requests for poetic lighting in larger rooms and spaces. The small irregularities in the mouth blown glass make each of the pendants one of a kind and add the story of the glass master?s personal efforts in changing sand, soda and chalk into a modern classic using a thousand year old method.
& Mega Bulb offers both high quality design and high quality light, being a perfect companion for the kitchen chef.
Clear
Red
Black
Mega Bulb SR2.pdf
Product Sheet
bulb_sketch_ALL.jpg
All Bulb Sketches
instructions Mega Bulb SR2.pdf
Manual
BIG FLOWERPOT
Materials: Aluminium with lacquered finish and fabric cord.
Dimensions: Ø: 500mm x H: 360mmm
Story: In 1968 the students? revolts in Paris, Rome and the United States were overthrowing stiff, old values, initiating the Flower Power-generation of peace, love and harmony. Same year, Stanley Kubrick pictured the future of the year 2001, featuring the Verner Panton Chair, and man was soon to set foot on the moon. In the world of design, a colourful, playful pendant hung in restaurants and exhibitions, and, very soon, in everybody?s homes. The FlowerPot with its two semi-circular spheres facing each other has long proved its lasting design quality and is just as much a synonym of our time, too.
&The diameter of the upper sphere is twice as large as the lower one, making a perfectly balanced form. No wonder, the FlowerPot won Gute Form Bundespreis in 1972.
Big Flowerpot - Black
Big Flowerpot - Red
Big Flowerpot - White
Big Flowerpot - Creme
Big Flowerpot - Yellow
Big FlowerPot VP2.pdf
Product Sheet
FPP01.jpg
FlowerPot Production
FPP06.jpg
FlowerPot Production
Spinning_produktion01.jpg
Production
Spinning_produktion03.jpg
Production
Instructions FlowerPot VP2.pdf
Manual
SHUFFLE TABLE
Materials: Lacquered MDF, solid beech and oak
Dimensions: Ø: 450mm x H: 690mm
Story: Mia Hamborg gives new life to the old Nordic craft tradition of turning wood by adding the colour and playful forms from old painted wooden toys. It?s up to you where you want to put this fine piece of furniture and being truly Nordic and democratic, you can even decide the form, colours and height of the table.
& This fine table has one function more important than all others: To create joy.
Assembled
Disassembled
Shuffle Table.pdf
Product Sheet
MHwork02.jpg
Mia Hamborg Workshop
MHSketch07.jpg
Mia Hamborg Sketch
MHwork08.jpg
Mia Hamborg Workshop
MHSketch04.jpg
Mia Hamborg Sketch
MHwork03.jpg
Mia Hamborg Workshop
MHwork05.jpg
Mia Hamborg Workshop
MHSketch02.jpg
Mia Hamborg Sketch
MHwork04.jpg
Mia Hamborg Workshop
instructions Shuffle table MH1.pdf
Assembly Instructions
TOPAN
Materials: rubber coated aluminium with gold lacquer and matching textile cord
Dimensions: Ø: 210mm x H: 190mm
Story: Sometimes the simplest things are the most lasting and memorable, the Topan pendant being a brilliant example. It was the first mass produced lamp by Verner Panton, later to be followed by the FlowerPot. Topan's simplicity and coolness proves to be of lasting value. Topan was originally designed for the hotel and restaurant Astoria in Trondheim, Norway, in 1960. Here, Panton used his textile designs Geometry I to IV for floors, walls and ceilings in order to give the room a uniform image. The Topan pendants hung all over, dividing large rooms into smaller and more intimate spaces.
& in gold Topan becomes much more grown up than its colourful siblings, making it a sure choice for adding an exclusive detail to any interior or home.
GOLD
Topan VP6.pdf
Product Sheet
instructions Topan VP6.pdf
Manual
ROYAL BOWL
Materials: Stainless steel
Dimensions: small: Ø: 115mm x H: 53mm / large: Ø: 213mm x H: 100mm
Story: The Hotel Royal in Copenhagen is considered one of Arne Jacobsen?s greatest masterpieces, built in the years from 1956 to 1960. The ?Gesamtkunstwerk? included almost every little detail from the wall-mounted curtain holders to the furniture and lamps, and right down to the tableware, all designed by Arne Jacobsen. The drop as a form, quoting Jacobsen?s own Drop chair, runs through the bowls, ashtrays and candlestick holders, all being examples of the attention to detail, that more than anything else was the mark of Arne Jacobsen.
& Used as a part of table decoration on special occasions, the Royal Bowl is as beautiful as it is timeless.
Stainless Steel
Royal Bowl.pdf
Product Sheet - Bowl
AJ_Hotel_03.jpg
Hotel Royal
AJ_Hotel_05.jpg
Hotel Royal
AJ_Hotel_04.JPG
Hotel Royal
FLOWERPOT VP4
Materials: Lacquered steel shade, polished steel stand, and matching fabric cord.
Dimensions: Ø: 230mm x H: 359mm
Story: In 1968 the students? revolts in Paris, Rome and the United States were overthrowing stiff, old values, and initiating the Flower Power-generation of peace, love and harmony. Same year, Stanley Kubrick pictured the future of the year 2001, featuring the Verner Panton Chair, and man was soon to set foot on the moon. In the world of design, a colourful, playful pendant hung in restaurants and exhibitions, and very soon, in everybody?s homes. The FlowerPot with its two semi-circular spheres facing each other has long proved its lasting design quality and is just as much a synonym of our time, too.
& Also as a desk lamp, the FlowerPot offers great style and great working light.
Matt Black
Yellow
Green
White
Chrome
FlowerPot VP4.pdf
Product Sheet
FPP04.jpg
FlowerPot Production
FPP07.jpg
FlowerPot Production
FPP06.jpg
FlowerPot Production
FPP03.jpg
FlowerPot Production
instructions flowerPot VP4.pdf
Manual
HANGER
Materials: Acrylic or wood with stainless steel hook
Dimensions: L: 446mm x H: 116mm
Story: In many homes, hangers and coatstands are what first meet the eye and the first indication that somebody resides in there. With Maria Berntsen?s hangers it?s easy to welcome guests? coats in an orderly and functional way with the promise of a home that cares for design and quality.
& Chose from clear or mat acrylic, birch wood or black wood
Black
Nature
Clear
Frosted
Hanger.pdf
Product Sheet
TOPAN
Materials: Lacquered aluminium with textile cord
Dimension: Ø: 210mm x H: 190mm
Story: Sometimes the simplest things are the most lasting and memorable, the Topan pendant being a brilliant example. It was the first mass produced lamp by Verner Panton, later to be followed by the FlowerPot. Topan's simplicity and coolness proves to be of lasting value. Topan was originally designed for the hotel and restaurant Astoria in Trondheim, Norway, in 1960. Here, Panton used his textile designs Geometry I to IV for floors, walls and ceilings in order to give the room a uniform image. The Topan pendants hung all over, dividing large rooms into smaller and more intimate spaces.
& in yellow, white, orange, red, turquoise, black and green - Topan is a true celebration of colour - just like M&M's.
Black
Brushed
Green
Red
Orange
Yellow
White
Turquoise
Mint
Topan VP6.pdf
Product Sheet
BMW_01_mini.jpg
BMW Museum Munich - Topan
instructions Topan VP6.pdf
Manual
FLOWERPOT VP5
Materials: Lacquered aluminium shade with stainless steel stem.
Dimensions: H: 1272mm x L: 500mm x W: 175mm
Story: In 1968 the students? revolts in Paris, Rome and the United States were overthrowing stiff, old values, and initiating the Flower Power-generation of peace, love and harmony. Same year, Stanley Kubrick pictured the future of the year 2001, featuring the Verner Panton Chair, and man was soon to set foot on the moon. In the world of design, a colourful, playful pendant hung in restaurants and exhibitions, and very soon, in everybody?s homes. The FlowerPot with its two semi-circular spheres facing each other has long proved its lasting design quality and is just as much a synonym of our time, too.
& The garden variation of the FlowerPot takes the original design back to the roots. Planted among grass, flowers and bushes, the pureness of the form stands just as tall as the lamp itself.
Black
Red
White
Orange
Turquoise
FlowerPot Garden VP5.pdf
Product Sheet
FPP10.jpg
FlowerPot Production
FPP02.jpg
FlowerPot Production
FPP06.jpg
FlowerPot Production
FPP09.jpg
FlowerPot Production
Instructions FlowerPot Garden VP5.pdf
Manual
BULB
Materials: Clear mouth blown glass with clear PVC or fabric cord, both with porcelain lamp holder and ceiling rose.
Dimensions: Ø: 110mm x H: 163mm
Story: With Bulb, Danish light artist Sofie Refer lit up the new millennium and a new classic was blown. The shape refers to the first electrical light bulbs by using thick transparent glass. Sofie Refer continues an elegant Nordic tradition, adding her own passion and femininity. The small irregularities in the mouth blown glass make each of the pendants one of a kind and add the story of the glass master?s personal efforts in changing sand, soda and chalk into a modern classic using a thousand year old method.
& GOOD DESIGN award 2001 by the Chicago Athenaeum: Museum of Architecture and Design; Wallpaper Design Award 2006 for Best Light.
Red
Black
Clear
Bulb SR1.pdf
Product Sheet
bulb_sketch_ALL.jpg
All Bulb Sketches
Instructions Bulb SR1.pdf
Manual
ROYAL CANDLESTICK
Materials: Stainless steel
Dimensions: Ø: 115mm x H: 53mm
Story: The Hotel Royal in Copenhagen is considered one of Arne Jacobsen?s greatest masterpieces, built in the years from 1956 to 1960. The ?Gesamtkunstwerk? included almost every little detail from the wall-mounted curtain holders to the furniture and lamps, and right down to the tableware, all designed by Arne Jacobsen. The drop as a form, quoting Jacobsen?s own Drop chair, runs through the bowls, ashtrays and candlestick holders, all being examples of the attention to detail, that more than anything else was the mark of Arne Jacobsen.
& Used alone or together with the Royal Bowls, the Royal Candlestick holder adds a timeless quality to any table decoration.
Stainless Steel
Royal Candlestick.pdf
Product Sheet Candlestick
AJ_Hotel_03.jpg
Hotel Royal
AJ_Hotel_05.jpg
Hotel Royal
AJ_Hotel_04.JPG
Hotel Royal
FLOWERPOT VP1
Materials: Steel with lacquered finish and textile cord.
Dimensions: Ø: 230mm x H: 160mm
Story: In 1968 the students? revolts in Paris, Rome and the United States were overthrowing stiff, old values, initiating the Flower Power-generation of peace, love and harmony. Same year, Stanley Kubrick pictured the future of the year 2001, featuring the Verner Panton Chair, and man was soon to set foot on the moon. In the world of design, a colourful, playful pendant hung in restaurants and exhibitions, and, very soon, in everybody?s homes. The FlowerPot with its two semi-circular spheres facing each other has long proved its lasting design quality and is just as much a synonym of our time, too.
& The diameter of the upper sphere is twice as large as the lower one, making a perfectly balanced form. No wonder, the FlowerPot won Gute Form Bundespreis in 1972.
Cream
FlowerPot VP1.pdf
Product Sheet
FPP04.jpg
FlowerPot Production
FPP02.jpg
FlowerPot Production
FPP01.jpg
FlowerPot Production
FPP06.jpg
FlowerPot Production
FPP03.jpg
FlowerPot Production
Instructions FlowerPot VP1.pdf
Manual
FLOWERPOT VP3
Materials: lacquered steel and aluminium with clear PVC cord.
Dimensions: Ø: 230mm x H: 500mm
Story: In 1968 the students? revolts in Paris, Rome and the United States were overthrowing stiff, old values, and initiating the Flower Power-generation of peace, love and harmony. Same year, Stanley Kubrick pictured the future of the year 2001, featuring the Verner Panton Chair, and man was soon to set foot on the moon. In the world of design, a colourful, playful pendant hung in restaurants and exhibitions, and very soon, in everybody?s homes. The FlowerPot with its two semi-circular spheres facing each other has long proved its lasting design quality and is just as much a synonym of our time, too.
& Also as a table lamp, the FlowerPot offers great style and great light for even greater conversations.
Black
Chrome
Chrome
Purple
Red
Orange
Yellow
Turquoise
White
FlowerPot VP3.pdf
Product Sheet
FPP10.jpg
FlowerPot Production
FPP01.jpg
FlowerPot Production
FPP04.jpg
FlowerPot Production
FPP06.jpg
FlowerPot Production
FPP09.jpg
FlowerPot Production
Instructions flowerPot VP3.pdf
Manual
STAND
Materials: Stainless or powder coated steel
Dimensions: H: 1680mm x L: 340mm - Steel tube Ø: 22mm
Story: In many homes, hangers and coats stands are what first meet the eye and the first indicators of the residents. With Maria Berntsen?s Stand that can carry up to six hangers it?s easy to welcome guests? coats in an orderly and functional way with the promise of a home that cares for design and quality.
& Simplicity of the form works excellent with the stainless steel to a functional stand that also works visually.
Powder Coat
Black
Stand.pdf
Product Sheet
CORIUM
Materials: Leather on aluminium, black leather with yellow stitches & cord; tan leather with green stitches & cord.
Dimensions: Ø: 400mm x H: 230mm
Story: Corium is Latin for leather and the name of this striking pendant. With the juxtaposition of the softly shaped curves against the firmness and solidity of leather, Corium evokes a mood that is finely balanced between dualities: The feminine and the masculine, the yin and yang, tradition and innovation. Used in this new and unexpected way, leather becomes a highly modern way to implement nature's qualities in contemporary design.
& The leather is tanned with natural tannic acid from oak bark, using a thousand year old technique to create a very modern design.
Black
Tan
Corium PV1.pdf
Product Sheet
Corium_produktion02.jpg
Production
Corium_sketch03.jpg
Corium Sketch Zoom
Corium_produktion03.jpg
Production
Corium_produktion01.jpg
Production
Corium_sketch02.jpg
Corium sketch
Corium_sketch01.jpg
Corium Inspiration
Instructions Corium PV1.pdf
Manual
TIVOLI
Materials: Steel with lacquered or polished finish and white fabric cord
Dimensions: Ø: 220mm x H: 230mm
Story: To Jørn Utzon, his father?s naval engineering drawings became a lifelong fascination with ships and boats, along with light. More than a decade before Jørn Utzon created his masterpiece, the Sydney Opera House, he put his childhood fascination into this pendant, combining successfully the smoothness of the lines of a ship with the source of light for the first time.
& The choice for white or polished finish reminds of the waves and the northern light.
White
Chrome
Tivoli JU1.pdf
Product Sheet
JU1_Harbour_House.jpg
Tivoli Harbour House
JU1_CPH_Square.jpg
Tivoli CPH Square
Instructions Tivoli JU1.pdf
Manual
SHUFFLE TABLE
Materials: Lacquered MDF, solid beech and oak
Dimensions: Ø: 450mm x H: 690mm
Story: Mia Hamborg gives new life to the old Nordic craft tradition of turning wood by adding the colour and playful forms from old painted wooden toys. It?s up to you where you want to put this fine piece of furniture and being truly Nordic and democratic, you can even decide the form, colours and height of the table.
& This fine table has one function more important than all others: To create joy.
Disassembled
Assembled
Shuffle Table.pdf
Product Sheet
MHwork08.jpg
Mia Hamborg Workshop
MHwork03.jpg
Mia Hamborg Workshop
MHSketch01.jpg
Mia Hamborg Sketch
MHwork05.jpg
Mia Hamborg Workshop
MHSketch04.jpg
Mia Hamborg Sketch
MHwork02.jpg
Mia Hamborg Workshop
MHwork04.jpg
Mia Hamborg Workshop
instructions Shuffle table MH1.pdf
Assembly Instructions
SPINNING LIGHT
Materials: Spun aluminium shade with gloss lacquered exterior finish, silicone top and PVC cord.
Dimensions: Ø: 400mm x H: 340mm
Story: The spinning-top toy, a childhood favourite, inspires to the joyful form of the Spinning Light along with the process of metal spinning. Here, form truly meets function in an innovative way. It?s sleek, it?s sexy and it?s sure to become a new classic.
Purple
White
Spinning Light - variant
Spinning Light BH2.pdf
Product Sheet
Instructions Spinning Light BH2.pdf
Manual
Spinning_produktion06.jpg
Spinning Light Production
Spinning_sketch03.jpg
Spinning Lights
Spinning_produktion04.jpg
Spinning Light Production
Spinning_sketch01.jpg
Spinning Lights Sketches
DESIGNERS
Arne Jacobsen
Tradition: Its hard to say something that has not already been said about Arne Jacobsen (1902-1971), father of modern architecture and design in Denmark and the most influential architect and designer of the 20th century. Only 23 years old and still a student at the Royal Academy of Arts in Copenhagen, he received his first international award for furniture design at Exposition des Arts Decoratifs in Paris. Working as an architect all life, furniture became his media of expression in the 50?es and 60?es where he found his own style, the Ant chair (1952) showing his signature combination of strictness and floating form. In this period, where he was also a professor at the Royal Academy of Arts he reached world fame and achieved some of his best work, including his masterpiece the The Royal Hotel (1956-61) His attention to detail led to the design of furniture (Swan and Egg), lamps, tabletops and even door handles. Yes, the Hotel ROYAL pendants, that &tradition proudly produces today, were indeed the light of a golden era.
Innovation: Arne Jacobsen successfully melded modern functionalism with Danish traditionalism and though influenced by Le Corbusier and Mies van der Rohe, he initiated a modern style deeply rooted in Danish craftsmanship and materials, that had not been seen before. His works are said to reflect a form of "critical regionalism" in which traditional techniques collide with functionalist beliefs and this collision has ignited generations of architects and designers, giving them a firm ground to stand on and an openness to the new.
& Arne Jacobsen grew roses in the garden of his summerhouse but he wasn?t really satisfied until he found a nurseryman who had spent forty years of his life cultivating roses with a scent, flat-shaped roses like in the old Dutch paintings.
Jacobsen 571x205.jpg
Benjamin Hubert
Tradition: ?I try not to look too much at what other people are doing, otherwise its very difficult to do anything truly new? says British designer Benjamin Hubert (born 1984). His many times award winning lighting and furniture are material led and process driven, bringing simplicity and functionality in a natural equilibrium. This approach pays respect to the usual classic suspects such as Charles Eames and Dieter Rams. By trying to create a design philosophy of his own, Benjamin Hubert is indeed a true designer.
Innovation: After graduating from Loughborough University in 2006, Benjamin Hubert?s final year project ?Puff out lights? won the Corus materials prize at New Designers, received short-listings in two other awards, and won Best Graduating Designer of the Year at the Hub Class of 2006. Though short in years, the list of awards and prices is very long, including Blueprint 100% Design Best New Product 2009, Design of the Year/British Design Awards 2009 and Elle Decor British Design of the Year 2009.
Only few designers accomplish so much in such a short time and even before turning 25. This is not least thanks to his fascination of materials, including ceramic, wood and cork, Benjamin Hubert is already an established name in the world of design. Creating new objects means doing things that are relevant and innovative in aesthetics, functionality or materials. With the goal set to create happiness with his design, there are surely many more smiles to come from his hand.
& Benjamin Hubert is always curious to find new solutions and materials, often stopping to feel the texture on a piece of furniture or feeling the weight an old glass vase.
Hubert 571x205.jpg
Spinning_sketch03.jpg
Spinning Lights
Spinning_sketch02.jpg
Spinning Lights
Jørn Utzon
Tradition: Born in Copenhagen, but raised in Aalborg far away from the buzz, no one would have thought that the architect Jørn Utzon (1918-2008) should become one of the greatest architects ever. He is present in almost every family album, or more correctly so, are pictures of his Sydney Opera House which he started building in 1957. As a graduate from the Royal Academy of Arts in Copenhagen, he was influenced by Danish architect and author Steen Eiler Rasmussen. Utzon also often referred to the Swedish architect Erik Gunnar Asplund along with Alvar Aalto and Frank Lloyd Wright as his architectural kin. After travelling through Europe, the United States and Mexico, Utzon established his own practice in Copenhagen, working mainly as an architect throughout the world. His classic, elegant and yet very poetic lines emerged not only from materials but more importantly from light. Anyone who has had the chance to enjoy any work of Utzon?s will recognise the lines from his father?s (a naval engineer) detailed boat sketches, delivering a never ending source of considerations on form, light and lightness.
Innovation: Words as futuristic, global and original are often used about Utzon?s work, and when he won the contest for the Sydney Opera House the word genius was heard. Working anthropological when sourcing inspiration for his works is maybe what made his style really new and outstanding. The eye is never tired but always challenged, in his buildings or lamps. His lamp design reflected his buildings and even though the Tivoli Pendant was designed 10 years prior to the opera house, it holds the same strength and beauty. For good reasons Utzon became only the second person alive to experience to have his work recognised as World Heritage.
& Modest Utzon never wanted to be portrayed, stating his works as his portrait.
Utzon 571x205.jpg
Maria Berntsen
Tradition: The sculptural is important to me, says Danish designer Maria Berntsen (born 1961), who enjoys working with three dimensional objects because they always deliver new views from new angles. As a graduate from the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts, School of Architecture, she belongs to the Nordic tradition of fine lines and thought through functionality. Working with Danish design brands like Georg Jensen and Holmegaard, she underlines her relationship with the design tradition that goes back to designers like Henning Koppel, one of her sources of inspiration. Her hangers for &tradition, being her first product ever and today a design classic, truly embrace the essence of form and function in it?s simplicity and quality of material.
Innovation: ?For a design object to be truly new it must evoke new senses through its design and it must hold a lasting value?, says Maria Berntsen. Her innovation derives from experimenting with materials and forms from inspiration through photography, architecture and fashion - she herself being a skilled photographer. Working intuitively with her hands when creating, she knows that we perceive the final design intuitively, too. Our innate ability to decode forms in terms of quality and wellbeing is a never ending source of inspiration for her.
& Maria Berntsen has built up a broad palette of skills through working and studying internationally, and designing everything from coffee jugs to exhibitions.
Berntsen 571x205.jpg
Mia Hamborg
Tradition: Norwegian designer Mia Hamborg (b.1980), BA in furniture from the Steneby School of Crafts and Design in Gothenburg has a passion for order, functionality and colour. With her joyous and playful furniture she continues an old Nordic tradition for wood turning and brings new life into the material. She compliments designer Sir Terence Conran for his acknowledgment that modern people often live with limited space and therefore making storage a design issue. She doesn?t follow any strict design tradition, but the joy of life is definitely her inspiration.
Innovation: A turned wooden leg divided into pieces and splashed with colour is a daring and charming way of renewing the woodturning tradition. Her STACK table, made for &tradition, combines the playfulness of a BRIO clown with another Nordic tradition: Democracy. The users are free to compose their own table from the turned pieces and with the measures that will fit their home perfectly, spreading the aura of joy.
&: I can spend hours with a jigsaw puzzle, putting everything into various categories, it makes me peaceful, says Mia Hamborg.
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Norm
Tradition: We definitely see our work as a part of the Scandinavian modernist tradition ? functional, minimal, poetic and timeless - with a profound understanding of natural materials and a special attention to detail, says NORM, also known as the architects Kasper Rønn (born 1976) & Jonas Bjerre-Poulsen (born 1976), both graduates from the Royal Danish Academy of fine Arts in Copenhagen. The dynamic design duo, being true modernists, believe in design where focus is on meeting a real need in stead of creating one and this reflects in their work as architects as well as industrial designers. Function, production and form are equally important components, and though being true Nordic values, this also applies for the traditional Japanese design, the Arts & Craft and the Shaker Movement, all traditions, NORM is influenced by. Though bearing a strong admiration for some of the most pure minimalists like Mies Van der Rohe, Donald Judd, John Pawson, Alberto Campo Baeza and Noato Fukasawa, NORM is not easy to categorize. In the architect and designer Carlo Scarpa, with his obscene attention to detail, the duo see a kinship which they express in the that little twist or playful detail they add to their design.
Innovation: NORM combines materials in a new way and rethink details, but this is as far as a design strategy goes. We have no strict formula, every new design comes about in its own way, every invention is built on something already existing, says NORM. Speaking with one voice of design but being two highly creative individuals, the collaboration between them often leads to new designs, throwing an idea forth and back .With MILK for &TRADITION NORM?s intention was to create a soft light that could be placed in all the corners of the home to create a cozy atmosphere. With it?s innovative combination of translucent glass shade on wooden legs MILK stands firm in a strong Danish tradition, not unlike NORM themselves.
& Kasper and Jonas have known each other since high school and have worked together numerous places including a home for mentally challenged people, a gas station and at the Ole Palsby Design office.
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MILK Lamp
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MILK Lamp
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MILK Lamp
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MILK Lamp
Norm
Tradition: We definitely see our work as a part of the Scandinavian modernist tradition ? functional, minimal, poetic and timeless - with a profound understanding of natural materials and a special attention to detail, says NORM, also known as the architects Kasper Rønn (born 1976) & Jonas Bjerre-Poulsen (born 1976), both graduates from the Royal Danish Academy of fine Arts in Copenhagen. The dynamic design duo, being true modernists, believe in design where focus is on meeting a real need in stead of creating one and this reflects in their work as architects as well as industrial designers. Function, production and form are equally important components, and though being true Nordic values, this also applies for the traditional Japanese design, the Arts & Craft and the Shaker Movement, all traditions, NORM is influenced by. Though bearing a strong admiration for some of the most pure minimalists like Mies Van der Rohe, Donald Judd, John Pawson, Alberto Campo Baeza and Noato Fukasawa, NORM is not easy to categorize. In the architect and designer Carlo Scarpa, with his obscene attention to detail, the duo see a kinship which they express in the that little twist or playful detail they add to their design.
Innovation: NORM combines materials in a new way and rethink details, but this is as far as a design strategy goes. We have no strict formula, every new design comes about in its own way, every invention is built on something already existing, says NORM. Speaking with one voice of design but being two highly creative individuals, the collaboration between them often leads to new designs, throwing an idea forth and back .With MILK for &TRADITION NORM?s intention was to create a soft light that could be placed in all the corners of the home to create a cozy atmosphere. With it?s innovative combination of translucent glass shade on wooden legs MILK stands firm in a strong Danish tradition, not unlike NORM themselves.
& Kasper and Jonas have known each other since high school and have worked together numerous places including a home for mentally challenged people, a gas station and at the Ole Palsby Design office.
Poulsen-R?nn 571x205.jpg
Pernille Vea
Tradition: ?I stand in the modern Nordic design tradition, that?s what made me, it is my creative heart blood?, says Pernille Vea (born 1965), over two decades one of the most influential Danish designers. Since she graduated from the Danish Design School with a degree in furniture and spatial design, her work list has grown along with the (very long) list of design awards she has received. The Black Contour series that she has designed for MENU is among the most loved table wear in Scandinavia. Having no design icons as such, both the artists Donald Judd and Anish Kapoor?s search of space and emptiness in their works along with Jasper Morrison?s understatement offer inspiration in Pernille?s work.
Innovation: Life is innovative. What we do at home or working, during holidays or in the car is ever changing. And basing new ideas on this context, always reflecting the era we live in, Pernille Vea?s designs become intriguing and vibrant. In the search of things that keep a dialogue with the user, function, tactility and emotions are taken into consideration. In her hands, modern Nordic is interpreted in a form that combines simplicity with proportions, minimalistic and honest. Making the material talk is one of her characteristics, heard eloquently in the Corium pendant lamp for &tradition. The Corium pendant lamp is her first furniture design in six years, taking her back to her roots.
& Pernille Vea never sleeps in the plane from Hong Kong to Copenhagen, because it is so amazing to miss.
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Pernille Vea
Sofie Refer
Tradition: Sofie Refer (b.1974) is a Danish designer who graduated from from The Danish Design School department of Product Design in 2003. She is partner and Creative Director
of Refer + Staer Aps, a Danish design lighting company and her designs play with Nordic
simplicity in a more extravagant way. Lighting design is her passion and she is fascinated by
light in all it?s aspects. The Bulb pendants she has created for &tradition expresses her respect
for the Nordic tradition of glass blowing and simple, pure forms, quoting the first source of
electric light. But her approach to light is fun and feminine, sophisticated and sensuous.
Innovation: Working with international architects such as Conran Contracts, Aukett, CBA
and Bates Smart, Sofie Refer is taking the Nordic light tradition way out in the world. She takes
great pleasure in working with architects on projects where her customized lightning design
closely follows the architecture and interior.
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Sofie Refer
Verner Panton
Tradition: Verner Panton (1926-1998) once said, ?I have never learned so much from somebody as from Arne Jacobsen?. Yet his own fluid, futuristic style couldn?t have been further from Jacobsen?s, for whom he worked from 1950 to 1952. He graduated as an architect from the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Copenhagen in 1951, and later he founded his own studio and went in the opposite direction of most of his contemporary Danish designers. Pop aesthetics in furniture and interiors were born. Verner Panton successfully interpreted the ?a-changin? times of the hippie movement and moon landing into visionary colourful interior, lighting and furniture. To him, colour was always more important than form and creating his own theory of light based on Goethe and the Bauhaus painters, he believed, that colour could evoke feelings. The Flowerpot summarized this theory, lightening up in a variety of bright colours.
Innovation: Being a child of his time, the new materials emerging gave Panton the opportunity to create objects never seen before and to revolutionise interior design with his total concepts in saturated hues. This is seen in the headquarters of Der Spiegel in Hamburg or his parent?s inn on the island of Fynen where everything down to the aprons of the waitresses was designed in matching colour. He was first on many things from developing the first inflatable furniture to the first chair cast in one piece, the S chair (1960). Where he really moved the way we live was in his light and colour, this also being the title of the 1998 Panton exhibition at Trapholdt museum in Denmark. The exhibition opened as planned on 17 September 1998, reigniting the fame of the enfant terrible of Danish design. However, Verner Panton had died in Copenhagen just 12 days earlier, making it also a tribute to the designer.
& In his young days, Panton often set off from Copenhagen in an odd looking converted Volkswagen for a trek across Europe, dropping in on fellow designers to share ideas - and good meals.
Panton 571x205.jpg
MANIFEST
Craft meets art. Function meets form. Material meets potential. This is Nordic tradition. And this is our heritage that we cherish and keep. But &Tradition is more. We aim to bridge the values of solid handicraft to contemporary design.
The principles of quality are timeless. But the beauty of design and the methods of production will never stand still. &Tradition will move on to reshape, to redefine and to reinvent. We utilize and combine new materials, uncover new techniques and break boundaries in manufacturing. And we challenge the limits of function, form and materials.
Thus, the collection of &tradition not only covers iconic designs and undiscovered gems from the masters of yesterday. It also features new works from leading designers of today and from the talent of tomorrow. The classics of now were the avantgarde of the past, and we will encourage the creation of what may become the classics of the future.
Our perspective is global. We scout for design talent beyond borders. We handpick the production facilities that will provide the finest quality, where ever they are. We market our collection through an international network. But our roots are still Nordic. Tradition is still a part of our identity.
That is why we believe in design that is made to last and in sustainable production. We respect nature that provide our raw materials, so we salute the tree that grew the wood and the sand that blew the glass. But even tradition will find new roads. And we lead the way at &Tradition.
&Tradition. The Nordic heritage in contemporary design.
GALLERY
Stockholm Furniture Fair 2010
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Stockholm Furniture Fair 2010
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Stockholm Furniture Fair 2010
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Stockholm Furniture Fair 2010
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Stockholm Furniture Fair 2010
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Stockholm Furniture Fair 2010
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Stockholm Furniture Fair 2010
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Stockholm Furniture Fair 2010
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Stockholm Furniture Fair 2010
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Stockholm Furniture Fair 2010
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Stockholm Furniture Fair 2010
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Stockholm Furniture Fair 2010
Norm Architects 02
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Copenhagen Apartment - MILK
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Copenhagen Apartment - MILK
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Copenhagen Apartment - MILK
Norm Architects 01
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Norm Architects - Topan
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Norm Architects - Topan
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Norm Architects - Topan
CPH Square showroom
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CPH Square - FlowerPot & Big FlowerPot
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CPH Square - Mega Bulb
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CPH Square - Topan
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CPH Square - Tivoli
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CPH Square - Topan
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CPH Square - Topan
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CPH Square - FlowerPot VP3
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CPH Square - FlowerPot VP4
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CPH Square - Big FlowerPot & FlowerPot
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CPH Square - Big FlowerPot & FlowerPot
Danish Design Center
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Danish Design Center - Verner Panton Exhibition
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Danish Design Center - Verner Panton Exhibition
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Danish Design Center - Verner Panton Exhibition
BMW Museum Munich
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BMW Museum Munich - Topan
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BMW Museum Munich - Big FlowerPot
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BMW Museum Munich - Big FlowerPot
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BMW Museum Munich - Topan
Menu A/S
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Menu A/S
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Menu A/S
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Menu A/S
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Menu A/S
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Menu A/S
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Menu A/S
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Menu A/S
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Menu A/S
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Menu A/S
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Menu A/S
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Menu A/S
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Menu A/S
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Menu A/S
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Menu A/S
Harbour House
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Harbour House Crane Room
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Harbour House - Tivoli
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Harbour House - Tivoli
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Harbour House - Tivoli
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Harbour House - Tivoli
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Harbour House - Tivoli
Microsoft Holland
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Microsoft Holland - FlowerPot
Cavendish Sq. - Annette Peters Ltd.
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Cavendish Square by Annette Peters Ltd. - FlowerPot VP1
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Cavendish Square by Annette Peters Ltd. - FlowerPot VP1
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Cavendish Square by Annette Peters Ltd. - FlowerPot VP1
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Cavendish Square by Annette Peters Ltd. - FlowerPot VP1
Shop Interiors
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Top Shop Copenhagen - FlowerPot
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Illums Bolighus - FlowerPot
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Café Fokus - FlowerPot VP3
Danish Bank
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Danish Bank - HANGER
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Danish Bank - HANGER
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Danish Bank - HANGER
SHOPS
For retail supplies, please contact:
Great Dane Furniture
Melbourne Head Office
116 Commercial Rd,
Prahran VIC Australia 3181
T. +61 3 9510 6111
F. +61 3 9510 6222
www.greatdanefurniture.com
www.greatdanefurniture.blogspot.com
AUSTRALIA
For retail supplies, please contact:
Collective
Ieperleet 5
8200 Brugge
Belgium
T. (+32) 50 34 31 18
F. (+32) 50 34 93 82
info@collective.bewww.collective.be
BELGIUM
Sjælland
Illums bolighus
Amagertorv 11
1160 København K
T. 33 14 19 41
www.illumsbolighus.dk
Magasin København
Kgs. Nytorv 13
1095 København K
T. 33 11 44 33
www.magasin.dk
Magasin Lyngby
Lyngby Hovedgade 43
2800 Kongens Lyngby
T. 45 88 44 33
www.magasin.dk
Magasin Fields
Arne Jacobsens Allé 12
2300 København S.
T. 32 47 06 00
www.magasin.dk
Illum
Østergade 52
1101 København K
T. 33 14 40 02
www.illum.dk
1000Chairs
Callisensvej 2-6
2900 Hellerup
T. 3961 1944
www.1000chairs.dk
Anton Dam
Gammel Kongevej 90
1850 Frederiksberg C.
T. 33 24 22 17
www.antondam.dk
Spotlight
St. Kongensgade 103
1264 København K
T. 3311 4400
www.spotlight2.dk
Designdelicatessen
Frederiksberg Allé 44
1820 Frederiksberg C
T. 3311 1470
www.designdelicatessen.com
Cph Square Space
Carl Jacobsens vej 16, indg. 5
2500 Valby
T. 3322 3360
www.cphsquare.dk
Casanova Møbler
Nørregade 39
4100 Ringsted
T. 5544 4446
www.casanovafurniture.dk
Casa Casino
Jægersborg Allé 7
2920 Charlottenlund
T. 3963 7086
Mekavi
Retortvej 1
DK-2500 Valby
T. 35 38 63 20
www.mekavi.com
Kirkeskov Hvidesteen Interiør
Hundige Strandvej 210
2670 Greve
T. 4360 1155
www.theboligshop.dk
Normann Copenhagen
Østergade 70
2100 København Ø
T. 35554459
F. 35554439
normann@normann-copenhagen.comwww.normann-copenhagen.com
Urban Living
Frederiksborggade 50
1360 København K
T. 3535 5249
www.urban-living.dk
Fyn
Kadec
Gåsestræde 7b
5700 Svendborg
T. 7020 3837
www.kadec.dk
Trend Bazaar
Bygmestervej 23
5750 Ringe
T. 6262 5400
www.trendbazaar.dk
Jylland
Angeleyes
Nørregade 27
6100 Haderslev
T. 7452 0412
www.angeleyes.dk
Brdr. Sørensen Møbler
Danmarksgade 25
9000 Aalborg
T. 9816 4144
www.brdr-sorensen.com
Entre Living
Haraldsvej 60-62
8960 Randers Sø
T. 86 20 10 21
Ingvard Christensen
Ladegårdsvej 3
7100 Vejle
T. 7585 8211
www.ingvardchristensen.dk
Jacobsen Plus
Grønlandsvej 8
8700 Horsens
T. 7564 8722
www.jacobsenplus.dk
Luxo Living
Skolegade 5
7400 Herning
T. 7022 3292
www.luxoliving.dk
Tendens
Gåseagervej 8-10
8250 Egå
T. 8622 2825
www.tendens-bolig.dk
DENMARK
For retail supplies, please contact:
Scandeco Sarl
15 Impasse Gallieni
06480 La Colle Sur Loup
France
info@scandeco.fr
www.scandeco.fr
FRANCE
For retail supplies, please contact:
Shapes GmbH
Salvatorplatz 3
80333 Munchen
T. (+49) 89 95417833
F. (+49) 89 95417973
sales@shapes-gmbh.de
www.shapes-gmbh.de
GERMANY
For retail enquiries please contact:
FOTOESTHISSIS S.A.
253 Kifissias Av.
145 61 Kifissia
Greece
T. (+30) 210 6236740
F. (+30) 210 6236727
communication-dpt@fotoesthissis.com
www.fotoesthissis.com
BOX Architects
2, Xanthippou str.
10675 Athens
Greece
T: (+30) 210 7248600
F: (+30) 210 7248604
M: (+30) 6932 570710
www.boxarchitects.gr
Design Shop - More Design For More People
Lepeniotou 36, 1st fl. Psirri
10554 Athens
Greece
Tel/Fax: (+30) 210 3210815
info@designshop.gr
www.designshop.gr
GREECE
For retail supplies, please contact:
&Tradition
Kongevejen 2
DK-3480 Fredensborg
Denmark
T (+45) 3920 0233
F (+45) 3920 0256
info@andtradition.dk
ITALY
For retail supplies, please contact:
Collective
Ieperleet 5
8200 Brugge
Belgium
T. (+32) 50 34 31 18
F. (+32) 50 34 93 82
info@collective.bewww.collective.be
LUXEMBOURG
NETHERLANDS
For retail supplies, please contact:
Form Focus
Steniaweg 13-D
3702 AE Zeist
T. (+31) (0)6 53 616 930
F. (+31) (0)84 225 44 11
www.formfocus.nl
fw@formfocus.nl
Illums Bolighus
Munkedamsveien 27
0251 Oslo
Norge
T. (+47) 22 01 55 10
Møbelgalleriet Stavanger
Løkkeveien 99
4008 Stavanger
T. (+47) 51 51 02 90
post@moebelgalleriet.no
Møbelgalleriet Kristiansand
Skippergt. 3-5
4611 Kristiansand S.
T. (+47) 38 02 08 50
F. (+47) 38 04 88 42
oystein@mobelgalleriet.no
Møbelgalleriet Moss
Kongensgt. 5
1530 Moss
T. (+47) 69 25 47 30
F. (+47) 69 25 30 47
asb@mobelgalleriet.no
NORWAY
Mesmetric
al. Zwyciestwa 187
81-521 Gdynia
Poland
T/F: (+48) 58 621 80 00
info@mesmetric.com
www.mesmetric.com
POLAND
SWITZERLAND
Shapes GmbH
Salvatorplatz 3
80333 Munchen
T. 89 95417833
F. 89 95417973
sales@shapes-gmbh.de
www.shapes-gmbh.de
SWITZERLAND
For retail supplies, please contact:
SMAK DESIGN STOCKHOLM AB
Finnboda Varvsväg 19 A,
S-13173 Nacka
Sweden
M. (+46) 708 600628
T. (+46) 871 78760
www.smakdesign.se
SWEDEN
For contract supplies, please contact:
Simply Scandinavian
70 Flaxman Road
London SE5 9DH
UK
T. +44 (0)207 095 8400
F: +44 (0)207 095 8984
sales@simply-scandinavian.co.uk www.simply-scandinavian.co.uk
For retail supplies, please contact:
95% Danish
Cypher House
Bampton Business Centre (South)
Weald, Bampton
Oxon OX18 2AN
UK
T. +44 1993 867078
F. +44 1993 852125
sales@95percentdanish.co.ukwww.95percentdanish.co.uk
UNITED KINGDOM
For retail & contract supplies, please contact:
Ameico Inc.
1 Church Street
CT 06776 New Milford
Connecticut
USA
T. (+001) (86) 03 54 87 65
info@ameico.com
www.ameico.com
UNITED STATES
JOURNAL
Jørn Utzon's Tivoli lamp now in chrome
Jørn Utzon's Tivoli lamp is now available in chrome with white fabric cord. This new version makes a bold statement and reflects its surroundings in the polished steel shades.
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Shuffle Table Nominated For Design Award
Our new Shuffle Table has become very popular and is now nominated in the catergory 'best new produkt 2010' in the Danish 'Bolig' magazine's annual awards. We look forward with anticipation to hear the announcement of the winner on the 10th of June.
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Bolig Magasinet Awards 2010
Shuffle_News.jpg
MILK
MILK lamp by Norm Architects
Materials: Opal glass shade on solid oak stand
Story: With MILK, the NORM architects Kasper Rønn & Jonas Bjerre-Poulsen find exciting new ways in an ancient Nordic tradition of wood and glass. Though perfectly suited as a lamp, MILK adds more than light to your home. MILK can be placed anywhere and lights up both body and soul and let?s the mind drift of to the zen of a Japanese spa.
&: MILK is the first item in a series of sensory design for the home.
Technical information :
Designed 2010
Size: H: 300mm Ø: 200mm
Light source: Max: G9 40 Watt
Cord measuring 3 meters
Approvals: CE
Cord colours: Black, White
MILK_white_news.jpg
Milk Lamp White
MILK_sketch_news.jpg
Milk Sketch & Production
Spinning Lights
Spinning Light by Benjamin Hubert
Materials: Spun aluminium with gloss lacquered exterior finish, PVC top and fabric cord.
Story: The spinning-top toy, a childhood favourite, inspires to the joyful form of the Spinning Light along with the process of metal spinning. Here, form truly meets function in an innovative way. It?s sleek, it?s sexy and it?s sure to become a new classic.
Technical information :
Designed 2009
BH1 Tall: H: 450 mm Ø: 230mm
BH2 Wide: H: 400mm Ø: 340mm
Light source: Max: 60 Watt
Pendant lamps
Cord measuring 3 meters
Approvals: CE
Colours: Black, White, Purple
.
Spinning_news.jpg
Spinning Lights
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Sketches 6 lamps
Shuffle table
SHUFFLE TABLE by Mia Hamborg
Materials: Lacquered solid wood
Story: Mia Hamborg gives new life to the old Nordic craft tradition of turning wood by adding the colour and playful forms from old painted wooden toys. It?s up to you where you want to put this fine piece of furniture and being truly Nordic and democratic, you can even decide the form, colours and height of the table.
& This fine table has one function more important than all others: To create joy.
Technical Information:
Designed 2009
Indoor use only
H: 690 mm Ø 450 mm
Colours: multicolour & beech
Shuffle_News.jpg
Shuffle Table
Topan now in Mint
Topan now comes in a refreshing new colour we call mint, to add a new cooler hue to the existing palette of classic Verner Panton colours. It will be shown for the first time at the Stockholm Furniture fair on February 9th to 13th 2010.
topan_mint_news.jpg
Topan Mint News
CONTACT
Kongevejen 2
DK-3480 Fredensborg
Denmark
T +45 3920 0233
F +45 3920 0256
info@andtradition.dk
Press enquiries:
press@andtradition.dk
Design Proposals:
send a digital presentation to:
design@andtradition.dk
&Tradition
CATALOGUE
CATALOGUE
Click here to see our on-line cataloque.
DOWNLOADS
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Spinning.jpg
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