The unconventional, conversational centrepiece.
Designed to move between seat and side table, the piece resists a single function. Its presence comes from both scale and form – carved from a single, substantial log and shaped to reveal detail from every angle.
Working from a 50-year-old trunk of aged teak, a single woodworker is responsible for carving and refining the form in its entirety. The log must be large enough to create the piece as one continuous volume, making each example unique in both scale and structure.
Every surface is sanded by hand before being finished in a black lacquer, giving the timber a semi-lustrous depth while allowing the material’s natural markings to remain visible. The process unfolds over six weeks from beginning to end, resulting in a piece that feels both grounded and deliberate.