This stylish walnut Vitra wall clock by George Nelson attracts your attention with its playful, yet easy to read 12 bars.
The many years of experience of Hella Jongerius as art director for colors and materials at Vitra can be clearly seen in the colored design of the Vlinder sofa.
The Vitra Trapèze table by Jean Prouvé was initially designed for the Cité Universitaire of Antony in Paris in 1948, and now available for all.
The Vitra stool Visiona by Verner Panton was initially made for the Cologne fair in 1970, and due to great interest, it was immediately taken into production.
Victor Papanek's book "The Politics of Design" offers you a nice overview of the work of this designer.
The Vitra Decoupage Vase Feuille by Ronan & Erwan Bouroullec is a contemporary decorative object, perfect for all your flower arrangements.
The Uten.Silo 2 organizer by Dorethee Becker from 1969 is beautiful and functional for your home office, bathroom or kitchen, and now available in new colors.
The Uten.Silo 2 organizer by Dorethee Becker from 1969 is beautiful and functional for your home office, bathroom or kitchen, and now available in new colors.
The Uten.Silo 2 organizer by Dorethee Becker from 1969 is beautiful and functional for your home office, bathroom or kitchen, and now available in new colors.
The Vitra Uten Silo 1 Storage compartments is a handy organizer for all small things in the office, kitchen, living room, bedroom or bathroom.
The Vitra Uten Silo 1 Storage compartments is a handy organizer for all small things in the office, kitchen, living room, bedroom or bathroom.
The Vitra Uten Silo 1 Storage compartments is a handy organizer for all small things in the office, kitchen, living room, bedroom or bathroom.
The swivel return and height adjustable Unix conference chair is a design by Antonio Citterio for the Swiss furniture brand Vitra.
Vitra's Tyde desk offers you optimal workspace without compromising on beauty and style.
The Vitra Turbine Clock belongs to the family of wall clocks with which George Nelson wanted to bring modern design into American homes while emphasizing the spirit of optimism in the 1950s.
A family business for eighty years, Vitra believes in lasting relationships with customers, employees and designers, durable products, sustainable growth and the power of good design.
The Swiss Vitra has been producing beautiful and iconic chairs, tables, lamps and home accessories for private homes as well as offices and public spaces since the 1950s. The strength of the brand lies in the products designed by the world's most renowned designers such as Charles and Ray Eames, Verner Panton, Jean Prouvé, Hella Jongerius, the Bouroullec brothers and many others. Together with them, they make high-quality design furniture with an eye for sustainability and innovation. Vitra already has many design classics to its name, such as the very popular Eames Loungechair and the Eames Plastic Chairs. The collaboration between Vitra and Ray and Charles Eames in the 1940s/50s was therefore a golden opportunity.
The Vitra Chairs:
Vitra is well known for its chair collection. For example, there is the Panton Chair, DSW, DAR, DAW and the DSR series, all very specific and iconic by now.
The Vitra tables:
There are dining side tables and coffee tables, most designed by Charles & Ray Eames. But the tables of the other designers are also very well known, such as the coffee table by the designer Isamu Noguchi. this table has a sculptural organic shape and a ditto glass table top.
Vitra Lamps:
Then you immediately think of the Akari collection, which consists of no less than 55 versions, this series was designed by Isamu Noguchi. The series consists of floor lamps, pendant lamps and table lamps. All these lamps are still made by hand from shoji paper and therefore beautifully traditionally filtered, creating a warm glow and a pleasant atmosphere.
Vitra Clocks
All Vitra clocks are designed by George Nelson, a well-known designer from the United States. Today, the studio of designer George Nelson is considered one of the founders of American modernism and one of the most influential American furniture designers of the 1950s. Nelson was active as a designer, graphic artist, architect, exhibition organizer, design manager and design promoter. A design critic and theorist, he is also the author of a number of books 'Tomorrow's House' (1947), 'Problems of Design' (1957), 'How to see' (1977), 'On Design' (1979), and a special rich journalistic body of work that has influenced the international approach to design and architecture for decades.