Design Collection dedicated to the home interiors, contract and the multifunctional spaces, combines the wisdom of a great manufacturing tradition with the style and energy of modern designs. Thanks to technology and processing innovation, the wood becomes a major player in the furnishing trends, bringing with it the value of the substance and expressing great imagination.
Root tables and Origami table belong to Design Collection, the new collection of Natisa tables and chairs, dedicated to the home interiors, contract and the multifunctional spaces, combines the wisdom of a great manufacturing tradition with the style and energy of modern designs.
Thanks to technology and processing innovation, the wood becomes a major player in the furnishing trends, bringing with it the value of the substance and expressing great imagination. Materials, fashionable colors, fabrics and design details play with each other, in search for a beauty rich in character.
Root table, sturdy and dynamic like a root
Design: Roberto Iacuzzi
It is a table whose ash base evokes the shape of the ‘root’. Root is a creation by designer Roberto Iacuzzi, who – as was the case for the base available in some models of Natisa chairs – has entrusted the role of protagonist to a central tube, where the four legs are anchored.
‘In Root, the legs,’ explains Roberto Iacuzzi, ‘move close together to meet exactly at this point, where they are anchored, and then they develop, widening below the top to support it.’ Precisely this ‘play’ of closing toward the ‘root’ and then reopening gives dynamism to the base and makes Root a unique piece of design, made even more original by the contoured shape of the base available in several finishes.
Origami table, Asian inspiration
Design: Giulia Vincenzutti
Origami is the Japanese art of paper folding. In Natisa’s Origami table the material is different, but the aesthetic effect remains the same; its very designer Giulia Vicenzutti confirms it: ‘I thought,’ she explains, ‘about a structure that would be light and sturdy at the same time: wood, like a sheet of paper, “folds” to give life to a new shape.’
The base is formed by several pieces of wood, yet it looks like a single element: a visual continuum made possible thanks to the mastery of Natisa in working and joining the different parts that make up the structure. The end result is definitely impressive: the table by itself furnishes the living area with great personality, becoming the protagonist of the environment.
The Origami top can be chosen in veneer, solid oak, or in the elegant version in bevelled smoked glass, which offers a glimpse of the play of balance and joints of the shapes that support it.