
Neat & compact - this smart, perfectly matched duo is super handy to have around for a very basic need.
In Northern Europe the small boards are used as ‘breakfast or snack plates’. The larger size is a chopping board or perhaps for use as an anti-pasti / cheese platter…Combined with their function these boards have a very special feature: a laser engraved motif is carefully located on each board to perfectly match the beautiful swirling grain of the timber, deliberately chosen to produce a surprising result! Design: Olze & Wilkens.
Designs available: Scooter, Golfer, Skier, Eskimo, Astronaut, Ice Skater, Swimmer, On The Beach, Walking the Dog. Coming soon: Canoeist.
Small (15.5 x 23 x 1 cm)
Large (23 x 34 x 1.5 cm)
More info coming soon...
More info coming soon...
High quality, plywood trays with eye-catching prints from Remember.
NEW style trays in plywood, as shown, coming soon.
Size:
45.5 x 31 x 1.5cm
The name says it all! The daily rag (in fact produced from unsold newspapers) recycled into lovely, whimsical ‘doilies’. This version of the humble, old fashioned doily certainly captures the zeitgeist.
What more can we say? That it is a personal favourite.
100 doilies to a packet. Size: Ø 9 cm
More info coming soon...
More info coming soon...
This is going straight to the top of our Autumn - Winter fave list. A 'block' of wood has never looked so cool & it's infinitely useful... A bit of woody warmth to dot around the home or office - as a single log or chopped up!
Printed with photo-real wood 'grain' on all four sides, it's a reference to the relationship between wood & paper.
Pages: 1200 sheets each
Size: 60 x 60 x 150 mm
More info coming soon...
Pages: 50 sheets each
Size: 100 x 70 x 5 mm
1 - Cité de Refuge, Paris, France (1929 - 1933)
2 - Villa Savoye, Poissy, France (1928 - 1931)
3 - Unité d’habitation, Berlin-Charlottenburg, Germany (1956 - 1958)
4 - Chapel of Notre Dame du Haut, Ronchamp, France (1950 - 1955)
5 - Villa Savoye, Poissy, France (1928 - 1931)
6 - Unité d’habitation, Marseille, France (1945 - 1952)
Sold as a set of 6 (as shown)
Set of 8 different design cards in a folder.