lowtide coffee table
from Linteloo
lowtide coffee table
Design Roderick Vos, 2006
Solid smoked oak
Made in Italy by Linteloo
A walk on the beach made a good concept: the sand structures as visible on the coast at low tide, gave designer Roderick Vos the idea to approach these fascinating structures with help of a computer controlled milling technique. Low tide is one of a kind!
The Lowtide tables feature a solid smoked oak frame. The top of the table consists of several pieces of wood and offered in either smoked, white wash or anthracite, varnished and finished in linseed oil. The table top has a CNC milled structured surface.
lowtide 3 rectangular: 47.2" w | 31.5" d | 13.4" h
lowtide 2 rectangular: 70.9" w | 31.5" d | 13.4" h
lowtide 1 rectangular: 70.9" w | 47.2" d | 13.4" h
lowtide III square: 39.4" w | 39.4" d | 13.4" h
lowtide II square: 47.2" w | 47.2" d | 13.4" h
lowtide I square: 55.1" w | 55.1" d | 13.4" h
Solid smoked oak
Made in Italy by Linteloo
A walk on the beach made a good concept: the sand structures as visible on the coast at low tide, gave designer Roderick Vos the idea to approach these fascinating structures with help of a computer controlled milling technique. Low tide is one of a kind!
The Lowtide tables feature a solid smoked oak frame. The top of the table consists of several pieces of wood and offered in either smoked, white wash or anthracite, varnished and finished in linseed oil. The table top has a CNC milled structured surface.
lowtide 3 rectangular: 47.2" w | 31.5" d | 13.4" h
lowtide 2 rectangular: 70.9" w | 31.5" d | 13.4" h
lowtide 1 rectangular: 70.9" w | 47.2" d | 13.4" h
lowtide III square: 39.4" w | 39.4" d | 13.4" h
lowtide II square: 47.2" w | 47.2" d | 13.4" h
lowtide I square: 55.1" w | 55.1" d | 13.4" h
$4,760.00 + free shipping
Linteloo started a brand that radiates "enjoying the good life" in every possible way. Raised by parents who owned a furniture store in The Netherlands, he had noticed the domination of minimalism in the early nineties. British and Italian design gurus were promoting an anonimous, almost sterile interior style in which practically anything personal should be hidden in cupboards, and anything "comfortable" was expelled to the bedroom.