louis ghost chair singapore

louis ghost chair singapore

louis ghost chair scratch

Louis Ghost Chair Singapore

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Please note additional materials, colours and sizes may be available. Please contact a Space sales consultant for further information. Philippe Starck's iconic Louis XV style armchair is the quintessence of baroque. Designed for Kartell, Louis Ghost's polycarbonate form excites and captivates. Philippe Starck's comfortable Louis XV style armchair is the quintessence of baroque revisited to dazzle, excite and captivate.  Louis Ghost is the most daring example in the world of injected polycarbonate in a single mould, available in transparent and coloured polycarbonate. Despite its evanescent and crystalline appearance, Louis Ghost is stable and durable, shock and weather resistant and can also be stacked six high.  This article has great charm and considerable visual appeal and brings a touch of elegance and irony to any style of home or public area. Chair with Arms 54w x 55d x 94h cm seat height 47 cm Transparent or Batch-dyed Polycarbonate You can send us a message to request more information about this product.




Just fill in the form below. I would like to receive special offers, news and invitations to events from Space Furniture 540mm(W) x 550mm(D) x 940mm(H) 1 - 3 Days, 4 - 6 Days Please enquire for more than 6 daysKartell is the world’s leading manufacturer of design classics made from plastic and the company continues to push the scientific limits of the material. Since its launch in 1949, Kartell has worked with designers to make plastic engaging and desirable. Componibili was one of the first pieces launched and is still in production today. Colour is Kartell’s trademark, but in 2001 it perfected transparent plastic with the Louis Ghost chair by Philippe Starck. Louis Ghost is now a multi-award winning design icon and their number one seller. View the Kartell collection Created by innovative architect and product designer Philippe Starck, the Ghost chair has become a modern cult classic. The Baroque style, with its flamboyant flourishes, is boiled down into one single mould of polycarbonate.




Polycarbonate is highly durable, wipe-clean and practical. Up to 7 of these chairs can be stacked.Philippe Starck is a legend of modern design whose repertoire has left permanent mark by producing some of the iconic shapes of the 20th century through his bold reworkings of everyday objects - from interiors to mass-produced consumer goods such as toothbrushes, chairs, and even houses.Please note: Not all of our ranges are on display in our furniture departments. Please callyour nearest John Lewisto check before you visit.0% APR Representative: If you buy this product in our shops, it's eligible for Interest Free Credit, which is available when you spend £1000 or more on selected home products. Terms and conditions apply: find out more H94 x W54 x D55cm Eligible for International Delivery Living and Dining Room Furniture Buying Guide Choosing new cabinet furniture Measuring Up for Furniture Guide Make sure your new furniture fits your home Delivery from 3 working days (lead time and available delivery slots will vary by postcode)




The backrest of the Louis Ghost Chair is rounded, the shape evoking that of antique medallions but it is more linear and geometric. This chair will lighten up any room and provide a grand statement. The transparency of the chair allows it to take up less space visually. - Installation & Free Assembly - Delivers in 7 to 10 Weeks (Why?) L49.5cm x D38.5cm x H118cm Wipe with damp cloth. Warranted against defects and wear under normal condition for 1 year. Log-in or Sign-up to access your order history, save your favourites Give $20, Get $20. Give your friends a each when you recommend HipVan, and get S$20 in store credits each time they make their first purchase! Log-in or Sign-up to get started. Log-in or Sign-up to ,access your order history & more! and be notified when it's back in stock 3-Year Furniture Protection Plan 5-Year Furniture Protection Plan & FREE Shipping on eligible orders. Used & new (37) from $40.55




Casper Dining Armchair in Clear Ikea 302.290.77 Tejn faux sheepskin, white FREE Shipping on orders over . Buy "Casper Dining Armchair in Clear” from Amazon Warehouse Deals and save 76% off the $169.99 list price. Combine artistic endeavors into a unified vision of harmony and grace with the ethereal Casper Chair. Allow bursts of creative energy to reach every aspect of your contemporary living space as this masterpiece reinvents your surroundings. Surprisingly sturdy and durable, the Casper Chair is appropriate for any room or outdoor setting. Pure perception awaits, as shining moments of brilliance turn visual vacuums into new realms of transcendence. 22 x 21 x 36 inches 17 pounds (View shipping rates and policies) #1,152 in Home and Kitchen (See Top 100 in Home and Kitchen) #11 in Home & Kitchen > Furniture > Kitchen & Dining Room Furniture > Chairs Manufacturer’s warranty can be requested from customer service. Click here to make a request to customer service.




Poly and Bark Louis Ghost Style Arm Chair, Clear Ghost Side Chair in Transparent Crystal LexMod Casper Dining Side Chair Clear 5 star77%4 star11%3 star5%2 star3%1 star4%See all verified purchase reviewsTop Customer ReviewsGreat quality!!!||Shipping was fast and packaging was adequate||Quality Control Should Be Fired|| Since I purchased this, the price went down a whopping 30%. But still worth it.|| See and discover other items: best office chairs, chair under $100, kitchen table chairs, eames chair, outdoor chairs no assembly I could be wrong, I could be right In town for the eight metre-high 720° at Singapore International Festival of Arts, architect and designer Ron Arad leads an introspective of his work Ron Arad knows a good question from a bad one.Speaking to a crowd of design enthusiasts and professionals in 72-13 along Muhammad Sultan road two evenings ago, the Israel native had folders upon folders of his work stocked in an iPad — which occasionally buzzed with messages — ready to share.




At 65 years young, the London-based designer is still sharp as a whip, and will not hesitate to call you out for a bad question. "What do you think of Brian's work," asks the first prompter. (Brian refers to Brian Gothong Tan, a film director, video artist and performance maker whose multimedia work is shown on Arad's eight metre-high installation made up of 5,600 silicon cords that mount to over 37 kilometres in length) "That was a bad question," Arad retorts. What sits well with Arad? When asked how to equate poetic license and art in a commercial sphere. Such a query is advantageous to the designer, who's worked with many brands that employ his artistry for commercial gains — and industry cred, of course. He's done chandeliers and bookends for Swarovski, distorted tempered steel for Vitra and crushed vintage cars for Fiat. 2016 has seen him work on high-profile public installations in London's Royal Academy of Art and St. Pancras International as well as redesign Washington D.C.'s infamous Watergate Hotel — and it's only September.




It's almost a drag to list all the accolades a designer as successful as himself has attained. Arad himself wasn't too fussed that evening. Donning his signature hat, loose-fit clothing and rubber sandals, he sat on Philippe Starck's Louis Ghost Chair (albeit grudgingly) and fielded questions from a rather hesitant audience — for nobody wanted to get heckled from the man himself.When he does speak, it's a delight. Showing a video of a wheel-less bicycle he had created for the Aids foundation along to the post-punk sounds of Public Image Ltd's Rise, he thanked Johnny Rotten and triumphantly declared, "I was right". Indeed he was — this was a man who lives by "what ifs" and is drawn to jealousy of the most positive sort. "If I see something I say, 'Why didn't I think of that?'", he shares on what attracts him. "When I go to an exhibition and I don't walk out jealous, it's not a good show". Well Tempered Chair1986 "What if we do a chair with just the skin, with no flesh and bone?




This is the first time that a company [Vitra] asked me to design for them. It's a light and easy portrait of an armchair. I didn't design the curves, they are the natural shape that happened when you bend temperate steel. I fixed them with wingnuts to show that nothing is final there. You're sitting on a piece of steel, but it behaves like a waterbed. People hesitated before they sat on it — will it support me? Will it cut me? There was a uniform sentence people said when they sat on it, 'Actually, its very comfortable'. It's good to break expectations if you do it positively." Bookworm1997"I had just moved to a new place and thought it would be nice to do a shelf and use fake books as brackets. The idea came when I did a workshop in Vitra and asked them to get me tempered steel, 1½mm thick and as wide as you can get. I played with it completely. I no idea what to do with it. Little did I know that this was my best selling piece. I did something that was purely artistic. There are lots of things wrong with it — the shelves are not parallel, it's very difficult to install, and it's not a commercial product."




Matrizia Sofa2015 "I was walking in Tel Aviv when my father passed away, and I saw this mattress. I was very jealous of this piece, so I took a picture of it and I started to draw, distorting it. I drew what it would be like in a domestic scene, to sit on it, and we made a little model of it. I walked in Mayfair and saw a homeless person's, and thought, 'he copied me!'" @the_real_ron_arad – friend of WIRED and an international design superstar – has brought the courtyard of London's Royal Academy to life with his latest alien-like creation. "Spyre" is a 16-metre-long steel tentacle that writhes unnervingly – and if you feel like it's also watching you, you'd be right: a huge screen shows what the sculpture is "seeing" through the camera at its tip. Look out – you're on creepy camera… #spyre #royalacademy #surveillance #ronarad #art A video posted by WIRED magazine (UK edition) (@wireduk) on Aug 2, 2016 at 11:03pm PDT Spyre2016 "This was at the Royal Academy of Arts in London.




We look at the sculpture, what if the sculpture looks back at us? I did this piece which is a play on the words spiral and spy. This is in a place where there are about 20 security cameras — this one's not hiding. The piece doesn't look the same twice. It never repeats itself. The secret of this piece is that all the joints are a complete circle. It can go as low as 2.8metres." Thought of Train of Thought2016"The brief was to do a suspended sculpture and the idea is that every year, a different artist will claim the wires. It looks like something that goes from nowhere to nowhere. This is the first thing you see when you take a train from Paris to London, or from [the rest of] Europe to London. It's Britain here, abroad there. It was symbolic that I installed it on the night of the Brexit vote [count]. We did this at 4am and there was a cleaner who looked up and said, 'I love it'. My colleague came four hours later and said, 'I love it'. We covered a big spectrum here."Ron Arad's 720° is happening from now till 17 September at The Meadow, Gardens by the Bay.

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