Newsletter
Each year, the designs in our collection evolve to new levels that continually impress. Today’s designers are engaging with a unique appreciation of past, present, and future, lending to a design landscape that fosters innovation and continues to inspire us. This week, we’re highlighting five of our favorite designs from this past year to propel you into 2024.
PK0 A
Poul Kjærholm
Poul Kjærholm’s one-of-a-kind PK0 A™ chair was designed in 1952, at the very beginning of the Danish designer’s tenure at Fritz Hansen. Highlighting the range of his talent as a furniture designer, the curved chair – now reissued in black colored ash with cinnabar red spacers – is a functional sculpture and a seminal piece of design history. The design’s innovative silhouette and fluid geometry are striking, capable of instantly elevating a room with its presence alone. Also available in Oregon pine.
CURTAIN CONSOLE
Laufer and Keichel
The Curtain family is a collection of designs that amplify the durability, strength, and versatility of solid wood, and recently, the collection has been expanded to include the Curtain Console. Precisely crafted from sustainable hardwood, the table is defined by its curtain-like legs, which appear to flow in a wave-like pattern, offering a fluid expression not often explored in solid wood furniture. Available in ash, white oiled oak, knotty oak, oak color stain, American cherry, American walnut, or knotty American walnut.
MALLOW
Note Design Studio
With Mallow, Note Design Studio has challenged traditional chairs in both construction and design. The result is an exciting innovation of contemporary soft seating where the organic design offers an extraordinarily good comfort. Featured in Labofa's Contemporary Collection, the chair's rounded edges and plush upholstery feel immediately forward-thinking, and serve as a vehicle for creating seductive lounge spaces. Available in two sizes and as a sofa.
ASPIDE
Gianfranco Frattini
Aspide is a sleek, futuristic table lamp, showcasing a sparkling chromatic finish. Serpentine in shape, the lamp is both functional and playful, serving as a statement piece while standing as an homage to industrial design. Aspide was first developed in 1970 by Gianfranco Frattini, yet feels equally suited for the year 3000. At its core, the design is a versatile task lamp which can be manually adjusted to create either direct light for work or reading, or turned toward the wall to create a softer, ambient glow. 


CLUB 44
Angelo Mangiarotti
Angelo Mangiarotti’s contributions to Italian design cannot be overstated, and his legacy lives on in his designs—one of which is the Club 44 Table. Designed specifically for a cultural club of the same name in La Chaux-de-Fonds, the table was only produced for the club until now. Like many of Mangiarotti’s designs, the Club 44 Table finds its roots in the designer's passion for architectural concepts, and presents a striking addition to the contemporary home. Conical base in concrete with glass or wood tabletop options.