Every year, the rhythm is the same. Somewhere between April and May, the world gradually shifts—opens up. As the light lingers and the air turns soft, we’re slowly starting to tend towards the outdoors—to the quiet of early mornings, the gatherings that stretch into dusk, and the small rituals that define the season.
From the May Series—comprising tables, chairs, and benches shaped for spontaneous dinners or unhurried afternoons—to portable companions like the Karl-Johan and Adventure Light, designed to weather the outdoors, and indoor lamps like the softly sculptural Kizu and Brolly, easily brought along for an evening on the terrace, each piece follows the cadence of the season.
With the arrival of warmer days, New Works invites you to shape the season with pieces created for life both outdoors and in—furniture made to meet the open air, and portable objects that move effortlessly between inside and out, suited to patios, balconies, and open windows as daylight lingers and evenings unfold.
From the May Series—comprising tables, chairs, and benches shaped for spontaneous dinners or unhurried afternoons—to portable companions like the Karl-Johan and Adventure Light, designed to weather the outdoors, and indoor lamps like the softly sculptural Kizu and Brolly, easily brought along for an evening on the terrace, each piece follows the cadence of the season.
With the arrival of warmer days, New Works invites you to shape the season with pieces created for life both outdoors and in—furniture made to meet the open air, and portable objects that move effortlessly between inside and out, suited to patios, balconies, and open windows as daylight lingers and evenings unfold.
Let the Pleat Pitcher lend its sculptural charm to late-summer tablescapes—filled with water, chilled wine, or garden stems—while portable lighting extends its soft light to the last hour of the day. Carefully shaped and built to endure, each object lends weight to the fleeting.
Outdoors or through open windows, close to home or further afield—these objects are companions for the long days ahead. A call to step outside, linger longer, and savour the beauty of the warmer days ahead.
Next Read
Wilma Nawara’s creative path is one shaped not by the absence of limits, but by the quiet power of structure. For her, boundaries are not barriers; they are a framework for imagination — a way to focus and deepen the act of making. From childhood memories of crafting objects with intention to her discovery of ceramics as a medium that balances form and feeling, Wilma has always gravitated towards processes that require both intention and intuition.