Gubi Beetle Stool Fully Upholstered

Designer: GamFratesi
€999.00
Fabric category: *
Name Fabric and colour code: *
Piping: *
Color Legs: *
  • Black
  • Chrome
  • Black Chrome
  • Brass
  • Antique Brass
Glide Option: *
Height: *
Shipping Costs
€88.25
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GamFratesi's design takes its creative drive from a fusion of tradition and renewal and in an experimental approach to their chosen materials and techniques.

With their dual traditional background, Stine Gam and Enrico Fratesi draw on the classic Danish furniture and craft tradition as well as the classic Italian intellectual and conceptual approach.

From this cross-cultural substrate they create furniture that respectfully reflects tradition while also featuring unique embedded stories, symbols and associations, often expressed in a minimal form.

For examples of upholstery click here

To download a list of available fabrics click here

Specifications

Laminated molded veneer with seat and back in 2 separate parts. The 2 parts are joined together with a steel fitting milled into the 2 shells. The stool is fully upholstered.

More information about the fabrics can be found here.

Size Description

Counter Height: 108cm x Width 53.5cm x Depth: 58cm Seat height: 65cm Seat depth: 50cm

Bar Height: 118cm x Width: 49cm x Depth: 58cm Seat height: 75cm Seat depth: 53.5cm

  • GamFratesi

    GamFratesi Design Studio was established in 2006. Stine Gam (born 1975) and Enrico Fratesi (born 1978) belong to the latest generation of furniture architects. Stine is Danish, while Enrico is Italian and together they represent a new interpretation of the meeting between Danish and international design traditions. GamFratesi's design takes its creative drive from a fusion of tradition and renewal and in an experimental approach to their chosen materials and techniques. With their dual traditional background, they draw on the classic Danish furniture and craft tradition as well as the classic Italian intellectual and conceptual approach. Understanding a tradition and addressing it actively in the workshop makes it possible to expand on it. From this cross-cultural substrate they create furniture that respectfully reflects tradition while also featuring unique embedded stories, symbols and associations, often expressed in a minimalist idiom.
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