The Cutter Mini-Wardrobe is a very stylistically pure collection of shelves that, despite its modest size, incorporates a hanger rail, four hooks and a hat shelf. A practical little Cutter Box for gloves and caps can be placed on the shelf. With a Cutter Stool and matching box on the floor, you could even create a complete design-led solution for the narrow space in the hallway.
Pots can be used for holding flowers, herbs, sweets, ballpoint pens, jewellery or makeup, or for storing all sorts of other knick-knacks.
Regardless of where Pots is used in your home, it will undoubtedly be a smart, festive feature. Not least because Pots’ shape is a little daring and different and appeals to creativity and ingenuity.
Pots withstands ordinary cleaning with soap and water and can be used anywhere and for any purpose – both outdoors and indoors, and in every room of your home.
“We seek to create new well-designed, high-quality versions of classic objects.”
This is one of Skagerak Denmark’s basic philosophies, and so far it has resulted in new, trendy models of the archetypal beer box, stool and stepladder.
The latest addition to the range is the company’s exclusive take on the classic beach chair which is now being launched in a modern, streamlined version. The new chair is called Lean, and its design and high quality finish means that it crosses the traditional functional boundaries – it is equally suitable for use at concerts, on picnics, around the camp fire or as a children’s TV chair at home in the living room.
Lean is the work of the Danish designer Hans Sandgren Jakobsen, known among other things for his prize-winning Gallery chair from Fredericia Furniture. The new Lean beach chair consists of just two parts, and it takes up virtually no space when folded. It is easy to transport, and may be quickly and easily unfolded and reassembled.
A small bracket below the seat locks the chair when in use, and functions as a useful handle during transport.
Lean was awarded the Formland Design Award – Spring 2008 at this year’s Formland design fair in Herning, Denmark. The Award Committee substantiated its choice as follows: “Lean combines stunning design with aesthetic expression. It is at once classic and modern, and at the same time weighs next to nothing. Lean can be hung on the wall as a sculpture when not in use.”
Lean is made of moulded birch veneer with a black melamine or walnut top veneer. Lean will be available in spring 2008.
And this very same challenge has been met by Skagerak Denmark. The result is Get-a-Grip, an all-in-one kitchen utensil.
The two wide blades of laminated teak are uniquely joined so the utensil is just as easy to handle as if using your hands – except that you don’t burn your fingers or touch the food.
In other words, Get-a-Grip can be used as salad servers, a spatula, tongs for turning the meat, a cooking utensil and much more besides. The more you use Get-a-Grip, the more possible uses you will discover.
Because Skagerak Denmark is launching an elegant doormat for homeowners with a sense of detail and overall perspective. Skagerak Denmark simply leaves all other doormats wallowing in the dust in terms of quality, structure and design.
Skagerak Denmark’s doormat revolutionises notions of how a doormat should be built and designed. Its design is diametrically opposed to other doormats, because it is made using wooden rods of solid teak for scraping off dirt and an outer frame of hot-dip galvanised steel.
It looks extremely elegant and each wooden rod in the mat has rounded edges to withstand hard wear without splintering the wood. Teak also has the unique advantage of not rotting, because of its high natural oil content.