Details make the project.
So says the architect. The Easy door front has hand-crafted recessed handles in the door.
It’s an easy, soft and natural grip. The “Distressed Stone”door finish highlights the elegant detail and overall energy of the materials.
Each element has a strong personality, combining material and design. Daily use will make them even more special. So I wanted a long, narrow, brushed walnut solid wood, multi-puropose table with a rust finish base.
The walnut shade repeats in the Fly shelving unit with stone shelves. The shelving unit posts’ dovetail joints and rust finish feet captured my attention and convinced me that the Fly design has thought of it all.
What do people choosing a kitchen need and what are their starting conditions? There are so many answers.
We looked at living spaces first. There are open space lofts but also smaller apartments which need to be functional with carefully selected details, while still “carving out” corners and exploiting every centimetre of living space. Without abandoning its well-known collections, Callesella’s Fly Project goes into the city, opening up to a constantly shifting multi-coloured cosmopolitan urban setting, full of people with a diverse range of professions, interests, needs and wants. People who want what they like to be seen.
Arrangements and shapes, however large or small, allow free positioning of elements on existing walls or in absence of walls. Free-standing units, like a sideboard or open shelving unit, can become room dividers to create functional zones or be part of the overall living space.