You’ve heard of getting lost in a good book, but can you say the same about a table? British design brand Duffy London is back with yet another mesmerizing creation that invites viewers to lose ...
We’ve previously featured Duffy for his playful Swing Table, a modular unit that suspends guests around a long table. Like the Swing Table and Duffy’s other designs, the Abyss Table expertly executes ...
The main idea was to make a piece of sculpture,” says Paris-based designer Mattia Bonetti of the fantastical dining table he dreamed up in 2003. “I was imagining something telluric, from an abyss ...
Christopher Duffy’s furniture looks like it belongs in a Magritte painting. The British designer creates pieces made of equal parts whimsy and precision, meaning his portfolio includes things like ...
The Kraken Abyss Table is a study in topography from Christopher Duffy, crafted using layers of Plexiglas and sustainably sourced timber. Depicting a geological cross-section of the ocean bed, this ...
The designers from Duffy London experimented with the materials glass, Plexiglas and wood for an entire year before coming up with their design for the Abyss coffee table. The London studio used a 3D ...
This week landlocked design bloggers have been swooning over London-based designer Christopher Duffy’s Abyss Table, a mesmerizing sculpture masquerading as a coffee table that mimics the deep blue sea ...
With his 6-foot-long, 3-foot-wide glass-topped dining table, furniture designer Christopher Duffy depicts varying levels of the seafloor. The Abyss ($41,000, duffylondon.com), Duffy says, pays tribute ...
Riding a wave of layered tabletops, Christopher Duff's Abyss Table uses stacked sheets of glass and wood to create a bathymetric effect and is to be given a limited run of merely 25. A £6,960 ...