Soft Edge70 Black powder coated steel 4 leg base Standard glider-Dusty green water-based lacquered oak veneer seat-None-None

 

Iskos-Berlin’s Soft Edge series features an organically shaped design, blending strong curves with extreme lightness to create a minimalistic design that optimises human-centric comfort. Featuring a wooden seat in a variety of finishes and straight steel legs, the Soft Edge 70 Stool is a short variant that shares the same uncluttered aesthetics with a feeling of lightness. Its strength and functionality ensure years of everyday use in a wide range of public and private environments – from corporate spaces and cafés to home environments.

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Soft Edge70 Black powder coated steel 4 leg base Standard glider-Dusty green water-based lacquered oak veneer seat-None-None

  • Item no: AA527-A404-AA51-01UF
  • Size: H47.5 x W37.5 x L37.5
  • Shell: Dusty green Water-based lacquered Oak veneer
  • Frame: Black Powder coated Steel
  • Glider: Standard gliders

Soft Edge 70 / Variants

Soft Edge 70 / Story

Soft Edge 70 / Designer

Iskos-Berlin is the design partnership of Aleksej Iskos and Boris Berlin, which was founded in 2010 and is based in Copenhagen. Together, they work across the fields of industrial, furniture and graphic design. The pair previously worked together at Komplot Design, Berlin was a founding member in 1987, with Iskos joining the practice in 1999. Berlin (b. 1958) is from St. Petersburg, Russia, and is a graduate of the city’s Institute of Applied Arts. While Iskos (b. 1965) is from Kharkov, Ukraine, and has studied architecture, engineering and industrial design in both Ukraine and Denmark. Their approach is to “see design as an art of storytelling” and they pay particular attention to the materiality of objects, often letting this define the language of their designs. Their exploratory nature often results in products that utilise new technologies and materials. For HAY, Iskos-Berlin have created the Soft Edge series of chairs and stools, a design created in the knowledge that there is no ultimate sitting posture, rather that our natural state is one of constant dynamic movement.