Castor Armchair Plus Pad キャストールアームチェアプラスパッド

SGD 1,210.00

The Castor Armchair Plus presents a new take on the classic Castor Chair. Drawing on their eight years of experience working with Karimoku, BIG-GAME developed a design that makes use of the company’s skills and technology — from the CNC milling of solid wood to assembly and finishing by hand. The back and armrests feature beautifully articulated details that have been adapted from the Castor Low Chair and allow for a comfortable upright sitting position. The chair shares the Castor Chair’s three standard colors and is made from the same robust Japanese oak and plywood.

The upholstered version, Castor Armchair Plus Pad, offers extra comfort through the addition of a slim yet soft cushion pad, which is covered with a durable fabric that matches the color of the frame.

W554×D538×H804×SH460

Made In Japan

All items come with 3-Years Structural Warranty.

Delivery charges separately

Note: This product requires to be indented. Please contact us for further assistance. Call us @ +65 6259 2609 or Email us @ sales@retrocolony.com

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BIG-GAME is a design studio founded in 2004 by Grégoire Jeanmonod (Swiss, 1978), Elric Petit (Belgian,1978) and Augustin Scott de Martinville (French, 1980). Based in Lausanne, Switzerland. BIG-GAME designs objects for companies such as Moustache, Galerie Kreo, Praxis or Materia. Their creations are part of the collections of the Zürich Museum of Design, the Musée du Grand-Hornu, the Centre Georges Pompidou as well as the French National Fund of Contemporary Art. Their works have been shown in various exhibitions and been published in major magazines. The book ‘BIG-GAME Design Overview’ was published in 2008 on the occasion of their first monographic exhibition in a museum. Along with their design practice, the three founders of BIG-GAME are also professors at the ECAL/University of Arts and Design in Lausanne, and won the Swiss Federal Design Award in 2006 and 2010. The three designers draw on a vast repertory of ideas and put them nonchalantly into unexpected contexts, following the credo “Confrontation is giving birth to progress”.