T
he EDGE table is a study in precision and structure. Its name refers to the defining gesture of the design: legs that rise to square the tabletop’s corners, framing its perimeter with clarity and intent. Rather than being hidden or secondary, the legs assert themselves as architectural features—visible, integral, and exact.
Finished in a high-gloss lacquer, the table’s surfaces reflect light with crisp sharpness, underscoring the bold geometry of its construction. The composition is minimal but deliberate, where every element is expressed, and nothing is ornamental beyond its role in the whole.
EDGE is both a functional piece and a spatial statement—where design meets discipline, and structure becomes form.

