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TOM DIXON FAT MODULAR SOFA
TOM DIXON FAT MODULAR SOFA
TOM DIXON FAT MODULAR SOFA
TOM DIXON FAT MODULAR SOFA
TOM DIXON FAT MODULAR SOFA
TOM DIXON FAT MODULAR SOFA

Tom Dixon • FAT

Modular sofa

Construction made of a mix of FSC certified timbers, no sag springs, high resilience foam and powder coated steel legs. Upholstered in bouclé fabric B084 (96% polyester and 4% acrylic). Designed by Tom Dixon.

The entire Tom Dixon collection can be ordered in our physical stores.

€3.060,00
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The FAT modular sofa was born from the need for a range that focused on the comfort expected from a sofa in a domestic setting. Being a fully modular system, it offers great adaptability. The FAT sofas feature a steel leg base, maintaining the aesthetic coherence with the rest of the FAT range. This comprehensive, versatile system is equally at home as a ‘living island’ in residences or in expansive configurations in airports, lobbies, and office breakout areas.

FAT sofas are made from FSC-certified* mix timber sourced from forests in Europe with responsible management that reduces deforestation and ensures the forests’ future preservation.

Tom Dixon, even without a formal education, is definitely one of the most important names in British design.

Whether as the owner of a store that sold not only emerging and experimental brand objects such as Droog and Inflate but also his own production, or later as Head of the Design Department and later Creative Director of Habitat, Tom Dixon demonstrates not only a keen talent and aesthetic sense but also a strong commercial instinct, a rare mixture in the world of design, and which inevitably leads to the foundation in 2002 of the brand with its name, and which created instant classics such as the Mirror Ball and Beat Light lamps.

With an exclusively British soul and never forgetting its values and traditions, Tom Dixon and its Design Research Studio are committed to innovation, through the production of extraordinary objects for everyday use.

These masterfully designed and produced objects populate some of the best known hotels and restaurants, but also shops and private residences.