Furniture manufacturers Evostyle consult and collaborate with architects and designers from process to production to create timber products that are well crafted, low-cost and sustainable.
May 31st, 2011
What does your company supply?
We supply 100% Australian made quality designer furniture, and architectural products. We specialise in tables and stools, but also produce screens, beds and sofas.
Where do you distribute?
The products and furniture we have produced have been shipped all over the country, and even internationally. We can arrange crating and delivery anywhere in the world.
Describe your customers.
Our customers tend to be people that have an eye for quality and craftsmanship, and want a piece of furniture to last. We offer a high tech service to architects and designers, who not only appreciate our shop drawings, but also our ability to fulfil large orders and meet tight deadlines.
What sets your company apart?
We have generations worth of experience in working with solid timber, and have adopted cutting edge technology in our manufacturing process using integrated Cad/Cam software. However our woodturning capabilities with our CNC lathe (the only one of its type in the southern hemisphere) and our experience in 3D milling really sets us apart from any other furniture manufacturer.
Luke and Louise, founders of Evostyle
What is good design to you?
Good design is a functional, yet beautiful product that is faultless in quality.
What does the future hold?
Evostyle aims to keep high quality manufacturing in Australia. We are passionate about good and functional design, and are excited about working with people who are likeminded in this respect. We have a very positive outlook on where we can go from here, knowing that we can offer people services and products that they are not able to source elsewhere.
Evostyle
evostyle.com.au
A searchable and comprehensive guide for specifying leading products and their suppliers
Keep up to date with the latest and greatest from our industry BFF's!
Marylou Cafaro’s first trendjournal sparked a powerful, decades-long movement in joinery designs and finishes which eventually saw Australian design develop its independence and characteristic style. Now, polytec offers all-new insights into the future of Australian design.
Savage Design’s approach to understanding the relationship between design concepts and user experience, particularly with metalwork, transcends traditional boundaries, blending timeless craftsmanship with digital innovation to create enduring elegance in objects, furnishings, and door furniture.
Channelling the enchanting ambience of the Caffè Greco in Rome, Budapest’s historic Gerbeaud, and Grossi Florentino in Melbourne, Ross Didier’s new collection evokes the designer’s affinity for café experience, while delivering refined seating for contemporary hospitality interiors.
The design of a spectacles shop by LAANK reflects the authenticity and craftsmanship of the bespoke products on offer.
Built on a wealth of knowledge and a passion for valuable design, Seaton McKeon of studio.mckeon, in collaboration with James Laffan, presents the latest furniture collection, Neatt.
The internet never sleeps! Here's the stuff you might have missed
Lacquered in warm timber tones and complemented by high-quality furniture and fixtures, the new HQ for Salta Properties is a home away from home.
An outstanding line-up of participants will contribute to a beautifully curated exhibition in Thailand that delves deep into the collective thinking of architecture in our region and helps set a progressive agenda for the future of design.
The latest iteration of Tanatap deploys walls as a key architectural device to create both a cooler microclimate and elevated spatial experience.
Wood Marsh, a practice that spans 40 years, has been the first to design many of Melbourne’s landmark infrastructure projects – including the monumental noise walls along the Eastern Freeway (the first non-building to receive the Victorian Architecture Medal), Eastlink, the Geelong bypass and the pedestrian bridge at the west end of Bourke Street. The […]