The Concetto collection from Caesarstone captures the natural beauty of semi-precious stones for deeply coloured and patterned surface finishes.
Hand-cut slices of agate, quartz, amethyst and petrified wood make for striking surfaces by way of Caesarstone’s Concetto ® collection. Popular in kitchens and bathrooms, each piece takes a single skilled craftsperson a full week to produce – a blend of art, nature and technology.
Concetto® can be used on walls, benchtops, splashbacks, vanities and furniture. Some of the stones are translucent, so the brilliant colours and patterns can be backlit for an even more striking effect that intensifies the natural colour play and markings.
Petrified Wood (left) and Petrified Wood Classic (right)
The collection includes Blue, Grey and Brown Agates™, White Quartz™, Red Tiger Eye™, Amethyst™ and Petrified Wood™. Each variant draws the imagination to the natural world with its spectrum of colours and patterns.
Ideal for bringing a sense of luxury to interiors, Caesarstone’s Concetto® collection of semi-precious stone surfaces are heat and scratch resistant, easy to clean and never require sealing.
INDESIGN is on instagram
Follow @indesignlive
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!
London-based design duo Raw Edges have joined forces with Established & Sons and Tongue & Groove to introduce Wall to Wall – a hand-stained, “living collection” that transforms parquet flooring into a canvas of colour, pattern, and possibility.
The new range features slabs with warm, earthy palettes that lend a sense of organic luxury to every space.
For Aidan Mawhinney, the secret ingredient to Living Edge’s success “comes down to people, product and place.” As the brand celebrates a significant 25-year milestone, it’s that commitment to authentic, sustainable design – and the people behind it all – that continues to anchor its legacy.
Despite its long and rich history, signwriting is a profession in decline. Will Lynes’ new show, Oily Water at Canberra Glassworks, aims to showcase the techniques of the trade to highlight its potential in design.
The new range features slabs with warm, earthy palettes that lend a sense of organic luxury to every space.
In this edition of The Edit, take a closer look at Pedrali’s 36th showing at Salone, where spatial choreography, and new ideas in form, function and material come into view.
Emerging from millennia of geological force, each exquisite slab tells a singular narrative etched by time and tectonic power. And this luxurious dwelling serves as a masterful recontextualisation of this enduring beauty, highlighting the extraordinary aesthetic and uncompromising strength as the ultimate expressions of residential grandeur.
The internet never sleeps! Here's the stuff you might have missed
In this comment piece, COX Principal David Holm reflects on Carlo Ratti’s curatorship in which climate, colonisation and gender equity took centre stage at the Venice Biennale.
Phillip Withers joins the podcast to discuss landscape design in relation to Country, place and European notions of control, as well as his part on the Habitus House of the Year 2025 Jury.