The Marcel Ottoman is an elegant bench, with a grid stitch detail to the cushions and a stainless steel tube frame. It is the latest addition to the Norman + Quaine range. Please Contact Living Edge at sydneysales@livingedge.com.au for more details regarding dimensions, delivery time, applications, variations and finishes.
February 3rd, 2009
The Marcel Ottoman is an elegant bench, with a grid stitch detail to the cushions and a stainless steel tube frame. It is the latest addition to the Norman + Quaine range.
Please Contact Living Edge at sydneysales@livingedge.com.au for more details regarding dimensions, delivery time, applications, variations and finishes.
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!
The undeniable thread connecting Herman Miller and Knoll’s design legacies across the decades now finds its profound physical embodiment at MillerKnoll’s new Design Yard Archives.
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 vibrant fit-out for creative agency Grey Group’s new office is anything but grey.
On Thursday 11 November 2010 the Surface Gallery launched their stunning new showroom in Sydney’s Annandale.
The internet never sleeps! Here's the stuff you might have missed
The Standard, Singapore by Ministry of Design has been crowned winner of The Social Space at the INDE.Awards 2025. Redefining hospitality with a lush and immersive experience, The Standard celebrates both community and connection.
Australian designed and manufactured, Laminex Architectural Panels transform timber design aesthetics with cutting-edge technology
A recent exhibition at the Robin Boyd Foundation in Melbourne invited visitors to think deeply about sheds and what this under-appreciated building typology can teach us about construction and living today.
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.