View cart “Flower Color Guide” has been added to your cart.
Showing 565–576 of 590 results
-
$23.10 $19.25
The art of making cocktails is a piece of theatre in itself. Whether it’s a humble gin or tonic or a cutting-edge creation, add an extra splash of style with this sleek and elegant ice bucket with lid and tongs. Ergonomic and minimal, the bucket will grace any home bar and makes a great gift…
-
$11.65 $9.71
Walter Gropius, German architect and founder of the Bauhaus School, was a powerful influence in the development of modernism. In the mid-1960s, a friend commissioned him to design some dinnerware, which ultimately led to TAC 02 Dinnerware (1969), named after Gropius’ firm, The Architects Collaborative. Concise in its minimal geometric form and firmly in the…
-
$9.90 $8.25
Designer Alexander Girard drew inspiration from his travels to Mexico and India, as well as his interest in folk art, to design his signature Toostripe pattern. Originally created in 1965, Toostripe uses vivid color and simple geometry to give a soft pillow a striking, graphic motif.
-
$55.88 $46.57
The streamlined Norm Floor Mirror (2014) can be just the right fit practically anywhere in your home. You can lean it or hang it wherever you want ‘ in bedrooms, bathrooms, hallways, foyers. Its gently curved corners and clean, minimal design help make it a statement piece, if that’s what you’re looking for. Made in…
-
$2.83 $2.36
Sonnhild Kestler is a Z’rich-based textile designer known for her ability to combine a range of cultural motifs into distinct pattern language that emphasizes dynamic compositions, vibrant colors, and ornate graphics. Mela (2019) incorporates varied references across a large repeat comprising six weft colors, featuring an ornate pattern of botanical, geometric, figurative, architectural, and spiritual…
-
$42.17 $35.14
Drawing 15 by French designer and artist Ronan Bouroullec is part of a series of framed posters offered by The Wrong Shop. Founded by Sebastian Wrong, this U.K.-based company was established to make unique artwork which is both affordable and well-presented. Its collection of posters ‘ which Wrong sees as a contemporary, considered take on…
-
$47.45 $39.54
The Sunburst Clock (1949) is one of more than 150 clocks designed by George Nelson Associates for the Howard Miller Clock Company, which sold them from 1949 into the 1980s. Nelson Associates, first launched as a studio by George Nelson in 1947 in New York City, employed some of the most celebrated designers of the…
-
$9.59 $7.99
Squares, circles, ovals, and cylinders merge to magical effect in the Sphere Vase. Each bears the hand of the maker, with intricate detailing and a subtle, unique color brought out by the firing. Use them to hold dried summer blooms or group them together to create an eye-catching display. Made of ceramic. Not water-safe.
-
$12.06 $10.05
Brooklyn-based ceramics studio SIN was founded by multi-disciplinary designer Virginia Sin in 2006. One of her first clients was Design Within Reach, and we share her passion for ‘putting the fun into the functional.’ Her Bacchus Bookends, which Sin likes to say ‘are as strong as your vocabulary,’ are handmade stoneware forms that can be…
-
$985.50 $821.25
Inspired by the curved windows found on ships and airplanes, the Window Mirror (2022) has the same gentle shape, which ‘helps you feel relaxed when you look at it,’ says designer Gabriel Tan. Made of solid wood, the frame is curved on the outside and chamfered on the inside, which creates a beautiful optical effect…
-
$34.80 $29.00
Protect your Block Island Collection in the offseason with our tailored furniture covers. Made to ward off the elements year-round, these covers are constructed of tough Weathermax, a 100% solution-dyed all-weather polyester designed especially for outdoor use. They’re breathable; resistant to water, mildew, abrasion and sun exposure; and easy to clean. Backed by a three-year…
-
$28.74 $23.95
Alexander Girard was the director of design for Herman Miller’s textile division from 1952 to 1973. Toward the end of his tenure, he was asked to add an element of ‘aesthetic functionalism’ to Herman Miller’s very first open-plan office system, called Action Office. He responded with more than 40 images for the Environmental Enrichment Panel…