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Used since the millennia, cork is British designer Tom Dixon’s newly discovered “dream material” that he strikingly recasts as a minimalist round dining table. Playing to its natural attributes, the cork is charred an appealing blackish brown and assumes pleasingly solid proportions. Sustainably sourced from the cork tree’s renewable bark, it’s then granulated and mixed with a small amount of polyurethane resin to take full advantage of the natural elasticity, sound absorption and waterproof qualities. The cork can still be continually recycled and even the dust from the production is used to power the furnaces in the factories.
Fashioned in solid cork, Tom’s round dining table is available in a choice of small and large versions. With a characteristically chunky profile, the round-edge tabletop is set on a trio of columns for added visual interest.
Specifications
Size
- Small: 29.5" h x 39.4" dia (75x100cm)
- Large: 29.5" h x 47.2" dia (75x120cm)
Material
Cork, MDF, plywood, timber
Brand
Tom Dixon
“If there are rules to design, I don’t know what they are,” declares self-taught Tom Dixon. This Tunisian-born Brit started out with stints painting cartoons, as a printer, then bass player in a disco-funk outfit. But it was honing his welding skills in an auto body repair shop that led to a design breakthrough, the now revered S Chair for Cappellini. From there, after several years helming design at the iconic Habitat during its prime years, he established his eponymous brand in 2002 and with it a body of near-unrivaled work.
Tom Dixon is synonymous with the idiosyncratic sensibilities that inform so much of British aesthetics, yet by a beat all his own. He challenges with his use of materials in unexpected applications, and reworkings of otherwise conventional classics into elegant gems. His remarkable creative output covers a wide swath of categories, among them at A+R, his lighting, furniture, décor, tabletop and barware. Tom also manages to extend his exhaustive vision to hotels, restaurants—including his own at this wonderful campus at the Coal Drops Yard in King’s Cross—and the odd home. For good reason this OBE’s design work now resides in the collections of the V&A, MoMA and the Pompidou.