


Puzzle Schema 10 edge
Architonic ID: 1416980
Einführungsjahr: 2016
POSA SFUMATA CON UN FONDO TINTA UNITA
Shaded installation on one solid background
production: industrial
material: gres porcellanato smaltato ad impasto omogeneo glazed homogeneous porcelain stoneware
sizes: *25·25 cm- 10”·10”
thickness: 14 mm
complementary pieces: battiscopa *12,5·25 cm- skirting 5”·10”
*misure nominali- nominal sizes
Konzept
“The Puzzle collection is a game with in nite outcomes. The simple geometric shapes become softer and more uid as the puzzle grows, allowing patterns to ebb and ow. Objects emerge like maps, islands or clouds, with endless possible permutations, meaning that whenever Puzzle is used it will always be unique.”
Edward Barber & Jay Osgerby
Puzzle is a set of glazed porcelain stoneware tiles: a mixture of block colours and multi-coloured graphic patterns. The idea behind the collection is to design the entire room and not an individual façade, giving the chance of communication between architectonic and space elements placed in different parts of the house and drawing a continuous line through colour declinations of the collection. The versatility of the block colours and graphic patterns offers endless possibilities to the space projects, combining walls and oors, shaping areas with frames and graphic ooring, aiming to give rhythm and attitude to unique settlements.
Puzzle is an original composition of colour and geometry in which patterns are at the forefront. No matter how you arrange Puzzle, the resulting design will always be interesting and unique, creating in nite combinations that are new every time.
The tiles measure 25 x 25 cm, a single format that is now somewhat unusual in the ceramics world, and are quite thick at 14 mm to give greater value to the piece.
There are eight colour families, each one are composed of:
A SET OF 6 GRAPHIC PATTERNS in 3 colours
3 PLAIN TILES in 3 different colours
A SET OF 2 SYMMETRICAL EDGE PATTERNS in two colours
Farbe beige, Farbe blau, Farbe grau, Farbe mehrfarbig
Keramik, Feinsteinzeug
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United Kingdom
Edward Barber and Jay Osgerby founded their eponymous studio in 1996 after graduating with Master’s degrees in Architecture from The Royal College of Art in London. From their first studio in Trellick Tower in London, they designed their first piece, the Loop Table, produced by Isokon in 1997. Much of Barber and Osgerby’s early work involved the folding and shaping of sheet material, influenced by the white card that they had used frequently in architectural model making. Plywood and perspex were used in the development of the Pilot Table, 1999, and Stencil Screen, 2000.