


Help me find it
Little Big chair
Architonic ID: 1484283
Year of Launch: 2017
Little BIG chair is for kids from 2 to 6 six years old. In the kindergarten or at home, it is the combination of a light, comfortable plastic shell with sturdy, stable wooden feet. The chair grows with the children, thanks to a simple system that allows the chair to be adjusted to three different heights. As a first chair, it is definitely an object that creates emotional ties – we wanted it to have the qualities of an adult chair, but for children. It comes in three colors and is easy to grab and move around for adults and children.
Chair, adjustable in height.
Material: frame in solid ash, natural.
Seat in polypropylene.
Concept
Little BIG chair is for kids from 2 to 6 six years old. In the kindergarten or at home, it is the combination of a light, comfortable plastic shell with sturdy, stable wooden feet. The chair grows with the children, thanks to a simple system that allows the chair to be adjusted to three different heights. As a first chair, it is definitely an object that creates emotional ties – we wanted it to have the qualities of an adult chair, but for children. It comes in three colors and is easy to grab and move around for adults and children.
This product belongs to collection:
Height-adjustable
Contract, Residential

Switzerland
The Belgian Elric Petit, the Swiss Grégoire Jeanmonod and the French Augustin Scott de Martinville met at Ecal, where they studied industrial design. Taking advantage of their diverse backgrounds, they create the Big-game design studio in June 2004, today based in Lausanne and Brussels. According to their motto “From confrontation comes progress”, they mix universes through their collections. “Heritage in Progress”, their first collection, questions the blending of heritage and contemporary lifestyle. With “New Rich”, they make democratic objects exclusive by using gold. With “Pack, Sweet Pack”, they use packaging to create furniture. Lately, “Plus is More”, plays with the Swiss modernist heritage. Appart from their studio work, the members of Big-game also teach design at Ecal (Lausanne) and La Cambre (Brussels). While their approach is often experimental, their industrial realism makes the products sustainable for the market. Big-game’s objects are produced by companies such as Ligne Roset, Mitralux, Vlaemsch and Domestic, and awarded prizes such as the “Bourses Fédérales” or the first prize of the “Die Besten” contest in 2005. Taking part in numerous exhibitions, the studio also works with galleries such as KREO in Paris to create more exclusive pieces. More recently, they were brought to work in the field of scenography for companies such as Team by Wellis or commissioned work for Veuve Clicquot.