Hamilton Conte brings curves and comfort
In a post-Covid period of reinvention, Porto-based furniture brand Hamilton Conte is embracing modularity, new shapes and above all, comfort.
September 29, 2021 | 10:00 pm CUT

Ollie, the inviting new armchair from Porto-based Hamilton Conte, is available in a range of fabrics and leathers as well as bespoke finishes

The curves of the upholstered pieces are matched by those of the collection’s new side tables. Lupa’s textured cast brass legs and frame support a circular glass top
The curve is king
There’s no doubt that a new bent for bends pre-dated Covid, but in the design world’s great post-pandemic reset, the curve is coming out as king. Perhaps it is simply to do with possibility, perhaps it’s a pressing need for comfort. And perhaps someone like Ross Hamilton, CEO of Porto-based fine furniture brand Hamilton Conte might have answers, given that his newest collection is all sweeping silhouettes, arching frames and plump upholstery.‘At Hamilton Conte, we are interactive. Our furniture is made-to-measure so we react to our customers. And the minute you give choice, it's fascinating where people’s imaginations take them’

The Tenoch cabinet's brass facade evokes the Aztec Empire (top). The Manolo Model S table, available in a choice of woods or marbles and supported by hand-cast metal legs, shuns straight lines but nevertheless feel thoroughly modern
Eclectic influences and refined materials
Founded in 2009, Hamilton Conte has already set out its cart as a thoroughly modern and collaborative, made-to-measure brand, eclectic in its influences, refined in its materials and finish, and full of anecdote. It has an eye on wellbeing, and how furniture makes you feel, and a passion for the nurture of the craft that brings its pieces to life. It is perfectly placed to respond quickly to new moods in interior design.
The Ignacio sofa is a classic piece in the curvilinear collection and comes with a symmetrically arched profile or a less regular silhouette which swoops lower at one side across the back
Freeing the mind of convention
Not that tables are out entirely – additions to the collection include side tables Lupa, with its circular top and wilfully wobbly legs, and the Manolo Model S with its soft corners and gently warped pins. And with the gently arced Ignacio sofa already a collection kingpin, for this season Hamilton is taking the sharp angles out from the ubiquitous L shaped sofa with soft bends added into the Barbara sofa. ‘There is a rational side to the Barbara – it’s modular. It’s a counter-proposal to the L shaped sofa - and comes in an open V-shaped version too,’ he explains.
This season Hamilton Conte has developed a modular version of the Barbara sofa that reinvents the L shaped sofa with no sharp corners to be seen, only an amoebic bend
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