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Silaï

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  1. SILAÏ SMALL POUF WHITE

    $1,340.00

    This is the small Small White pouf from the Silaï collection, a square piece which may be used as a casual seat or as a footrest. Its dense embroidery is made of thick white and yellow wool, stitched into different geometrical shapes: hexagons, squares, octagons. Its design recalls the geometry of certain ceramic or wooden floors, translated into a textile language. As an accent, some of its edges are finished in bright yellow.

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  2. SILAÏ SMALL TABLE

    $550.00

    $385.00

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    Out of Stock

  3. SILAÏ BIG TABLE

    $690.00

    $483.00

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    Out of Stock

  4. SILAÏ RUG ROSE

    $2,950.00

    For her Silaï collection, designer Charlotte Lancelot has synthesized tile-like patterns using just four stitch lengths, which are hand-embroidered onto the rug using an innovative reinterpretation of the petit point technique. The Rose model is embroidered with thick pink, white, gray and yellow wool threads. Its different compositions, based on squares, triangles, diamonds, hexagons, octagons and crosses, are reminiscent of mismatched floors, often found in old houses.

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  5. SILAÏ RUG GREEN

    $2,950.00

    This is the Green rug from the Silaï collection, embroidered by hand using thick wool threads in different shades of green, white and dark gray. Its design reinterprets the petit point technique in an innovative way, by using four stitches of different lengths. In this way, designer Charlotte Lancelot is able to achieve tile-like patterns to create four designs based on diamonds, squares, triangles, hexagons, octagons and crosses, thus recreating the mismatched floors that can often be found in old houses.

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  6. SILAÏ RUG BLUE

    $2,950.00

    This is the Blue rug from the Silaï collection, made with thick wool yarns in an innovative reinterpretation of the petit point technique. Its designer, Charlotte Lancelot, is able to achieve tile-like patterns by using four different stitch lengths. The result is a rug with four distinct designs, as if it were recreating the mismatched floors that can often be found in old houses. Squares, triangles, rhombuses, hexagons, octagons and crosses are all embroidered by hand using only dark blue, white, gray and yellow threads.

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