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Editor’s Picks: 7 Goods We’re Loving This Month

Unconventional lighting from The Dennis Freedman Collection | R & Company
Within Dennis Freedman’s pioneering assemblage of avant-garde works are a number of smaller collections concentrated around a specific movement, theme, category, or ideological affinity. One such example is a grouping of 1970s avant-garde lamps by notable Radical Italian design figures—exceptional and rare pieces Freedman unearthed through diligent research and discovery. Photo by Joe Kramm.

Counterpoint Collection | Paul Schatz for New Ravenna
Inspired by his travels to Portugal, Spain, and Morocco, as well as ancient Roman architectural materials, interior designer Paul Schatz, has conceptualized a timeless collection that contrasts symmetry and urban grid patterns with dramatic color and calm neutrals.

PROPS Collection | Hem X
Hem X has worked with Modern Design Review to tap into the creative minds of six emerging international designers to launch PROPS, an eclectic and original collection of stools. The editions demonstrate a wide variety of innovative processes, materials and unique expressions, elevating this humble multi-functional object in a collector’s fantasy.

Pompeii Collection | Wayne Pate + Studio Four NYC
With 13 designs in a lush, earthy range of colors and textures inspired by the historic architecture, scenic vistas, and vivid memories of Wayne’s travels in Italy, the Pompeii Collection is Studio Four NYC’s largest collection to date.

Whimsical Bottle and Oil Bottle | Astrid Luglio for Sprezz
Designed using unconventional shapes to suggest the gesture of ‘travasare’ — pouring liquids from their original packaging into other objects.

Cassette Folding Screen | Dumais Made
Handcrafted using slab-construction techniques, each ceramic panel slots individually into a blackened steel frame, allowing the overall composition to vary from screen to screen.

Dada Outdoor Table | FAS Pendezza
Inspired by the Dadaism Manifesto, Dada reinterprets the classic tenets of table tennis. Two twin tables can live separately, as well as welcome 16 people to sit. A functional division allows the table to transform as needed; just by adding the net, you can have a regular ping-pong table.

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