InHale by Ben Storms: a marble block weighing over 200kg carried on an inflated metal cushion.
Columbian industrial designer Heidi Jalkh created the triHEX stool from a single piece of tubular steel and a hexagonal wooden seat.
I love these lamps by Renate Vos made of concrete and silicone rubber, part of Ventura Interieur by Ventura Projects – the same people who are behind Ventura Lambrate in Milan and Ventura London.
The Collar chair by freelance interior architect Esmeralda Misseghers was part of an exhibition called We Are The Next Generation, showcasing new designers from across the globe.
In the same exhibition was Kurkkruk by Joop Couwenberg, a cantilevered stool made from a biocomposite made from used cork bottle stoppers and steel, designed to support active sitting. The seat can be removed and the frames stacked horizontally.
Tight is a chair by Wouter Defrancq that is assembled without the need for glue or nails. It consists of a single wooden frame, held tight with a strap that becomes the seat and back.
Lars Rank’s Dots tableware collection consists of 13 multipurpose elements decorated with dots in five different colors: light blue, light green, coral red, light grey and white.
Belgian interior architect Filip Janssens’ furniture takes the trend for all things geometric to a whole new level.
I loved Danuta Wlodarska’s side tables in pastel shades with tabletops that really celebrate the natural grain of the wood.
Lenscape by recent graduate Kine Solberg is a window panel made from circular lenses designed to distort the view of the landscape beyond.
And finally, inspired by his own studio apartment, Reinaart Vandersloten’s Space Plus is a reflective sculptural shelf when closed, and a felt desk complete with pinboard and pockets when open.