Flatware Single Pieces
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Alessi
The Nuovo Milano flatware series, featuring an elegant yet simple design, is perfect for your most formal dinners to informal gatherings.
This set of six dinner knives from Alessi combines form and function in a contemporary design. Crafted from premium stainless steel, they feature a polished finish that complements any dining table. The ergonomic handles ensure a comfortable grip, making them perfect for everyday meals or special occasions.
Georg Jensen
Out of Stock
Prince Sigvard Bernadotte (1907-2002) was trained at the Kungliga Konstakademien in Stockholm in 1929. The prince’s long affiliation with Georg Jensen represents another chapter in the rich history of Scandinavian design. His Bernadotte collection has been and continues to be a favorite for generations.
Fortessa
Tastefully decorated in the traditional style, this pattern reflects the elegance of handcrafted tableware from a bygone age. Fortessa flatware embodies a passion for design combined with a commitment to the finest materials. Made from heavy-gauge 18/10 stainless steel (the heaviest gauge used for tableware), each implement provides a comfortable heft and balance in your hand.
Following the typical minimalist approach that features in all Jasper Morrison's work, this design is an attempt to reduce the "cutlery-object" to its barest essence, its purest and most customary form and what might tentatively be called its definitive form, and deliberately stripped of all stylistic value and - perhaps precisely because of this - recognizable as Morrison's work.
Designed in 1938 and presented in silver at the 1940 Triennale, the Caccia series of cutlery - an excellent example of "Lombard classicism" in design - won praise from Gio Ponti for the balance it struck between an image of craftsmanship and the industrial future of household objects.
For Achille Castiglioni objects had to fulfill two essential requirements: They should offer practical solutions to the small problems arising while “being at the table,” possibly with intelligent functional innovation, and they should also satisfy the public’s taste, for example, for the finish of the metal.
The Nuovo Milano knife is a small masterpiece of design and production technique. A full and round shape corresponds to particularly lightweight and easy-to-handle cutlery. The secret is in the empty handle inside, obtained through a remarkable production process.
MATCH
Inviting to the touch, and weighty in the hand, Match flatware and serving pieces marry the functionality of 18/10 stainless steel with the warmth of pewter. Their handsome designs — including place settings, cheese sets, and condiment and serving spoons — are elegant chameleons, transitioning effortlessly between everyday use and more formal affairs.
Kirk Stieff
This pattern was named after the art of Repousse (the process of embossing metal from the back by hammering), originally used in European silversmithing. The Repousse pattern, first crafted in 1828, features an intricate floral design along its entire stem and handle.
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