Skip To Main Content
Issue 63 - Kitchen & Bathroom Issue

Issue 63

Kitchen & Bathroom Issue

Habitus 63 is arguably the most aspirational issue of the year with Kitchens & Bathrooms to dream about. Whether a family hub, an entertainer’s paradise or somewhere to grad a quick meal, how we live in and spend time in the kitchen is a very personal question that requires thought and an abundance of resources. Always the aspirational eye candy of design, we have some truly lovely kitchens from Greg Natale, YSG, Splinter Society, Sally Caroline and Studio Johnston. Bathrooms are just as important with Greg Natale, Studio Tate, YSG and Those Architects sharing some fabulous insights

Order Issue

A Product of

How to properly achieve timeless design
ConversationsEditorial Team

How to properly achieve timeless design

Timeless Design – it’s a term bandied about the design industry almost more than any other. But what is it that makes a design truly stand the test of time?


The term is used correctly as much as it is abused. Why a design is truly timeless is difficult to say, but you know it when you see it. Certainly, classic materials have something to do with it – furniture must last physically before it lasts as a proud piece of design.

Timeless may imply antique, yet this should not be the case. Take, for example, Catapult Design’s Coeval range. Whilst this Australian brand was established in 2013, the design of its items follows in the one hundred year history of its parent brand Dewhurst Furniture.

Dewhurst directors Danny Koss and Andrew Dewhurst launched the brand as an avenue for exquisitely crafted furniture that references the strong history of Dewhurst, but with a modern beat.

“Timeless design doesn’t have to be old-fashioned,” says Catapult co-Founder Aaron Zorzo. “Something can be modern looking, but still be ‘timeless.’ Coeval’s Ryba table combines classic materials and exquisite craftsmanship with the twist of a powdercoated metal beam running along the floor. It’s a twist on a traditional all-timber table, but that is what makes it unique and sets it apart.”

Timeless in the modern age should be seen as exactly this; design that is proud of its roots, honest, yet brave enough to stand as a modern item.

This is no doubt a difficult line to walk – striking a balance between the timelessness of age and making a bold new statement. Yet this ethos permeates across much of Catapult’s current collection, even outside of Coeval.

Timeless design isn’t just a buzzword for modern hype; there is a benefit for both the environment and the consumer, “Timeless pieces reduce the need for replacement; they’ll live on for years to come, which is not only good in the long run for the budgets of our clients and customers, but also means that we can reduce the impact of furniture waste on our planet” says co-Founder Leigh Johnson.

The true test of an item’s timelessness will only come in the future. If in twenty years, an object still functions as designed and looks great, then it is worthy of the moniker. And isn’t that what design should be?

Catapult Design
catapultdesign.net.au

Tevel-dining-chair---Coeval
Dusan-dining-table-D2---Coeval
Dusan-dining-table----Coeval
9-Dusan-lamp-table-2

About the Author

Editorial Team

Tags

catapult


Related Articles
Issue 63 - Kitchen & Bathroom Issue

Issue 63

Kitchen & Bathroom Issue

Habitus 63 is arguably the most aspirational issue of the year with Kitchens & Bathrooms to dream about. Whether a family hub, an entertainer’s paradise or somewhere to grad a quick meal, how we live in and spend time in the kitchen is a very personal question that requires thought and an abundance of resources. Always the aspirational eye candy of design, we have some truly lovely kitchens from Greg Natale, YSG, Splinter Society, Sally Caroline and Studio Johnston. Bathrooms are just as important with Greg Natale, Studio Tate, YSG and Those Architects sharing some fabulous insights

Order Issue