The W* House / Hall

'Progetto Domestico' desk

Vincenzo de Cotiis /

€28,000

Milan-based architect Vincenzo de Cotiis describes his design aesthetic as 'perfect imperfection' - a style which is clearly communicated in this desk design for his 'Progetto Domestico' collection. A series of perfectly polished brass volumes overlap and intersect to create an irregularly shaped writing desk with various storage compartments. As much a work of art as it is a piece of furniture, the striking composition incorporates salvaged materials and sits on a base made from recycled wood.

www.decotiis.it

'Stella Triangle' sconce

Rosie Li / Roll & Hill

$3,250

Inspired by the early abstract work of American painter Frank Stella, the 'Stella Triangle' wall sconce is Brooklyn-based Rosie Li's debut design for New York lighting brand Roll & Hill. Li shares Stella's love of graphic elements, which she has cleverly incorporated into the lamp's half mirrored glass diffuser. When illuminated, a series of glowing nested triangles are revealed.

www.rollandhill.com

'Hanny' coat stand

Ado Avdagic / Artisan

Price on request

Designer Ado Avdagic first discovered his love for carpentry as a child during visits to his grandfather's workshop in his home city of Tuzla in Bosnia and Herzegovina. But it was the structure of Native American teepees that inspired his finely crafted coat stand. Shown here in solid walnut and stainless steel, the tapered tripod design is available in six different types of wood.

www.artisan.ba

'Kiila' bench

Noora Liesimaa /

Price on request

Finland's Aalto University put on an impressive exhibition of student work at this year's Salone del Mobile, which included this angular 'Kiila' bench by masters degree student Noora Liesimaa. Measuring almost 3m in length and cast from pre-oxidised steel, the bench's imposing form was inspired by the stern of a sailing boat. The prototype was manufactured by Italian furniture company Pifferi & Alpi.

www.aalto.fi

'Connecting dots' coat hooks

Anna Fabrizi /

From €80 each

One of our favourite exhibitions at this year's Salone was by international design collective This is Very Dangerous. Called 'My Grandmother', it showcased works inspired by memories of the designers' elderly family members. Anna Fabrizi's marble and chestnut coat hooks are an ode to her nonna's love of 1950s designs, and to the marble quarries of her home city, Carrara.

www.maffe.it

August Smart Lock

Yves Behar / Fuseproject

$199

The August Smart Lock promises innovation in a field that's resisted change for generations. Billed as a new way of opening doors, the August abandons traditional keys, entry codes and sci-fi scanning in a favour of a smartphone app, a standard deadbolt and good old-fashioned maths. Designed by Yves Béhar's industrial design lab, Fuseproject, in collaboration with Jason Johnson, the August is essentially an app-controlled virtual key, personally tailored to those that need access. The brains are stored in a sleek metal cylinder, with 'keys' corroborated via Bluetooth to click the door open to the names on your list.

www.august.com

'Stickbulb' floor lamps

Rux / Rux

From US$1,100

The inventive New York design studio Rux reimagined the lightbulb with its latest collection of sabre-like lights, encased in woods including maple and ipe, salvaged from the Coney Island boardwalk.

www.stickbulb.com

'Contrast' stool

BCXSY / BCXSY

Prototype

Eindhoven-based duo Boaz Cohen and Sayaka Yamamoto of BCXSY have used a variety of traditional crafts, from Japanese joinery to Israeli carpet weaving, as the basis for their previous collections. This year was no different as the pair headed to Cork to learn the methods of Irish boatbuilding. The result is this versatile 'Contrast' stool, assembled by clamping three sheets of plywood together.

www.bcxsy.com

'Portan' coat stand

MIXCV / MIXCV

From CHF1,411 (€1,174)

There's no underestimating the value of a good coat stand. This abstract, sculptural rendition, conceived by Swiss collective MIXCV, made up of specialist metalworking company MI and design studio XCV, not only holds its own in the transient space of the hallway, but also functions as well as it should. An elegant, poetic assemblage of lines with the simplicity of a paper clip, the coat stand is also available in purple, grey and green.

www.mixcv.com

'Cut' mirror

Elisa Honkanen / Elisa Honkanen

Prototype

Elisa Honkanen is a Finnish designer who worked for Piero Lissoni in Milan and Patrick Norguet in Paris before going it alone in 2009. Mounted on an oak frame, her 'Cut' mirror features an unexpected additional sliver of bronze-tinted mirror that either gives extra light or stays mute and dark depending on how the room is lit.

www.elisahonkanen.com

'Apollo' console

Stéphane Parmentier / Ormond Editions

€7,700

We've kept an eye on Stéphane Parmentier and his new-industrial aesthetic ever since he made his furniture debut at Maison & Objet two years ago. Working once again with Geneva's Ormond Editions, the Frenchman has created a new collection, including this elegant console in perforated wood and soft leather, that is brimming with aviation references.

www.ormondeditions.com

'Wunderkammer'

Joe Doucet / Fritz Hansen

$10,000

The Wunderkammer may be a one-off, designed for Fritz Hansen for Kin Coda - an exhibition of keepsake boxes - but we would be very happy to find a home for it in our hallway nonetheless. Each box designed for the project is a sculptural assemblage of found, recycled and surplus materials, with room for storing around 40 'mementos', or artworks, contributed by the We-Are-Familia group of artists. We can't help but notice it would be perfect place to put keys and hats, too, as well as being a nice spot for a sit down, ensuring we are calm, collected and properly shod before leaving the house.

www.fritzhansen.com

'Branchline' bicycle rack

Quarterre / Quarterre

£900

Two wheels may be the best way to navigate a city but bikes are not the easiest of things to store. So we're thankful for the innovative solutions recently dreamed up by London group Quarterre, whose sculptural bike stands elevate our transports most delightfully.

www.quarterre.com

Door handle

Aldo Bakker / Izé

price on application

In the great pantheon of home accessories, door handles often tend to be given shortshrift. Which is why we can't keep our hands off this brass beauty that Dutch designer Aldo Bakker designed for hardware specialists Izé. The angled lines of the lever is almost mercurial in the way it flows out of the door before flaring into a comfortable ergnomic shape that folds naturally into the contours of a palm. At this year's Salone del Mobile (see W*146), we picked Bakker, the son of Droog founder Gijs Bakker, as one to watch -- a choice we feel is vindicated by the minimalist discipline of this door handle.

www.ize.info

'Piania' table lamp

Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec / Flos

price on application

This bijoux table lamp is easily one of the most enigmatic pieces designed by the prolific Bouroullec brothers. The asymmetrical hood and base creates a squat profile that brings to mind a futuristic street lamp but when lit, it acquires a monolithic architectural quality. Whichever your perspective, it draws attention for all the right reasons. Very handily, the base -- which comes in plastic, oak wood or basalt -- doubles as a valet tray useful for keys, coins and other pocket detritus.

www.flos.com

Paper frame shelves

Ontwerpduo / Vij5

price on request

There's already plenty to admire about these compact shelves with their industrial quality that comes courtesy of the rectangular strips of back mounting. The varied volumes of the frames make it easy to create artful combinations on any wall, not least as distinctive display units for your most precious tchotchkes. But we're particularly impressed by the fact that the timber frames are actually NewspaperWood, a renewable and incredibly tough material made from compressed newspaper. In their raw state, the paper layers appear like extremely realistic wood grain, but designers Ontwerpduo have covered the pieces with coloured paper to resemble tree bark. No possibility of barking up the wrong tree here.

www.Vij5.com

'Spin' coat stand

Studio Taschide / Schönbuch

£450

Grand entrances can often make all the wrong impressions, but with the right prop, such as this sinewy coat stand, it's bound to have everyone talking, but in a good way. Slender steel tubes, in white, granite or coral, curve in a continuous loop into sturdy cross bars for coats, scarves and assorted sartorial accessories with an umbrella stand slotted neatly between. A small tray for keys and the like slips over a waist-high cross bar. The stand can just as easily be moved out of the hallway -- with a few adjustments, it compressed to fit a smaller room. The only thing Spin doesn't do is show you how to make an equally dramatic exit.

www.schonbuch.de

'Peg’ coat stand

Tom Dixon / Tom Dixon

The problem with beautiful hooks is that you never want to hang anything on them. Like the very best butler, however, this graphic coat tree will hold its own while holding your coat as well. Also available in white, black and natural oak, the design is one of the better branches of Tom Dixon’s latest collection, and we’re very happy for it to take a supporting role in our hallway.

http://www.tomdixon.net

‘Down side up’ cabinet

Sam Baron / Fabrica

Price on request

Creative reuse is a big and important idea and Sam Baron and his Fabrica team are big on big ideas. From this cabinet to a desk and a clock, every item in their latest collection was made using four variously shaped and sized wooden boxes with holes in them. Baron and co simply attached legs and handles.

www.fabrica.it

Glacier Hallway collection

Jarl Fernaeus /

€5000

Beckmans graduate Jarl Fernaeus was a finalist of the Prix Emile Hermes with this brilliant table, light and stool ensemble, made from ash and Corian. Though seemingly just a clean and pure set of furniture, the table is actually a very clever gadget too. Built into the underneath are a series of sockets, meaning chargers for any and every gadget you might own are seamlessly concealed in the design, with just the end that you attach to your phone, camera or iPod on show. One cable emerges from the table leg to power up everything else.

www.jarlfernaeus.se

Table, bench, chair

Sam Hecht / Established & Sons

£850

The next best place for inspirational ideas, after the shower, is apparently the commute. Sam Hecht clearly favours the latter, taking the interior of the Yamonote line on Tokyo’s Metro as inspiration for his standout seating range for Established & Sons. While most Japanese trains have standard benches and armrests, the Yamonote line has a bench with a lone gold seat in the middle. Interested in the way people reacted to the space, Hecht applied his characteristic, minimal elegance punctuating a solid oak base with Bentwood arms and legs. Definitely too good to be kept underground.

www.establishedandsons.com

File shelving

Warm & Stolzenburg /

€1500 set of 10

Taking old-fashioned hanging files out of the drawer and arranging them dynamically on the wall is an idea that could filed under G for genius. This means you can file and search for your books or post without craning your neck. Better still the modular aluminium system can be added to for as far as your walls permit.

www.warmandstolzenburg.com

Unique mailboxes

Atelier 522 / Serafini

€349

If you don’t fancy ruining the line of your front door with a traditional letterbox, it’s worth investing in one of Atelier 522’s freestanding mailboxes. The German creative collective designed these Bauhaus-inspired models a few years ago, which have recently gone into production with German company Serafini. Available in black, white or translucent (which also doubles up as a light), they’re big enough to hold a newspaper alongside your daily offering of junk mail and bills, keeping them off your doormat and out of sight.

www.serafini.de

Tiuku clocks

Ari Kanerva / Kokoomo

€370

The young Finnish designer Ari Kanerva has given the grandfather clock of yore a makeover with Tiuku (bell in Finnish), a standing clock that leans against the wall. Though streamlined in every possible way he’s still incorporated everyone's favourite bit from the original - a swinging pendulum.

www.kokoomo.com

Umbrella stand

Charlotte Talbot /

Prototype

Time was when a good umbrella stand was de rigeur in every hallway but you’d be hard pushed to dump your brolly in anything purpose built, let alone beautifully designed these days, and yet it rains more than ever. Step forward ECAL student Charlotte Talbot who showed a beautifully considered design for an umbrella stand at this year’s Salone. The circular oak holder is rooted to the floor with a single arm and held in place by a circular pool of concrete, which has a gentle dip in it to collect running water from your umbrella.

mail@charlottetalbot.com

Woodpecker coat stand

Tommaso Nani & Noa Ikeuchi /

Prototype

This Italian-Japanese pair, Tommaso Nani and Noa Ikeuchi, cite abstract geometry and the dynamic relation of force and space as key components in their design strategy. That’s all very well but we’re seduced less by the lofty intention and more by the barely there practicality of their Woodpecker coat stand. The design couldn’t be simpler, consisting of a plexiglass tube and lime wood pegs, which can be inserted or removed according to how many guests you have. Come summer when coats and things to hang are in short supply, you can take it to pieces and store it away for a rainy day.

www.tomassonani.it

Storage system

TAF Arkitektkontor / NC Mobler

€800

The bare scaffold frame of this storage unit inspired us to clear space for it in our hallway. With pegs, shelves and a cupboard it has everything you want near the front door; hang your coat, empty your pockets and hide away your junk mail in one impressive entrance.

www.ncmobler.se

Moebel 41/02

Schubladen /

€3570

Franziska Wodicka designs sideboards and cabinets using rescued drawers. Describing herself as a curator rather than a designer, she mixes and matches found drawers from her hoard of over 800, constructing a wooden frame in which to house them.

www.schubladen.de

Cork doorknobs

Jasper Morrison / Pamar

From €149

Cork isn't the most obvious material from which to hew a doorknob but it feels surprisingly good to grip. Jasper Morrison has created a range of cork knobs for historic Italian handle specialists Pamar with the precise intention of moving away from the company’s metal tradition. Morrison is of course no stranger to cork, following the success of his 2004 ‘Cork Family’ for Vitra, a range of doorknobs was a neat, if maybe unusual development in exploring the material’s properties. And the fact that it weathers and changes over time is part of its appeal.

www.pamar.it

Chankley Bore drawers

Maarten Baas / Established & Sons

Price on request

The hills of the Chankley Bore pepper Edward Lear's nonsense poetry and the wacky and whimsy looks of this work by Dutch designer Maarten Bass are just as lyrical. The hand-made drawers in composite materials (concrete and rubber) one of a range of characterful but functional furniture pieces designed by Baas for the British company. With intriguing mini-drawers, cupboards and must-press yellow buttons, this commission perfectly captures the energy and originality of non-British based designers now flocking to Established & Sons.

www.establishedandsons.com

EUro lantern

Moooi studio / Moooi

from €336

The sun may rise in the East but it certainly sets in the West with this foldable, hightech version of the traditional Chinese lantern. This stylish prototype orb, here in luminous yellow, hints of a full moon and a skilful fusion of Oriental functionality and 60s aesthetics. The lantern comes in three sizes, 40 x 30, 80 x 70 and 120 x110 and in various colour combinations that include black/white, orange/white, printed/white in stretched fabric.

www.moooi.com

Brass key holder

Vincent van Duysen / When Objects Work

€485

As William Morris famously observed, you should ‘have nothing in your house which you do not know to be useful, or believe to be beautiful'. This 'Primitives' collection by Belgian architect Vincent van Duysen fits the bill perfectly. He deliberately mixes primitive, tactile forms such as native blond woods and brass, and transforms them into simple yet powerful utilitarian objects. This finished brass ring, 26cm in diameter and 3cm high, is a natural space for your keys, coins or earings.

www.whenobjectswork.be

Riuku bench

Mika Tolvanen / E&Y

€180

Tokyo-based editor, developer, manufacturer and retailer E&Y doesn’t feel the need to scream and shout about its designs. An impressive stable of designers has been busy creating stunning pieces since it’s inception in 1993. And while they may have caught the eye of those in the know like MOMA New York, London Design Museum and the Musee des Arts Decoratifs in Paris they have refreshingly stayed clear of the need for attention-seeking installations or come-look-at-me peculiar design/art creations. A highlight from their recent Greenland collection was this charming Riuku bench by Finnish designer Mika Tolvanen, which sits perfectly in a narrow hallway.

www.eandy.com

Rokumaru coat stand

Nendo / De Padova

€634

What you see is not what you get with this apparently simple, but technically complex coat rack by Nendo. It could conjure a tree with six branches or symbolise six radii of an imaginery circumference in which the product can be inscribed if seen from above. If that's too much information, you need only enjoy its clean, rigorous lines. Every detail of this solid rhomboid section coat rack with steel insert is minutely studied, from the inclination of its branches to the small notches at their ends upon which to hang your coat. In natural ash or wengé stain, coming in from the cold has never been so true.

www.depadova.it

Brass coat hooks

Jon Harrison /

From £15

RCA graduate Jon Harrison took it upon himself to give the traditional brass hook a bit of an overhaul, cutting and folding brass hooks in different angles from flat sheets of the metal. “On several there are slots encouraging the use of coat hangers, which tend to keep coats and jackets in better shape”, explains the young designer. Were proof needed as to the quality of the design, Ron Arad and Martino Gamper were first in line to order a set.

www.jon-harrison.com

Ceci n'est pas une landscape

Gustaf Karlsson / Blyert Design

€170

Karlsson, a Stockholm-based trained architect pinpoints his love of minimalist architecture and raw materials as the starting point for his designs. 'I wanted to create a useful product out of concrete,' he explains, 'and seeing these archetypal house-shaped forms holding up books or doors is like having a piece of minimalist architecture inside your home.'

www.blyertdesign.se

Orb hanger

Matti Klennel / David Design

€713

Slick design production with a visual twist is at the heart of Swedish manufacturer David Design. One of their recent highlights was the Orb hanger system by local Stockholm designer Matti Klenell. Available in red, white ir black powder-coated steel, as a freestanding hanger or single orbs, the molecular model is a surprising hit for the hallway.

www.daviddesign.se

About The W* House

We thought it only fair to throw open the doors to The W* House and share with you our wealth of experience in the design world. From cutlery to cupboards, pots to plumbing, The W* House features our favourite pieces of design from around the globe, room by room. We'll update them every time we find something new we like, building the collection into an archive for as long as the pieces are for sale. Practicality isn't often a buzzword at the Wallpaper* HQ, but when it comes to sharing our finds we wanted to keep things simple, letting you furnish your house the Wallpaper* way, with the click of a mouse.