Armchair Motogi: Lost in the sofa, storage and cache

Filed Under: Seating  


Armchair Motogi, Lost in the sofa, storage and cache


The young Japanese designer Daisuke Motogi thought of a chair , which besides being easy to solve space problems and management of small objects of daily use and frequent. It’s called Lost in the sofa and the idea is very simple: a chair tray (or alternatively cache ) which eliminates a canon table next to the seat to support something because that something just put it between the soft cubes that make up the same chair. Built with a geometric cluster formed by cubic cells padded sewn together but in a way that you can put something between a cube and another.

The design is minimalist, Japanese-style, but is conceived, what matters most to the functionality of objects pointing to its actual beauty.



The idea comes from the observation that often the small items you use frequently are lost or in or under the couch.
It ‘s normal, for example, that a coin slides out of his pocket.

The designer has focused its attention on the design of seats soft and comfortable, enveloping and intimate because they were an ideal medium on which to spend a hot afternoon of reading or otherwise relax. The result is a chair made up of many square blocks quilted: between a cube and one of the slots, specifically left open, it is possible to support and store everything from books and magazines over a cup of steaming tea or remote control, the typical object in any case, it would hide in a pillow el ‘ more.

Order and convenience are the cornerstones of this sofa. To be sure, despite the name, nothing more will be lost in this sofa.

Armchair Motogi, Lost in the sofa, storage and cache