A Chair That Refused to Blend In

Intro Line:
In a room painted all green, we made the furniture shout, not whisper.

The Brief:
Shravya Reddy came to us through architect Kanan Modi, with a delightfully specific ask: “Everything in this room is green. The chair should be too… but not invisible.”

The challenge? To create a piece that fit in with the room, without fading into it. Something bold, sculptural, and self-assured. Green, yes. But not shy.

The Transformation:
We didn’t just build a chair. We sculpted a stance.

The Zig Zag Chair was born out of sawdust. We compressed waste wood particles to form a new material, strong enough to hold its own yet flexible enough to take shape.

Then we gave it a shape that refused to sit still. Full of angles, edges, and unapologetic presence. No curves. No camouflaging. Just confidence carved out of dust.

A piece that made the room remember it.

The Outcome:
The final chair sits like an exclamation mark in a sea of green.

It’s functional, yes — surprisingly comfortable, even. But more than that, it’s unforgettable. Guests notice it before they sit on it. And even after they get up, it stays with them.