Verzelloni
Hampton Memory

Verzelloni
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Design: CRD Verzelloni
Presented: Salone del Mobile 2011, Milan
stylepark-id: 05.1272.00029
categories: |
Design
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home furniture
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seating furniture
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sofas
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01 product description
Product description
Hampton is a new elegant and refined modular sofa, a real modern reformulation of classical sofas. The collection includes two models: Hampton and Hampton Memory, which are differentiated by the length of the arm and shape of the seat cushions. In Hampton, the arm completely occupies the depth of the sofa, highlighting its symmetry and squared shapes, whereas in Hampton Memory the shorter arm cuts the symmetry of shapes. In Hampton, the seat cushions are parallel on the entire length of the sofa; in the case of Hampton Memory, they are L-shaped and are combined with the arm.
Both solutions have simple and harmonious lines, in addition to visual lightness further highlighted by the elegant bridge foot made of aluminium, available in two finishes. Hampton, in addition to sofas in various sizes, offers a variety of modules – corners, side panels, chaise longue, dormouse, and poufs – whereas Hampton Memory is developed on a number of proposals with fixed sizes. In both cases, a small armchair completes the range of items available. Two backrest versions are available: the type A, with its traditional rectangular shape filled with washed and canalized down feather, and polyurethane insert; and the type B with square backrest cushions entirely filled with canalized down feather.
However, Hampton modules can be completed and customized, choosing among a wide range of backrests, cushions, and tables – Argo, Blog, and Jim – already in the catalogue.
02 dimensions/weight
| overall dimension | |
|---|---|
width |
2050 mm |
Depth |
1000 mm |
03 All Hampton Products
04 Tags
CRD Verzelloni Products, Verzelloni Articles, Verzelloni Products05 Articles about Verzelloni
What a relief – The Milan marathon part 1
Milan 2013, a mixture of prudence, consolidation and solid design work. A little less hype and fewer prototypes, too. This is certainly doing the industry good.



