In the early 70s Riccardo Schweizer designed a series of tableware for his friend Giulio, owner of Pagnossin, one of the most famous Italian companies in the ceramic dinnerware space. The results were the iconic Giulietta and Romeo, the essential and compact serving of glasses Cubo Bibita, the elegant Salvagente, the futuristic Telescope, a coffee service made of vertical joints, and many other design pieces such as Zangola, Saturn and a variety of other extraordinary objects. Schweizer’s way to play with joints and insertions proofs that space saving and clutter minimisation can perfectly live with elegance and simplicty. The powerful selection of color patterns provide a special touch to the capability of allowing all pieces to perfectly nest within each other: a joyful combination of virtuosity and rationalistic engineering. Since 2009 the Italian company Bosa has offered again the possibility to enjoy these tableware pieces improving the quality of the materials and adding new colour textures, while keeping the original designs intact, both in forms and in proportions.
In the early 70s Riccardo Schweizer designed a series of tableware for his friend Giulio, owner of Pagnossin, one of the most famous Italian companies in the ceramic dinnerware space. The results were the iconic Giulietta and Romeo, the essential and compact serving of glasses Cubo Bibita, the elegant Salvagente, the futuristic Telescope, a coffee service made of vertical joints, and many other design pieces such as Zangola, Saturn and a variety of other extraordinary objects. Schweizer’s way to play with joints and insertions proofs that space saving and clutter minimisation can perfectly live with elegance and simplicty. The powerful selection of color patterns provide a special touch to the capability of allowing all pieces to perfectly nest within each other: a joyful combination of virtuosity and rationalistic engineering. Since 2009 the Italian company Bosa has offered again the possibility to enjoy these tableware pieces improving the quality of the materials and adding new colour textures, while keeping the original designs intact, both in forms and in proportions.
In the early 70s Riccardo Schweizer designed a series of tableware for his friend Giulio, owner of Pagnossin, one of the most famous Italian companies in the ceramic dinnerware space. The results were the iconic Giulietta and Romeo, the essential and compact serving of glasses Cubo Bibita, the elegant Salvagente, the futuristic Telescope, a coffee service made of vertical joints, and many other design pieces such as Zangola, Saturn and a variety of other extraordinary objects.
Schweizer’s way to play with joints and insertions proofs that space saving and clutter minimisation can perfectly live with elegance and simplicty. The powerful selection of color patterns provide a special touch to the capability of allowing all pieces to perfectly nest within each other: a joyful combination of virtuosity and rationalistic engineering. Since 2009 the Italian company Bosa has offered again the possibility to enjoy these tableware pieces improving the quality of the materials and adding new colour textures, while keeping the original designs intact, both in forms and in proportions.