Chaise Longue
Few pieces make a spatial statement as clearly as a chaise longue — it commits to a corner, an angle, a particular relationship with light and the rest of the room. Orientation matters: whether it faces a window, extends from a sofa or stands alone determines as much about how it works as the form itself. So does the choice between a fully reclined profile and a design with more back support, which shifts the piece from a place of complete rest to something closer to a reading seat with extended depth.
Flexform and Molteni&C are among the European makers who bring the most considered thinking to these decisions — working in full-grain leather, bouclé and fine linen over frames resolved for both ergonomic support and sculptural clarity. Every designer chaise longue in this edit is selected for the integrity of its recline, the quality of its upholstery and its ability to anchor a living room, bedroom or dressing space with the kind of presence that only a well-placed horizontal form can provide.
Few pieces make a spatial statement as clearly as a chaise longue — it commits to a corner, an angle, a particular relationship with light and the rest of the room. Orientation matters: whether it faces a window, extends from a sofa or stands alone determines as much about how it works as the form itself. So does the choice between a fully reclined profile and a design with more back support, which shifts the piece from a place of complete rest to something closer to a reading seat with extended depth.
Flexform and Molteni&C are among the European makers who bring the most considered thinking to these decisions — working in full-grain leather, bouclé and fine linen over frames resolved for both ergonomic support and sculptural clarity. Every designer chaise longue in this edit is selected for the integrity of its recline, the quality of its upholstery and its ability to anchor a living room, bedroom or dressing space with the kind of presence that only a well-placed horizontal form can provide.











