Salina Bed – Double
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The Salina Double Bed features a contemporary, elegant profile and is crafted to the high standard that defines the Ercol legacy. The new Salina spindle headboard bedframe has a smooth and sweeping top curve creating pared down elegant detail along side the gently sloping spindles. Constructed from ash and finished in a white washed stained lacquer that gives a lightness and calm to a room.
A modern pale ash bedroom collection finished with a white wash stain that invokes a feeling of light and calm creating a relaxed feel and look to this furniture collection. Full of practical design features and practical storage perfect for any modern home.
Solid Ash, Ash Veneers, Birch
The Double Bed is part of a wider Salina collection. This statement bed pairs particularly well with the Bedside Cabinets to create an inviting and understated bedroom space.
Salina Bed – Double
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Salina Bed – Double
The Maker /
Ercol
Ercol was founded in England in 1920 by a young Italian, Lucian Ercolani. His simple goal was to make furniture that was well designed and made in a good working environment by craftsmen who took real pride in their jobs. Today, Ercol remains a family owned company committed to protecting and sharing its highly celebrated legacy.
The iconic British furniture maker has also introduced L. Ercolani, a luxury brand inspired by the rich heritage, timeless designs and progressive vision of its founder.
The Designer /
Lisa Sandall
Lisa Gould Sandall has been part of the ercol design studio since 2011; she has designed many popular pieces of furniture including the Shalstone bedroom range and the Svelto round stacking stool which received the Design Guild Mark Award for excellence in furniture design in 2015.
Featured in the Journal
Ercol Lara Chairs at The Chapel of St. Peter by Stevens Lawson Architects
We are delighted to share the images of the newly completed Chapel of St. Peter at Auckland School St. Peter's College. It has been a privilege to be involved in providing the furniture for a stunning new piece of New Zealand architecture.