Sayonara
Design

«Let the daylight rain down on you and say goodbye to this mundanity. Here is to courage!» (Sayonara is translated from Japanese as «Goodbye»). We have promised to reveal the reasons guiding us while choosing a name for this collection: we put a haiku (an art to describing a moment using three lines) written by us in the epigraph. As they say in Japan, «it is not man, who is the measure of all things, but nature». The Japanese aesthetics suggest that everything about nature is well-ordered and inextricably linked, but shapes and setting promote an open relationship and they are not secondary to each other.

Being aesthetically pleasing, the items in the Sayonara Collection show a symbiosis developed between the elements and the creation of mankind. Among mountain patterns, we see semiabstract seashells that typify a perfect match, or harmony: mountains build a foundation preventing the world from coming down, and water symbolises the even tenor of life. The Sayonara Collection marks off as a collection with an astonishingly stylised design: the second and the third motifs show samurai swords depicted symbolically (a geometric companion) and skyscrapers in Tokyo. The colour scheme also refers to some basics of Japanese culture. There are two flagship colours: aoi (the way to call all the shades of blue, light blue and green in Japan) symbolises infinity and a Japanese water dragon, and black is a traditional male colour that stands for enlightenment. The collection is a quartet comprising two intense, but calm companions and their matt textured background allows combining the elements differently to design your interior.