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Studio Job designs furniture shaped like fast food for Seletti
A sofa shaped like a hot dog and a burger-like chair are among Studio Job's latest designs for Italian brand Seletti.
The food-themed pieces are part of Studio Job's Un_Limited Editions collection, and will be launched by Seletti during next month's Maison&Objet furniture fair in Paris.
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As with actual hot dogs and burgers – described by Seletti as "iconic images of American pop culture" – the sofa and chair are each made up of a number of components.
The Hamburger chair features a bun-like seat, with cushions designed to look like a patty, a tomato and a gherkin.
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The Hot Dog chair has much the same – but in place of the circular patty cushion is a long sausage embroidered with a squiggly yellow pattern to look like mustard.
Both pieces mark Seletti's first foray into upholstered furniture, which the brand says has come as a response to its "steady growth".
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The collection also includes the Tiffany Tree Lamp – Studio Job's resin take on the classic art nouveau design by Louis Comfort Tiffany, which traditionally had a stained-glass shade.
The studio's iconic golden Banana Lamps, originally designed for an exhibition at Belgium's Samuel Vanhoegaerden Gallery, also feature.
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All the pieces will be on show at Seletti's stand at the September edition of Maison&Objet, taking place this year from 8 to 12 September.
Studio Job founders Job Smeets and Nynke Tynagel – a former couple – have become known for their autobiographical and maximalist approach to design, and once crafted a coffee table that symbolised their break-up as a head-on collision between two steam trains.
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Earlier this year, the duo created a brick punchbag and a smoke-topped table for Gufram's new limited-edition range, which is aimed at the "most demanding collectors".
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During last year's Design Miami, they unveiled an eight-metre-tall tree depicting an array of memories and thoughts outside the OMA-designed Faena Forum building.
Studio Job ranked at number 111 on Dezeen Hot List, a data-based power ranking of design and architecture's most influential figures.