Ptolomeo Vino - h 213 784040 192x192 0751 product 240067 1
Ptolomeo Vino - h 213 1 784041 192x192 0751 product 240067 2
Ptolomeo Vino - h 213 2 784042 192x192 0751 product 240067 3
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Ptolomeo Vino - h 213

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Storage - Shelving - design Bruno Rainaldi

€ 1.050,00

Available in 15 days

Vertical free-standing lacquered black steel bottle holder. The designer’s signature is engraved on the base.
Ptolomeo Vino is the innovative bottle holder which combines two Italian excellences: wine and design. It represents the transformation of Original Ptolomeo, the bookshelf icon of contemporary design, into a scenographic bottle holder. Ptolomeo Vino is a metal column connected to a system of ledges that can contain a great variety of different wine bottles. The supports have been designed to be as imperceptible as possible, to give the beholder the idea that the bottles are “suspended”, the container once again stands aside allowing the limelight to go to its content. The wine bottles are the main protagonists, appearing to float in the air, their labels becoming a strongly decorative feature.
Available in two different sizes and four different finishes, it is the perfect solution for both domestic environments and the contract world, including hotels, restaurants, wineries, wine shops and wherever wine is more than just a passion.

Code: PTVINO213BB
Dimension: cm 40x40, h 213
Material: steel
Finish: black
Weight: kg 26,5
Volume: m3 0,2
Note: holds up to 22 bottles. All shelves are equipped with functional washable slip-proof elastic bands.Adjustable feet.

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Bruno Rainaldi
Designer

Bruno Rainaldi

Bruno Rainaldi was born in Milan in 1952. His training was hands-on, having started at a young age to work in design communication. In his early years in Milan he managed the first High-Tech emporium in Corso di Porta Ticinese, moving on to work first alongside Maddalena De Padova in the historical showroom in Corso Venezia and then with Enrico Baleri as partner in Baleri & Associati, where he was in charge of defining communication strategies for design companies and stores. His beginnings as an autodidact encouraged him in later life to ironically and anti-celebratively define himself as a “street designer” and his style as “chaotically rigorous”.

In the mid-1980s he founded Studio Rari – of which he became the soul and creative director. He also started working as art director with some of the top Italian design companies, leading his name to be associated, amongst others, with Alivar, Casprini, MDF Italia, Mussi Italy, Sintesi, Slamp, Terzani. His encounter, in those same years, with the Ciatti family marked the beginning of an important personal and artistic alliance, that led to the establishment first of CCR and then of Opinion Ciatti.

In the early 2000s, his career took a turn towards the world of design. In 2002, together with Marta Giardini, he founded ENTRATALIBERA, a very special space in the heart of Milan dedicated to design and design culture, sales and encounters. At the same time, his focus shifted to studying and creating objects, furnishing accessories and lamps, where the expertise gained over the years in this sector mingled with design inventions.

Amongst the numerous pieced designed there is the Ptolomeo bookshelf, for which, in 2004, he was awarded the Compasso d’Oro. In 2006, together with the very young Lapo Ciatti, who had just entered the family business, he founded Opinion Ciatti, of which Bruno Rainaldi was President, partner and art director.

He passed away prematurely in February 2011.