Tottolo is a table-portal to childhood.
It is born from memory — from those carefree moments when a child’s hand reached for grandpa’s tools, and scraps of wood appeared on the old workbench. Out of them emerged strange, clumsy shapes, yet full of inner meaning. Not for the result, but for the process itself: passionate, vibrant, uncompromisingly genuine.
Tottolo is not just a name. It’s a sound from an imaginary childhood language, where any word could become a shape. It sounds like a jump, like laughter, like the attempt to balance on a chair with one short leg. There’s softness, mischief, and freedom in that word.
The legs of Tottolo were not drawn with a compass, but carved with joy. They don’t follow logic — they follow the hand that was curious. In this table, there is no “correct,” but there is courage and life. It was not made as it should be, but as it wanted to be.
Tottolo speaks of something essential: creativity begins where the fear of making mistakes disappears. Where you can act intuitively, make things uneven, mix colors without restraint — and precisely there, find the form.
Designed by: Levantin Studio (designer: Lvov Sergei).