The Perillo Line, Rethought in ECO
Dauphin’s Little Perillo ECO chair revisits a familiar form with a sharper agenda. The signature loop remains intact, but the material story shifts. This version leans into sustainable seating, using post-consumer plastics without compromising the chair’s fluid identity.
The design still reads as one continuous gesture. Seat, back, and base fold into each other with ease. There’s no visual interruption, just a clean, single flowing gesture that feels both engineered and effortless.
Color plays a role in softening the message. Gelato tones like Tender Green and Peach Cream bring warmth, while neutrals keep it contract-ready. The palette makes sustainable seating feel approachable, not didactic.
Flexibility is built in. Four-leg, swivel, counter height, or upholstered. Each version holds onto the same silhouette, which makes it easy to specify across a project without losing cohesion.
What’s most compelling is its restraint. The chair doesn’t overstate its eco-credentials. It simply integrates them into a form designers already understand and trust. In that way, it aligns with other pieces exploring material-conscious design, like those featured in this look at Sculpted Dining Chairs.
It’s a quiet evolution. One that proves sustainable seating can still feel resolved, flexible, and fully considered.
Images Courtesy of Dauphin





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