Low, Linear, and Deeply Considered: The Osolo Long Seating Unit

Most furniture asks you to adapt to it. You locate the armrests, figure out where your back is supposed to land, and quietly accept that the cushions are more decorative than functional. The Osolo Long Seating Unit by Turkish designer Gökçe Nafak doesn’t work that way. It hands you the structure and invites you to decide the rest. That’s not vagueness. It’s a very deliberate design stance, and once you see it, it’s hard to unsee.

The Osolo Long Seating Unit is part of a broader series that Nafak has been developing, all of which share one defining characteristic: a single-piece folded metal body that functions as both the structural frame and the visual foundation of the entire piece. That single decision is doing enormous work here. The folded metal isn’t just holding the cushions up. It defines the silhouette, creates an open cavity underneath for books, magazines, or small objects, and gives the piece a kind of architectural confidence that most upholstered furniture simply doesn’t have. When you look at it from the side, the curve of metal bending upward from the floor reads more like a building detail than a furniture leg. That’s not a coincidence.

Designer: Gökçe Nafak

Low, Linear, and Deeply Considered: The Osolo Long Seating Unit

The low-to-the-ground profile is where the cultural reference kicks in. The Osolo series draws from the tradition of the sedir, a built-in seating form that was central to the traditional Turkish home. The sedir was placed along the walls of a room, built directly into the architecture, and upholstered with cushions and bolsters. It was low, linear, and multifunctional long before multifunctional furniture became a trend. What’s worth noting is that the sedir was largely displaced during the 19th century as Western furniture styles, including sofas, armchairs, and dining sets, moved into Ottoman homes and reshaped the way interiors were organized and experienced. Nafak seems to be making a quiet argument that something worth having was lost in that exchange. I happen to agree.

The modular structure of the Osolo unit reinforces that idea of flexibility and communal use that the sedir originally embodied. Independent backrest elements can be positioned wherever they’re needed. Modular cushions tile the platform in varying configurations. You can run a single unit in a compact space or connect multiple modules into one continuous seating arrangement that stretches the full length of a wall. The piece adapts to its context rather than demanding that the room adapt to it, which is exactly what good furniture should do and rarely does.

Low, Linear, and Deeply Considered: The Osolo Long Seating Unit

My honest opinion is that the real achievement here is visual restraint. The renderings show a deep blue finish, a sharp choice because it amplifies how clean and resolved the geometry actually is. The folded metal edges are smooth without being fussy. The modular backrests carry just enough surface texture to break up what could have easily tipped into something flat and institutional. The scattered cushions in orange, tan, and silvery blue add warmth without softening the structural clarity underneath them. There’s a stack of books and a coffee mug sitting on the platform, and they look completely at home there. That might be the most honest thing a product render can show you.

What I keep coming back to is how the Osolo Long Seating Unit manages to feel both familiar and entirely new at the same time. Culturally, it connects to a seating tradition that is centuries old. Formally, it looks like something from a studio that hasn’t made peace with anything conventional yet. That combination is genuinely rare. Most furniture that reaches back into cultural history for inspiration ends up producing a romanticized version of the past. The Osolo doesn’t do that. The folded metal body grounds it firmly in contemporary manufacturing and contemporary aesthetics. The inspiration is present, but it isn’t wearing a costume.

Whether the Osolo Long Seating Unit makes it from concept to production is something worth keeping an eye on. Right now it reads as a very confident, very resolved piece of design thinking. Gökçe Nafak is building a coherent design language with this series, and the long seating unit makes a strong case that language has something real to say.

Low, Linear, and Deeply Considered: The Osolo Long Seating Unit

The post Low, Linear, and Deeply Considered: The Osolo Long Seating Unit first appeared on Yanko Design.

©

Related Posts

Interactive Resume Template for Adobe InDesignInteractive Resume Template for Adobe InDesign
Interactive Resume Template for Adobe InDesign
Craft a Standout Resume with Stefan Kovac’s Adobe InDesign Template. ...
Read more
Dit super mooie appartement heeft een charmante vintage look gekregen!Dit super mooie appartement heeft een charmante vintage look gekregen!
Dit super mooie appartement heeft een charmante...
Bij Alvhem kwam ik aanvankelijk een erg leuke kinderkamer tegen,...
Read more
The Underwater Photographer of the Year Celebrates 60 Years of Wildlife DiversityThe Underwater Photographer of the Year Celebrates 60 Years of Wildlife Diversity
The Underwater Photographer of the Year Celebrates...
Entering its 60th year, the Underwater Photographer of the Year...
Read more
Low, Linear, and Deeply Considered: The Osolo Long Seating UnitLow, Linear, and Deeply Considered: The Osolo Long Seating Unit
Starkly beautiful photobook captures the disappearing kiosks...
...
Read more
Derealisation affects everyone once in their lifeDerealisation affects everyone once in their life
Panoply visualises the symptoms of derealisation in...
...
Read more
Low, Linear, and Deeply Considered: The Osolo Long Seating UnitLow, Linear, and Deeply Considered: The Osolo Long Seating Unit
A Wider View of the Long-Term Returns...
Professor Edward McQuarrie has recently published the final part in...
Read more