Palomar

DEARWORLD WORLD MAP

£30.00 GBP

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Name: City Names

City Names
Country Names
DETAILS

DearWorld by Palomar is a globe that makes you trace your personal travel experience. It invites you to mark the places you have visited and the ones that are on your wishlist.

At first this globe looks bi-dimensional, like an atlas. It takes just a few seconds to turn it into a three-dimensional object. The globe is made of a special high quality materic cardboard by Cordenons and the graphics enhance the paper’s preciousness, tactile quality and texture.

You can choose between two cartographic options: the map of the world with city names – and no borders – or the map with country names and borders.

Both simple and sophisticated, DearWorld stands up on its own without needing any support; it is very light but solid and it can be placed anywhere: on a table, on a bookcase, even on the floor. 

 

DESIGNER: Palomar

DIMENSIONS: Ø 21CM

MATERIALS: Cordenons Wild special Cardboard with 35% cotton in the natural fibers. High Quality Silkscreen printing with non-toxic inks.

100% RECYCLABLE
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
Name

City Names, Country Names

DELIVERY & RETURNS

In stock. Normally despatched within 24 hours.

Find out more about our delivery options.

If you wish to cancel your order you can notify us by email on info@luxxdesign.com before we have dispatched the goods or if goods have already been dispatched, you can return them to us within 14 days of receipt.

Vendor: Palomar
SKU: DWGC-S

Meet the maker:

Palomar

Palomar is a design company founded in Florence, Italy in 2001. The products they design and manufacture — a collection of nomadic objects — are radically innovative for the new meanings they aspire to bring to our everyday life and experience.

Through a research that can be described as “post-digital”, every project designed by Palomar represents a sort of countermelody to the over-whelming digital technology mainstream; a way of saying that new physical and analogical objects can coexist with the digital technology and its presumed imperatives, enriching our experience with a more human, more ironic and more attractive dimension.