Tom Ducarouge Collection - Tundra Table
by Tom Ducarouge
Material
Poplar Plywood
Are you a professional? Join our Trade Program now
The Tundra Table is a sculptural table by Tom Ducarouge, part of the Tom Ducarouge Collection x Monde Singulier.
The name signals the design intent. "Tundra" points to raw, expansive terrain: an open landscape where form follows the logic of the ground rather than architectural gesture. The table carries that reading into its silhouette, a profile shaped around organic contour rather than geometric precision.
Ducarouge trained at Central Saint Martins and built his Paris practice around the emotional and functional potential of materials such as aluminum, mirror, and ceramic. Each Tom Ducarouge Collection piece names itself after what it references formally, and the Tundra Table holds to that same convention.
Where the Camel family in the collection works with arching curves, the Tundra Table occupies a different formal territory: wider, more expansive, with a silhouette drawn from horizontal landscape rather than vertical tension.
W 120 x D 45 x H 40 cm
W 47.24 x D 17.72 x H 15.75 in
Materials: Unbrushed and poplar plywood
About
Tom Ducarouge
Tom Ducarouge is a Paris-based industrial designer, trained at Central Saint Martins in London. His practice covers product design, creative direction, and consulting for industry, at the point where artisanal methods and manufacturing processes shape each other.
Material investigation drives his work. Ducarouge develops objects in aluminum, mirror, and ceramic, treating each material as a distinct set of constraints: how a polished surface responds to light, how a cast form holds apparent weight, how a familiar object changes meaning when made through an unfamiliar process. He applies no fixed formal language across projects. The material logic of each commission guides its form, and the resulting objects are frameworks for experience and ritual as much as they are functional pieces.
The storytelling dimension is deliberate. Each object is designed to generate a specific interaction or habit of use, rather than simply completing a function. This approach holds whether the work is a limited-edition object or a product developed for industrial scale.
His clients have included Gucci, Rimowa, Arc'teryx, Alexander McQueen, New Balance, Soho House, and Uniqlo. These collaborations, spanning fashion, outdoor equipment, and hospitality, have built an industrial and creative fluency that runs through all of his work.
His pieces on Monde Singulier carry this material precision into collectible design for the domestic sphere.
















.jpg&w=3840&q=100)







