A sofa is not just a sofa. It becomes the ground where everyday life unfolds - conversation, rest, work, play, or quiet moments in between.
Feld approaches furniture as a landscape. Soft platforms that can shift and expand over time. A system designed to move with life. 

Our thinking is rooted in the pragmatic modernism of the mid-twentieth century, an era that believed in clarity, universality and modular logic. Furniture was understood as structure rather than decoration: systems of simple elements that could adapt to different spaces and lives.

Seen from the present, this legacy takes on a softer character. Homes today are more fluid, and the boundaries between work, rest and social life are less fixed. Furniture must respond to this reality with flexibility, comfort and quiet adaptability.

Across cultures, living spaces have often been organised close to the ground - from Japanese tatami rooms to interiors shaped by layers of textiles and cushions - creating open surfaces where furniture and architecture merge into a continuous field.

Feld continues this lineage in a contemporary modular language: clear geometric structures that remain open to change. A system designed for how life unfolds, across moments, moods and the spaces in between.