SURFACE Edition extends its slow conversations into a generously large, highly collectible print edition. Welcome to Vol.1.

Words by Phil Brenton and Alice Blackwood

Photography by Ayden Demiri

It’s generously large, highly tactile and carries the weight of quality while still remaining light enough to tuck under your arm or pop into your tote. We’re excited to launch our very first print edition of SURFACE Edition Vol.1. Like our digital space, this limited edition ‘broadsheet’ (as we’ve been fondly calling it in the office), is a place where we can converse together, at leisure, about architecture, design, materiality and the built environment.

Carrying the bespoke design of our digital platform into print format (full credits to M. Giesser), SURFACE Edition Vol.1 gives space and pleasurable time to material-rich conversations that revolve around process and innovation, design ideation and resolution, too. We give special thanks to the designers with whom we’ve engaged to create this one-of-a-kind issue, among them Georgina Jeffries, David Flack of Flack Studio, Adriana Hanna of Adriana Hanna Office, the team at Hecker Guthrie, Emanuele Benedini of Agape, Matilde Gandolfi of Mutina, Australian designer Jordan Fleming, UK designer Philip Watts and so many more.

Request your limited edition copy today.

At Artedomus we love to partner with you through the process of design, delivery and completion. Through that process we have come to observe, learn, and appreciate the finer details and complex resolutions that make a project memorable, life enhancing, and often exceptional – in its own quiet way.

SURFACE Edition enables us to step back from the fast pace of project delivery to reflect on the thinking, vision, and composition behind architectural spaces, interior environments, and designed objects. Whether established or emerging, award winning or quietly well-resolved – we seek out the magic in the lesser-known details.

Contact us directly to request your limited edition copy of SURFACE Edition Vol.1, available until stocks run out.