Our edit of contemporary glassware sets, from everyday kitchen glassware to dinner party-appropriate wine and cocktail glasses, by the best designers and makers
‘Puck’ glasses by Tom Dixon
Wallpaper* explored glassware sets for every occasion for this edit of drinking vessels, pitchers, tumblers and coupes. From minimalist, everyday kitchen glassware to the best wine and cocktail glasses for dinner parties (and more), we select the finest glassware in every format, created by the best designers and contemporary brands.
Browse our edit of glassware sets for every occasion
Essential everyday kitchen glassware
Name: ‘Glass / M’Brand: HayPrice: from £4
Simple and sturdy, this trio of minimalist drinking glasses by Hay is available in small, medium and large sizes. Compact and stackable, the essential design allows for the drinking glasses to double as a bowl for snacks.
Name: ‘Piuma’ collectionBrand: Ichendorf MilanoPrice: from £16
Designed by Marco Sironi, the ‘Piuma’ tableware features an entirely transparent design that perfectly showcases the quality of Ichendorf Milano’s Italian craftsmanship. As its name indicates (meaning ‘feather’ in Italian), ‘Piuma’ is a light and elegant collection. We particularly like the essential cylindrical design of the milk jug (pictured).
Minimalist dinner party glassware
Name: ‘Revolution’ collectionBrand: Felicia Ferrone, for FferronePrice: from $160
Originally designed by Felicia Ferrone in 2001, this glassware set marked the debut of the Amercian designer’s brand. Each glass has two sides, one deeper and one more shallow, allowing for multiple functionalities within the collection. The idea for this dual-sided approach was the result of an evening dining with close friends, Ferrone recalls, as seen through her trained architect’s lens. ‘The glassware reinvents the landscape of the table with its minimalist architectural forms: wine, water, cocktails and soup all appear to defy gravity with the floating effect of the hollow opposite side.’
Name: ‘Scotch’ tumblers and carafeBrand: Robert Stadler, for LobmeyrPrice: from €238
The ‘Scotch’ whisky set is named after its intended purpose but also offers a play on words as it may refer to Scotch tape, which inspired the hand-engraved tape-like strips on each side of the tumblers.
Colourful glassware
Photography: Jeroen Van De Gruiter
Name: ‘Pigmento’ collectionBrand: Formafantasma for Nude GlassPrice: from €63
This collection of glassware by Formafantasma includes pitchers, cake domes, dishes in various sizes and glass boxes, defined by a coloured gradient in pink, yellow and gray on mouth-blown crystalline glass that displays a sandblasted matte look.
Photography: Thomas Albdorf
Name: ‘31.3 Polygon Glassware’Brand: Omer Arbel for OAO WorksPrice: from $575
Bocci founder and creative director Omer Arbel created the OAO Works’ ‘31.3 Polygon Glassware’ in collaboration with a Czech glassmaker, who uses ancient colour formulas to make pieces and then supplies Arbel with his leftovers. These pieces are used to make glasses and prisms in shapes derived from a mathematical problem known as five-fold tiling.
Variations on a theme: cocktail glasses and champagne coupes
Name: ‘Puck’ collectionBrand: Tom DixonPrice: from £65
Tom Dixon brings playfulness to the table with his contemporary cocktail glassware, which pairs a satisfyingly thick base, reminiscent of ice hockey pucks, with elegant geometric forms, such as cylinders, cones and spheres. The collection creates a stylish set of consummate companions for our cocktails.
Name: ‘Half Cut’ champagne coupesBrand: Lee BroomPrice: £80 each
British designer Lee Broom references the thick shapes of decanter stoppers to create the base of his champagne glasses. Each of the four vessels is mounted on a distinctive, etched base, with the option of mixing and matching from the collection to create a glassware set.
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