Wine Breather Carafe, Deluxe

Wine Breather Carafe, Deluxe

Designer Norm Architects

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Wine Breather Carafe, Deluxe

Wine Breather Carafe, Deluxe

Designer Norm Architects

Light the candles, open a bottle of wine, place the Winebreather Deluxe over the bottleneck, and flip it all upside down - the wine will run through the decanting unit and into the large-surfaced carafe for perfect aeration. Flip it all around once more to get the wine back in the original bottle, pour it, and taste the advantages of a wine with 10 times the oxygen.

The Winebreather Deluxe works with both 750ml and 1000ml bottles, and holds 1500ml of wine. Flip it once and serve your wine in the Winebreather Deluxe - or flip it twice and serve the wine in its original bottle. Either way you get 10 times the oxygen.

Color

Selected: Steel Lid

Regular price $130.00
Regular price Sale price $130.00
Sale Sold out
In stock

Materials

Glass
Steel or Brass
Silicone

Dimensions

7.9"W x 8.3"H
Capacity: 47oz
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Norm Architects

Founded in Copenhagen in 2008 by Jonas Bjerre-Poulsen and Kasper Rønn, Norm Architects specialise in residential architecture, commercial interiors, industrial design, photography and art direction. The name, Norm Architects, reflects the group’s emphasis on the importance of drawing inspiration from norms and traditions within architecture and design – particularly the Scandinavian design principles of timeless aesthetics and natural materials, and the modernist values of restraint and refinement. Guided by these principles, Norm Architects produce a design that unites materials and craftsmanship, while embodying beauty, history and, most importantly, timeless simplicity, where there is nothing more to add or take away. Today, the group regularly collaborates with Audo Copenhagen, helping to drive the evolution of the brand and its product offerings —imbued with the same intrinsic quality as Norms creative direction: a simplicity that carries bigger ideas. Lead by the body and mind rather than by trends or technology, their projects explore ideas that not only look good but that also feel good: architecture becomes thoughtful, minimalism acquires softness and visual matter assumes haptic qualities.