About
A minimalist seating concept that balances form, function, and material honesty. The Spot Stool by Michael Anastassiades distills a cylinder into a circle-on-circle composition: a round seat and base connected by two parallel legs in wood and metal. It sounds simple, but in person the proportions feel dialed — the spacing of the uprights, the thickness of the seat, and the subtle sheen of the metal read as premium without shouting.
Available in white ash, walnut, or ebony paired with brass, satin chrome, or black finishes, it comes in three heights, with the counter and bar versions adding a crossbar footrest that sits exactly where you want it. The silhouette is clean from every angle, and it lands well in kitchens, studios, and hospitality spaces where restraint matters. No visual clutter, just a clear structure and great materials.
What stands out is the designer’s “honesty” approach: you see how it’s made, and that transparency becomes the aesthetic. It’s comfortable for short sessions, steady on its base, and more durable than its delicate lines suggest. If your space leans modern, minimal, or warm contemporary, this is the stool that elevates without taking over.













