Screw-inspired Stool Numbered Like a Sneaker Drop: Only 150 Made

There’s a certain kind of object that can’t quite decide what it is, and not in a bad way. Furniture has increasingly strayed into collectible territory, and collectibles have crept into living rooms posing as furniture. The result is a growing category of designed objects that live somewhere between a chair and a limited-edition release, serious about craft but refreshingly light about everything else.

Carpet Company, the Baltimore brand known for carving out its own irreverent corner of the design world, leans into that tension with the S-TOOL, its first piece of furniture. The name makes no effort to hide the attitude, and the official list of potential uses runs from stool and ottoman all the way to footrest, ornament, chew toy, and, with admirable candor, trash.

Designer: Carpet Company

The form is remarkably direct. A 12-by-12-by-12-inch cube of 100% fiberglass, cast in a single unbroken gloss color, sits on four chunky legs that taper down to blunt, faceted points. The top surface carries a screw-head relief in each corner, molded flush into the fiberglass in the same color as the piece, which reads immediately as hardware but behaves purely as ornament.

The screw motif carries through to the legs, shaped like Philips screwdrivers that slot into the screw-head relief of another S-TOOL. It’s a small but loaded gesture, nodding to the DIY impulse of the design process without pretending to be handmade. Carpet describes it as hardware that speaks to how things get built, balanced against the glossy, almost candy-like finish to keep the whole concept from becoming too earnest.

The S-TOOL is a limited release, with only 150 units spread across 30 colors, five of each. Every piece carries a metal plaque screwed into the underside, detailing the release and edition, which gives the stool some of the same collectible gravity you’d expect from a numbered print or a signed sneaker. At 15 pounds, it’s substantial enough to feel like something, and that’s rather the point.

The packaging reinforces the whole thing. The box carries the same list of purposes, a column of color-coded screw illustrations previewing the full range, and a cartoon hippo mascot that’s equal parts absurd and charming. Carpet has always been deliberately playful, and the S-TOOL packaging reads like the product brief itself, a small manifesto folded around a cube of brightly colored fiberglass.

What makes the S-TOOL interesting is how much effort went into something that officially disclaims all responsibility. Carpet spent considerable time on proportional analysis to give the elementary form a sense of sophistication it doesn’t advertise, and it shows in how quietly resolved the piece sits. It’s furniture that doesn’t mind being treated as trash, but it’s built carefully enough that you probably won’t.

The post Screw-inspired Stool Numbered Like a Sneaker Drop: Only 150 Made first appeared on Yanko Design.