
Side tables have a bit of an identity problem in furniture design. Most treat them as purely functional afterthoughts, giving you a flat surface at the right height and not much else. The ones that do try to stand out tend to overcorrect, piling on decorative legs, unusual proportions, or materials that compete with everything else in the room. Very few ask whether the structure itself could be the point.
That’s the question Stuttgart-based designer Deniz Aktay explores with the Whisk table, a side table built around a single continuous tube that does all the heavy lifting. Aktay’s work consistently gravitates toward pure lines and the expressive potential of a single well-chosen material. The Whisk is one of his cleaner expressions of that thinking.
Designer: Deniz Aktay

The tube bends into two rounded loops stacked at different heights, forming an S-curve when viewed from the side. One loop reaches the height of a standard side table and cradles the tabletop. The other sweeps back to the floor, forming the base. The whole thing reads as one fluid gesture rather than a frame assembled from parts, which is very much the point.
Where it gets interesting structurally is at the center, where the tube crosses itself. That crossing point isn’t decorative; it’s what keeps the table stable. The two loops work against each other in a way that resists rocking or shifting, so you get a table that looks almost impossibly light while still holding its ground next to a sofa or armchair without wobbling every time you set something down.

The tabletop is designed to stay in the background. It fits within the upper loop and matches its rounded profile, so the two read as a single shape rather than two components joined together. The surface adds just enough contrast to define the functional plane without competing for attention. The tube does the work; the top is simply where you put your coffee, your book, or a small lamp.

As a side table, the Whisk works in less space than you’d expect. Its footprint is compact enough for tight spots beside a lounge chair or at the end of a bed, and the open structure doesn’t crowd the room the way solid-legged tables often do. It comes in a polished silver finish and a warm red option, giving it a bit more personality for spaces that can take it.
The Whisk explores what a single material or fabrication method can do without adding more than it needs to. It’s a single tube, bent twice, crossed once. It’s the kind of idea that sounds almost too simple to work, until you’re actually using it and realize that nothing about it needed to be more complicated.
