There are sofas you sit on. Myami is the kind you sink into and immediately stop caring about whatever was on your mind.
The Myami Sofa is built around a deceptively simple idea: that different people carry their weight differently, and good upholstery should respond to that rather than ignore it. The seat and cushions are constructed from layers of varying firmness — adapting to the body, distributing weight evenly, and landing at a softness that feels balanced rather than either too firm or too yielding. Large backrest cushions provide the main support; smaller side cushions wrap around the sitter and double as armrests, completing the sense of a sofa working quietly in several directions at once.
The optional Dream collection fabric adds a bouclé effect that takes the comfort further — a distinctive texture that reads as warmth before you've even sat down, closer to home textiles than contract upholstery. It's the kind of detail that changes how a room feels.
The design brief came from an unexpected source. Designers Stefanie Kubanek and Michael Geldmacher of studio MUCNYC drew their inspiration from the Art Deco architecture of Miami's South Beach — clean geometric lines, decorative accents, and the gently curved edges that define that particular strain of modernism. The result is a seamless, curved backrest that subtly embraces the seating area from every angle. Place Myami anywhere in a room, and it works — the aesthetic holds from the front, the sides, and the back. There is no bad view.
Every curve and line is deliberately echoed through the piece — backrest, armrests, cushions, wooden legs — creating a coherence that feels considered rather than designed by committee. Human-centred in the truest sense: it draws you in before you've made a conscious decision to sit down.