Most Hi-Fi gear still looks like anonymous black rectangles, even in carefully designed living rooms. Serious listeners often hide their amps and speakers in cabinets because the hardware rarely matches the rest of the furniture, even when the sound is great. The default assumption is that audio equipment belongs out of sight, tolerated for its performance but not celebrated for its presence.
Antoine Brieux of NAK Studio designed a complete stack he would personally want at home, treating it as a thought experiment about what happens when an integrated amplifier, speakers, and turntable are drawn as one family from the start. Color, tactility, and proportions are treated as seriously as the signal path, so the system could earn a spot in the open rather than behind doors or under furniture.
Designer: Antoine Brieux (NAK Studio)
The integrated amplifier is a low, solid block with a ribbed cylinder grafted onto one corner, turning the usual volume knob into a full control column. That cylinder suggests precise, satisfying adjustments for volume, inputs, and tone, giving your hand a clear place to land instead of hunting for tiny knobs or touch buttons scattered across a cluttered front panel.
The tall monochrome display beside the cylinder shows track info, a big dB scale, and twin bar-graph meters dancing with the music. The list of inputs covers phono and TV to Bluetooth and USB, and a warm-to-cold tonal slider sits below, so the front of the amp feels like a calm, legible dashboard rather than a technical interface that demands constant attention or an instruction manual.
The compact speakers are each a rounded rectangle with a single driver and tweeter, but finished in mixable Pantone colors, letting you treat them as color accents in a room. You could pair teal with orange, or match a pair to a shelf or wall, so they become part of the space’s palette instead of something you try to hide or apologize for when guests visit.
The matching turntable sits on the same footprint as the amp, with exposed suspension pillars and a straight arm that echoes the cylinder theme. The three components stack visually into a tidy tower, making the whole listening setup feel intentional, almost like a piece of modular furniture for records and streaming alike, cohesive enough to anchor a sideboard or desk.
NAK Studio’s concept is not about chasing specs, but about imagining a Hi-Fi system that earns its place in the open. The controls invite touch, the colors play with the room, and the stack looks as considered as the music it is built to play. It starts to feel less like a fantasy and more like how audio gear should have evolved all along.
The post NAK Studio Imagines a Hi-Fi Stack You Would Actually Want on Display first appeared on Yanko Design.

