This Platinum-Winning Glass Stacks Like a Chalice

There’s something incredibly satisfying about a drinking glass that just feels right. You know what I mean: the perfect weight in your hand, a shape that fits naturally to your lips, and maybe even a little something extra that makes you smile every time you reach for it. Austrian designer Florian Seidl gets this, and his Cali glassware series just won a Platinum A’ Design Award, proving that even the simplest everyday objects deserve serious design love.

The Cali series comes from Officina Endorfino, Seidl’s creative playground where curiosity meets experimentation. These aren’t your standard kitchen glasses. Made from borosilicate glass (the same stuff used in lab equipment and high-end cookware), they’re surprisingly lightweight yet durable enough to handle hot and cold liquids without breaking a sweat. But what really catches your eye is how they play with light and perception. The material’s unique properties create captivating reflections that mess with your sense of volume and weight, making each glass look almost sculptural on your table.

Designer: Florian Seidl

What makes this collection particularly clever is its stackable design. The glasses come in three distinct sizes that nest together beautifully, solving that eternal kitchen cabinet space problem we all deal with. But Seidl didn’t just think about storage. The way these glasses stack actually references the elegant form of a chalice, giving them a subtle sophistication that elevates your everyday water or morning juice into something more special.

Seidl brings an interesting background to this project. With years of experience across various industries, including automotive and product design, he knows how to balance form with function. His multidisciplinary approach shows in the Cali series, where practical considerations never overshadow the aesthetic vision. Each glass manages to have personality without being fussy, and functionality without being boring.

The sustainability angle is worth mentioning too. While the glasses themselves are built to last (borosilicate glass is notably resistant to thermal shock and everyday wear), the packaging gets its own eco-friendly treatment with recycled cardboard. It’s a thoughtful touch that shows consideration for the entire product lifecycle, not just the glamorous end result.

What strikes me most about Cali is how it represents a growing shift in design culture. We’re moving past the idea that everyday objects should just blend into the background. Instead, designers like Seidl are asking why our daily rituals shouldn’t involve beautiful, well-considered pieces. Your morning coffee, your afternoon iced tea, your evening wind-down beverage all of these moments can be enhanced by thoughtful design that respects both your practical needs and your aesthetic sensibilities.

The Platinum A’ Design Award recognition is particularly significant here. This isn’t a participation trophy. It’s an acknowledgment from design professionals that Cali represents something genuinely special in the kitchenware category. The award highlights how the series addresses contemporary needs for space-efficient, versatile solutions while pushing creative boundaries in material exploration.

For anyone who cares about the objects they live with (whether you’re a design enthusiast, a minimalist who values quality over quantity, or simply someone who appreciates when things are done right), the Cali series feels relevant. It’s not about status or showing off. It’s about recognizing that the small choices we make about our everyday surroundings actually matter. They accumulate into an environment that either energizes us or drains us, delights us or just exists.

Seidl’s work with Cali suggests that good design doesn’t require complexity or gimmicks. Sometimes it’s about understanding a material deeply, respecting functional requirements completely, and then adding just enough personality to make something memorable. The result is a drinking glass series that works beautifully in practice while looking like something you’d want to display even when you’re not using it. That’s the kind of everyday magic worth celebrating.

The post This Platinum-Winning Glass Stacks Like a Chalice first appeared on Yanko Design.

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