Explores with you

Ligne Roset: the French house behind the Togo sofa

Ligne Roset has been making furniture since 1860. They are the French manufacturer of Michel Ducaroy's Togo sofa, which is the most-replicated sofa shape in contemporary design. Here's the short story.

Whoppah Curation Team

Ligne Roset's Togo, designed by Michel Ducaroy, is one of the most-listed single designs on Whoppah. Our curators have authentication notes for the Togo down to the foam-density era; production decades make a real difference.

Ligne Roset has been making furniture in Briord, France, since 1860, originally as a beechwood workshop producing walking sticks and parasol handles. The shift to upholstered furniture came after World War II, and the defining moment came in 1973 when Michel Ducaroy designed the Togo sofa for them.

The Togo is one of the most-produced and most-imitated sofa designs of the 20th century. Five components (a low sofa, a high lounge chair, a low lounge chair, an ottoman, and a corner unit) all built from a single foam structure with quilted fabric or leather covers. No internal frame, no legs, the whole piece sits flat on the floor. Ducaroy described it as "a tube of toothpaste folded back on itself". It was launched at the Salon du Meuble in 1973 to mixed reviews, and is now considered one of the canonical pieces of 1970s French design.

Beyond the Togo, Ligne Roset has produced Pierre Paulin's Pacha lounge chair (originally 1975 for another brand, reissued by Ligne Roset since 2018), the Calin armchair (Pascal Mourgue, 1989), the Multy sofa-bed system (Claude Brisson, 1973), and a long catalogue of contemporary upholstered pieces by Pierre Paulin, the Bouroullec brothers, Inga Sempé and others.

What to look for on the secondhand market: every authentic Ligne Roset piece carries a sewn-in label inside the upholstery with the model name and a serial number. The Togo specifically has a Ligne Roset label sewn into the underside of one of the seat cushions. Original Togos from the 1970s and 80s sell on Whoppah at €1,400 to €3,800 for the three-seater sofa, depending on upholstery condition.

The Togo has been heavily copied since the 1980s. The differences are real: genuine Ligne Roset Togos use a specific high-density foam that holds shape for 30 to 40 years; copies use cheaper foam that compresses faster. The quilted stitching pattern on the cover is also specific (look for the diagonal quilting at the seat edge).

Read our other blogs too

  • blog-one-main-test.png

    Whoppah explores: Frank Lloyd Wright

    Frank Lloyd Wright was one of the most influential architects of the twentieth century. It's high time to find out more about this world architect!

    Read more
  • Ludwig Mies van der Rohe Image

    Whoppah explores: Ludwig Mies van der Rohe

    One of the most iconic design chairs is the Barcelona Chair by Mies van der Rohe. The chair was exhibited in 1929 during the World Exhibition in Barcelona and is one of the best-selling designer armchairs ever. It is amazing how a chair has not lost its popularity for more than 90 years and remains a symbol of elegant and modern design. That is why this week is an ode to architect and furniture designer Mies van der Rohe.

    Read more
  • Scandinavian Modern: why Danish chairs still set the standard sixty years on

    Three decades of Danish furniture production set the template for what design-conscious living looks like in 2026. Here's a friendly tour of the makers, the pieces, and the secondhand market that lets you actually live with them.

    Read more
  • How to recognise a genuine Eames Lounge Chair before you buy

    The Eames Lounge is the most-counterfeited piece of mid-century furniture in the world, which is exactly why we wrote this. Here are the seven checks our curation team runs before any Lounge listing goes live, explained gently so you can run the same ones yourself.

    Read more