A sit-stand desk that looks like furniture
Most standing desks look like office equipment: chunky T-shaped legs, visible motors, and industrial aesthetics. The Forma is different. Four slender round legs, concealed cabling, and a natural oak top create a clean, table-like appearance that belongs in any room.
Whether you place it in a home office, executive suite, or open-plan workspace, the Forma blends in rather than standing out for the wrong reasons.
Four-leg design, without the premium price tag
Until now, four-leg sit-stand desks have only been available through commercial furniture dealers at $2,500 and above. The Forma brings the same clean, table-like aesthetic to Australian buyers at a price that actually makes sense for a home office or small business.
Who is the Forma best for?
Ideal For
- ✓Home office workers who want a desk that looks like furniture, not gym equipment
- ✓Executive offices where aesthetics matter as much as ergonomics
- ✓Open-plan workspaces needing sit-stand without the industrial look
- ✓Dual-monitor setups with 80kg capacity and 1600mm width
- ✓Users 155cm to 195cm tall (height range 687-1132mm)
Not Recommended For
- ✗Loads exceeding 80kg (heavy equipment, 3+ large monitors)
- ✗Spaces requiring desktops wider than 1600mm
- ✗Users who need a built-in cable tray (not included)
Features & Specifications
Frequently Asked Questions
The Forma uses the same four-leg design approach found in commercial sit-stand desks costing $2,500 and above. It features TiMOTION dual motors, anti-collision technology, and programmable memory presets. The key difference is price: commercial four-leg desks are typically sold through office furniture dealers at significant markups. The Forma delivers the same core functionality and aesthetic directly to Australian buyers.
Four-leg sit-stand desks require two independent motor systems (one per side), four telescoping leg columns instead of two, and more complex engineering to keep all four legs synchronised during height adjustment. The result is superior stability, higher load capacity, and a table-like appearance, but at a higher manufacturing cost than a simple two-leg T-frame.
Assembly takes 45-60 minutes with two people. All tools are included. The most important tip: keep all frame screws loose during initial assembly, then tighten everything once the desktop is positioned. The pre-drilled holes in the desktop may need slight adjustment to align with the frame. Our included Chair Dinkum assembly guide covers this in detail.
Some users report that the pre-drilled holes in the desktop don't perfectly align with the frame mounting points. This is a known characteristic of the manufacturing process. The solution is simple: assemble the entire base frame loosely first, position the desktop, hand-thread all corner screws before tightening any, then gradually tighten in a cross pattern. Even if one or two screws don't align perfectly, the desktop's weight (approximately 20kg) holds it securely in place. Our assembly instructions include detailed guidance on this.
Significantly more stable. Two-leg (T-frame) desks can wobble side-to-side, especially at standing height. The four-leg design distributes weight across four independent contact points, providing superior lateral stability at all heights. This is the same reason premium brands use four-leg designs for their executive-grade desks.
The Forma adjusts from 687mm to 1132mm (including the 25mm desktop). This suits most users for both sitting and standing. For reference, standard desk height is 720-750mm, and a comfortable standing height for someone 175cm tall is approximately 1050-1100mm.
Under 50dB, which is quieter than a normal conversation. You can adjust height during a phone call without the other person hearing it. The TiMOTION motors are the same ones used in premium desks costing three to four times more.

