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Tag: armchair

ecart paris

Ecart

Ecart was born in Paris in 1978 from the will and foresight of Anrée Putman, who bravely decides to re-propose some forgotten designers of the 1930s such as René Herbst, Jean-Michel Frank, Pierre Chareau, Michel Dufet, Mariano Fortuny, Robert Mallet-Stevens , Eileen Gray … trying to win back the general public with some eternal masterpieces in a period, the early 1980s, where design and interior trends were taking different paths. The name already wants to be a manifesto of what you want to propose: Ecart as a gap, as a different proposal from everything that was dominating the world of design in those years.
In the mind of Putman these masterpieces could not be forgotten, the result of the design of great architects and designers and the realization of the best French and in particular Parisian craftsmen. In fact, everything started from Paris and then interested in the world, up to the United States of America, where Putman herself will take care of the famous Morgans Hotel in New York in 1984 and then of many public and private spaces.
As she often liked to say after the Americans, finally the French and then the Europeans began to love her style and her elegant and refined proposals; the works of the great French masters of the 1930s were proposed together with an always impeccable anonymous design, with colors and materials often very brave: electric blue, the famous black and white damier (almost a trademark) …
Many well-known faces and French fashion brands such as Azzedine Alaia, Balenciaga and Karl Lagerfeld relied on Putman and Ecart furnishings for their shops and ateliers, but also some politicians such as the French minister of culture Jack Lang for his office. in 1984 or finally some large institutions such as the CAPC museum of contemporary art in Bordeaux, for which Anrée Putman will design a monumental and iconic floor lamp
In Putman’s work and in the Ecart catalog, almost a reflection of her personality, the materials defined as rich and precious, such as black lacquer or chromed steel, are combined with simple and poor ones, such as cotton or natural wood, the bolder colors are put in relation with more neutral ones, more squared shapes are alternated with more sinuous lines.
The Ecart catalog is still divided into 2 parts: one dedicated to the historic French masters of architecture and interiors of the 1930s, much loved by Putman, the other to projects designed by Putman herself, such as the Crescent Moon sofa or the floor lamp Lune, or new collaborations and contemporary designers. All production: furniture, upholstery and lighting, is still made in France by the best craftsmen, while rugs, like the iconic black and white specimen by Eileen Gray, are hand-woven in Nepal.

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Edra, moderna tecnologia e tradizione artistica

Edra

Edra has always paid great attention to the research of new materials or reinvent and flexible types, capable of transforming the creative concept in industrial project. The highly specialized manual intervention and refined, Italian genetic inheritance cultivated with intent, characterizes the uniqueness of production. Technologies used come from unlimited horizons, explored without prejudice. High-tech that draws from different industries to complement its input into the design without the need for performance. Great technical complexity, which translates into extreme simplicity of use. Technology to augment the means of expression, advanced design solution, innovazione. L’intervento manual is the irreplaceable human contribution that distinguishes and characterizes the uniqueness of the results. The essential attention to detail is the result of the manual wisdom cultivated from years of experience. intrinsic dexterity that is part of the manufacturing process of each product Edra and ensures the exceptional quality. An evolutionary choice in conceiving seriale.Nuove production relations between body and objects are explored. The concept of comfort is transformed, spreading to new possibilities and adapting to profound changes daily living needs. Previously unattainable levels of comfort are achieved by creating new forms and using different materials.

Edra sofas are universally considered the most comfortable and ergonomically in the world thanks to the skills and inspiration of Francesco Binfarè, one of the most prepared personalities on the subject in the world of design, architect since the 1960s of engineering the best sofas of Italian design . The works of Binfarè, for Edra both designer and technical leader of the team of engineers for the realization, are timeless sofas, where technology, very advanced, but invisible, is at the service of aesthetics: Flap, Standard, Sherazade, On The Rocks, Il Grande Soffice, Absolu, Essential, Pack … are some of the projects that have now become iconic.
A separate discussion in the Edra catalog is reserved for the historic partnership with the Campana brothers, famous Brazilian designers of international design. Their first project for Edra is the famous Favela armchair, handmade in Brazil with wood waste. Every year, for decades, the Campana brothers have created new projects for Edra, always united by the strong creativity and that characteristic ironic note that distinguishes them. Among the best known projects, many now part of the best museum design collections, we can mention: the Cipria sofa, the Sushi, Vermelha, Grinza, Corallo armchairs, the Brasilia containers and tables, the Cabana bed …
Edra’s selection, always in search of new international collaborations, is completed with the projects of Jacopo Foggini, master in the processing of methacrylate, with a collection of flower-shaped armchairs by the Japanese Masanori Umeda, Getsuen and Rose chair and with the armchair Sponge by Peter Traag, made thanks to a very advanced technology.

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Fritz Hansen

Fritz Hansen

Fritz Hansen was founded in 1872 by the visionary carpenter of the same name and has since become a natural part of the history of both Danish and international design and an exclusive and sought after design brand

The history of Fritz Hansen is characterized by wonderful craftsmanship, a unique design and an innate sense of high quality. Architects and furniture designers from all over the world have regularly contributed to the collection with beautifully shaped and functional furnishings, through the use of innovative techniques and new materials. Arne Jacobsen, Poul Kjærholm, Piet Hein, Vico Magistretti, Burkhard Vogtherr, Piero Lissoni, Kasper Salto and Morten Voss … the list of designers is long and the list of furniture with great international fame is even more.

Fritz Hansen’s iconic classic collection includes a large part of the most famous furniture by Danish architects and designers, including the Egg, Swan and Serie 7 chairs by Arne Jacobsen and the PK22 chair and the PK80 sofa by Poul Kjaerholm. The contemporary collection, second soul of the catalog, presents instead furnishings and accessories of some of the most stimulating and internationally recognized contemporary designers, including Jaime Hayon, Piero Lissoni, Kasper Salto and Cecilia Manz. Common to the two collections is a sculptural artistic expression that confuses the lines between design and art and combines function and form in unprecedented ways, giving each work a significant presence and purpose.

The corporate design philosophy reflects its history and inspires the creation of new, simple, sculptural, original and timeless furniture. Fritz Hansen’s design is visionary and makes the most of noble materials; every detail is carefully studied, the process is complete and impeccable and the final glance is unique and immediately recognizable. The general style is international and elegant: each piece of furniture is sophisticated in its own way, has a strong identity and the ability to discreetly illuminate any type of space.

Today as in 1872, Fritz Hansen’s work is guided by the philosophy that a single piece of furniture can beautify an entire room or building and simultaneously increase the well-being of the people who inhabit these spaces. With a strong international presence and an ever-expanding collection of iconic designs, Fritz Hansen continues his journey in creating elegant and discreet furnishing elements, which do not compromise comfort, and in strengthening his position in the global design elite , discreet luxury and contemporary living.

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Karimoku

Karimoku is a wooden furniture manufacturer from central Japan with a history of more than 70 years.
Their tradition derives from a deep understanding of artisan carpentry in combination with cutting-edge technologies for the construction of high-quality furniture possible.
Collaborating with some of the most promising international design talents such as the Dutch creative couple Scholten and Baijings or the Swiss Big Game studio, the KARIMOKU NEW STANDARD division was created and launched in 2009, a growing collection of innovative, joyful and functional objects which adapt to urban life forms in the 21st century.
With the aim of preserving and revitalizing Japanese forests and regaining balance with the local forestry industry, our products are made using sustainable Japanese woods, such as maple, chestnut and oaks – small – diameters that are often discarded or finish like paper pulp.
KARIMOKU NEW STANDARD pieces are made to give lasting joy, faithful to the belief that a piece of furniture should last at least as long as the tree from which it was made.

The story of Karimoku, a leader in Japanese wooden furniture production, began as a small carpentry shop in Kariya, Aichi Prefecture in 1940. Shohei Kato took over a timber company that already existed in the Edo period.
Processing technologies, surface treatment and wood coloring were accumulated through the subcontracting of the various wooden parts in the mid-1900s: spinning machines that supported Japan’s post-war reconstruction in the 1940s; sewing machine tables, piano parts and TV stands with wooden legs in the 1950s; and the company of the time sought original furniture for the domestic market in the early 1960s.
Since then, Karimoku has focused on pursuing its original concept of “high-tech and high-touch” products by defining bases in timber production areas. Karimoku has a large and reliable supply of large-scale advanced materials and structures showing techniques of craftsmen in the greatest possible extension. In addition, the company has also put in place a national system for wholesale and after-sales services for product care. Thus, Karimoku has developed a unique and unprecedented system that traverses the procurement of materials, production and sales within a company.
Karimoku also aims to help improve people’s lives to meet the challenges presented by environmental issues. This is demonstrated in the history of over 30 years of Karimoku in the reform and use of “Parawood”, a product derived from rubber trees after its use in latex production.

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knoll

Knoll

In 1938 Hans Knoll, German emigrated to the U.S. due to racial laws, she opened a small laboratory for the creation of furnishings to create modern interiors and in 1943 she married Florence Schust, architect and designer graduated from the Cranbrook Academy of Art in Bloomfield Hills in Michigan and with her enlarged the company, which in 1946 it became Knoll Associates, and then finally changed into 1951 into Knoll International, a name still in force.

The two spouses immediately call Florence Knoll’s classmates to design for the company such as Eero Saarinen, son of the director of the school, the Finnish architect Eliel Saarinen, and Harry Bertoia, at the registry office Arieto Bertola sculptor and designer of origins Italian. Everyone involved within the Knoll embraces the creative genius of the Bauhaus and the Cranbrook Academy of Art, which was then an American interpretation of the Bauhaus school itself, to create new types of furniture and environments for everyday life, for home and work. Craftsmanship combined with technology through the use of design fixes their point of view and shapes the values ​​that still live within the company today.

In 1957 Eero Saarinen designs what is still the most successful product of Knoll today, or the Tulip series, made up of chairs, tables and small tables with continuity between the shell and the base, convinced that “the lower parts of the tables and chairs create an intricate and irritating confusion … wanting to end the chaos of the legs; wanting to make a chair a unit again. ” The Tulip table, better known by the name of Saarinen, is still today the best-selling, most imitated and most desired table by design enthusiasts in its variants with the top in white or black laminate, or in marble in multiple colors.

Harry Bertoia instead creates a collection of chairs for the Knoll, inspired by those of the Eames couple, where the theme of discontinuity returns: a steel rod easel support holds a steel rod mesh body of various shapes. The Bertoia collection turns out to be a true masterpiece, a meeting point between design and art: a light and transparent chair, where the air, which passes through the metal mesh, becomes the true protagonist of the project.

Since the early years, Knoll has distinguished itself from the other famous American furniture design company, Herman Miller, for the choice of an extremely rigorous and rationalist design and for the courageous re-presentation on the market of some historic furnishings such as those designed by the Maestro. Mies Van Der Rohe: the Barcelon collection, which still remains one of the best-known design icons today.

Following the premature death of Hans Knoll in 1955, his wife Florence took over the reins of the company, preferring then to leave the presidency in 1960 to fill the position of artistic director of the design department; throughout his long life his motto will be “Good Design is Good Business”. Florence Knoll designs some very elegant furnishings for her company, which are useful for furnishing public and private spaces, among the most important in America, for illustrious private customers or public companies. Among them we can remember the Florence Knoll sofa with rigorous shapes, on a chromed steel structure, the tables with elementary and refined shapes with marble or glass tops and the containers, later many imitated, in natural or lacquered wood on a steel base polished chrome.

In more recent years, Knoll has made use of the collaboration of the best contemporary international designers such as Frank O. Ghery, Piero Lissoni, Barber Osgerby.

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Molteni&C - mobili e design, sedie, divani, tavoli, arredi

Molteni

Molteni & C was founded as a craft company in 1934 in Giussano in the province of Milan (later in the province of Monza and Brianza), by Angelo Molteni, a businessman from Brianza, among the promoters of the Milan International Furniture Fair, which will see its first edition in 1961 In the first post-war period the company made furniture starting from the trunk and covering all the production phases and in the mid-1950s it participated in the first “Selective Exhibition – International Furniture Competition” in Cantù, with a project by the Swiss architect Werner Blaser, a pupil by Alvar Aalto and assistant to Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, who wins first prize. The chest of drawers, with the triple fork geometric joint, is the first prototype of modern furniture and has recently been reworked in a precious numbered and certified edition.
1968 is the year of the revolution: in a few months, production is converted from classic to modern, to create well-designed furniture, designed for the series; Luca Meda, a pupil of the Ulm School, is the man of the revolution, his Iride containers presented at the Salone del Mobile in 1968. The following year the complete conversion to design furniture took place, followed by the purchase of the Unifor companies and Citterio, in the office sector and, in 1979, of Dada, a kitchen furniture company. Over the years Molteni & C therefore becomes a reality for the production of furniture.
During the artistic direction entrusted to Luca Meda, the architects Aldo Rossi and Afra and Tobia Scarpa are called to design for Molteni; Aldo Rossi will design some now iconic furnishings such as the theater sofa, the weekly Carteggio and the Milano chair, rare examples of the Maestro’s forays into the world of design.
In the 1990s, however, collaboration began with some Italian and international designers, including Jean Nouvel, Foster and Partners, Patricia Urquiola, Rodolfo Dordoni, Hannes Wettstein.
In 1994 Molteni & C received the Compasso d’Oro for Lifetime Achievement. “Among the protagonists of the Italian furniture culture”, says the jury, “he has been able to present an offer of products designed with constant dignity, safe quality and a broad vision of the cultural context”. In the same year Jean Nouvel designed the Fondation Cartier in Paris, Molteni created all the furnishings through Uniforo: thus the Less series was born, an icon of design in the world, tables with minimal thickness and with elementary and rigorous shapes.
In early 2000 To support international expansion, Molteni & C created the Padded division and, in a few years, established itself among the best international manufacturers with the projects of Patricia Urquiola, Ferruccio Laviani, Rodolfo Dordoni, Hannes Wettstein and Ron Gilad and many others.
In 2012 Molteni & C presented the Gio Ponti Collection at the Salone del Mobile, furnishings never mass produced by the great Milanese architect, in collaboration with Gio Ponti Archives. The collaboration between Molteni and Gio Ponti’s heirs continues annually thanks to an exclusive agreement for the rights of the Maestro’s projects.
The Molteni Group recently celebrated 80 years of activity with an exhibition at the Modern Art Gallery in Milan, entitled 80! Molteni. With an installation curated by Jasper Morrison and the graphic project by Studio Cerri & Associati, prototypes and furnishings from all the companies of the Group recount, for the first time, 80 years of experience, quality and innovation. The exhibition has become the core of the Molteni Museum in Giussano.
As of April 2016, Belgian architect and designer Vincent Van Duysen has been appointed creative director of the Molteni & C brands; after the success of the Gliss Master collection of wardrobes, the new collaboration focuses on coordinating the image and the design and artistic choices of the group.
Born as a company specialized in the production of systems, today the company still fully produces in Italy an integral offer for the home, from containers to upholstered items, from chairs to tables … flanked by a contract division that manufactures cruise ships, theaters , museums, hotels, restaurants and collective residences.

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Moooi: mobili, interni e illuminazione moderni olandesi

Moooi

For 20 years now, Moooi has inspired and seduced the world of design with sparkling, innovative, ironic and courageous projects.
The Dutch company was founded in 2001 by Marcel Wanders and Casper Vissers initially to propose the projects of Marcel Wanders himself, who in the 90s made himself known to the famous Dutch collective of designers Droog Design mainly thanks to his knitted chair, Knotted Chair, later edited by Cappellini; Wanders’ designs are often too original for design companies, so this publishing house is founded in order to maintain its independence and creativity intact: Moooi which means “beautiful” in Dutch.
Marcel Wanders’ capricious, unique and provocative style is fully expressed in the Moooi collection. In addition to the creations designed by Marcel himself, Moooi also edits other well-known designers such as Bertjan Pot, Jasper Morrison. Ross Lovegrove, Studio Job… enriching the catalog every year with always surprising pieces.
The company does not hesitate to leave the usual and aesthetic paths of design by editing unusual and courageous creations such as the surprising spider-shaped chandelier, composed of a multitude of technical desk lamps and called Dear Ingo in tribute to the Master of light Ingo Maurer , created by Ron Gilad in 2003 or even the “charred” Smoke wooden armchair from 2002 by Maarten Bass, who later became one of the most acclaimed Dutch designers.
In this way, the Moooi collection easily combines a suspension in pressed white paper by the creative couple Studio Job and a life-size black horse wearing a lamp on its head, a project signed by the Swedish studio Front Design and part of a particularly iconic collection completed from a rabbit_lampada and a pig-table.
Many designers are now called to collaborate with the company, always under the artistic direction of Marcel Wanders, now sought after by all the most important international design companies, from Flos to Baccarat, from Cappellini to Alessi; recent collaborations include those with Jaime Hayon, Nika Zuoanc, Joost van Bleiswijk.
Moooi’s style has not changed since the beginning and has remained exclusive, bold, playful … based on the belief that design is a matter of love, irony and joy. They are timeless objects, which possess the uniqueness and character of antiques combined with the freshness of modern times. This merger leads the brand to focus more and more on the production of iconic and spectacular objects.
With this unique and iconic mix of lighting, furniture and accessories, the company creates interior spaces decorated with a variety of inspiration of models and colors to embrace any type of space, domestic and public, and makes people of different ages, cultures fall in love and personality.
This vision of unexpected home always highlights new ideas with a clever touch of magic. Behind the apparent irony and playfulness there are always intelligent projects, the result of continuous reflections on the way of living and living and its continuous changes.

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Moormann, complementi arredo moderni, interni, design

Moormann

Nils Holger Moormann nel 1982, dopo gli studi in giurisprudenza, si appassiona al mondo del design e decide, da autodidatta e lontano dalle logiche di produzione delle aziende di arredi, di sviluppare mobili che mostrassero un linguaggio formale ridotto e soluzioni molto precise nei dettagli, sinonimo di quella corrente chiamata “Neues Deutsches Design”.

I pensieri principali di Moormann sono la semplicità, l’intelligenza e l’innovazione, che devono essere applicati contemporaneamente per il benessere della società. Il primo traguardo è quello di analizzare le esigenze alla luce dei nuovi modi di vivere e di lavorare, che spesso e sempre di più coincidono all’interno degli stessi spazi; il secondo passaggio è quello di individuare delle soluzioni progettuali concrete, semplici, ma non banali, per risolvere tutte le esigenze. Si arriva, attraverso questo semplice processo, alla realizzazione di soluzioni, in un primo tempo dedicate all’idea di contenere e di fare ordine, individuando un modello di libreria universale, facile nel concetto e nel montaggio, ma di estrema raffinatezza ed eleganza; un pezzo, come quelli successivi, fuori dalle mode e dalle tendenze, intriso di atemporalità per diventare un capisaldoi del design.

Per realizzare tutto questo è stato necessario individuare il luogo giusto, ove poter lavorare, progettare e produrre i pezzi ideali; e quale posto migliore per trovare le radici di questi mobili se non tra il clima di montagna crudo e le vive tradizioni nordiche, tra le bestie dei campi e una sentita attenzione per l’equilibrio ecologico? Il luogo montano e naturale, lontano dai consueti distretti industriali e dalle città, è stato fondamentale per la creazione e l’evoluzione di questa filosofia. Naturalmente tutto il progetto non può più essere ottenuto da una persona sola come all’inizio, ma da un team affiatato e convinto, composto ora da circa 40 menti brillanti.

Moormann non è del tutto facile da classificare. Non è solo design nordico, che risuonerebbe in modo limitativo, avendo all’interno del team molti progettisti internazionali. La sua estetica, seppur vicina agli esempi finlandesi, svedesi e danesi, è più articolata, frutto dell’unione di una tecnologia impeccabile e di uno sguardo attento alle forme accattivanti e sobrie allo stesso tempo. Il legno utilizzato per tutta la collezione è sempre il medesimo, ovvero betulla chiara di alvariana memoria, ma anche mdf naturale, con effetto molto ecologico, ma non povero, spesso abbinato a linoleum o laminati dai colori assoluti, bianco o nero, talvolta rosso. La libreria, poi interpretata nei decenni in molteplici modi e con innumerevoli varianti, rimane il prodotto principale della collezione, alla quale si sono gradualmente aggiunti letti, tavoli, scrittoi, contenitori e piccoli accessori di grande bellezza e funzionalità.

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Pastoe

Pastoe was born in Holland in 1913 in Utrecht for the creation of furnishings, in particular armchairs and sofas, but since 1948 it has focused on wooden containers in a modern and functional key. The sobriety and the technical and aesthetic refinement have always been the main guidelines in all the collections that have alternated, up to the most recent and beloved Vision series: container containers, modular in a huge amount of sizes, possibilities and colors, with the particularity of the pressure opening and the thicknesses at 45 degrees. The result, extremely refined and elegant, is much loved by architects, design lovers and designers for the purity of its aesthetics.

The Pastoe collection is therefore the result of many years of experience in the development and production of the highest quality furniture. Every day we invest again in quality, in the continuous search for further refinement of the technique and greater functionality, without stopping, until we reach the desired result.

When visual and material sustainability is increased, even the smallest details become important; the visibility of a screw or the shape of a hinge are therefore treated with extreme care and attention. The pursuit of perfection is, and will always remain, inherent in the company’s culture. Pastoe furniture is still made in the historic Utrecht factory, taking care to maintain traditional and artisan quality. In order to obtain the best result, production is still largely manual. Thanks to this attention and preparation, an impeccable piece of furniture of great value is born.

Pastoe has always remained faithful to the modular principle. Current furniture systems lend themselves to making sideboards, TV furniture, containers … and they can be defined as figurative works of art. The furniture is not only part of the wall, but also the wall becomes part of the furniture thanks to the play of shadows. Pastoe furniture leaves room for additions according to your taste and thanks to their shape they can be easily combined with other styles and brands.

The connection with art is always very close: in the development of its furniture, the company involves the ability of architects and artists and their sense of form, the keen eye for detail and the play between light and space. It starts with shapes, volumes and colors, elaborating them, to translate everything into furniture. This leads to furniture that is both functional and artistic: a piece of furniture as an object. In addition to the collaboration with architects and artists, the product development section, always at the forefront, translates the signals coming from the market into furniture in line with Pastoe’s design vision.

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PP Mobler

PP Mobler

PP Mobler is a family-run Danish carpentry workshop founded in 1953 and has a strong tradition of crafting high-quality designer furniture. Motivation has always been a love of wood. The company’s philosophy is that technique, ingenuity and craftsmanship can be combined in the search for quality.
The catalog is almost entirely dedicated to the projects of the Danish architect Hans J. Wegner, who had a long and important partnership with this small Danish manufacturing company; Wegner loved to stop in PP Mobler’s laboratory, where his ideas took shape; here he could touch and perceive the professional connection between designer and craftsman and feel the pride and respect for high quality craftsmanship. For its part, the designer has always provided this small laboratory with exciting and difficult tasks, always perceiving the uncompromising request for quality and the commitment to experiment with the material.
Between 1960 and 1968 many of Wegner’s prototypes were developed at PP Mobler before going into production at other companies, while after 1968 the designer began to design the first models for the production of PP Mobler, a very important event for this small laboratory, which began to organize a small catalog on its own. Wegner continued his exploration of the possibilities of wood in terms of form and construction even more freely.
Today PP Mobler produces a wide selection of Wegner furniture, most chairs, especially those with the most complex construction, that no one else could make. Among these, “The Round One”, as Wegner liked to call it with its typical provincial modesty, is one of the most famous Danish furniture in the world, summarizing in a simple and modest way the essence of the tradition of woodworking and the philosophy of the Danish design. It is Hans’ most important work. J. Wegner.
When Johm F. Kennedy and Richard Nixon met in the first televised election debate in 1960, they sat on the Round Chair, chosen primarily for its great comfort and its genuine quality; eventually the Americans found a new and more eloquent name for this chair: they called it, and continue to call it, simply “the chair”.
In the PP Mobler catalog there are many other Wegner projects, not only chairs, but also armchairs, tables and desks, such as the Peacock Chair from 1947, the Folding chair from 1949, the Papa Bear Chair from 1951, the Rocking chair from 1984, The Circle Chair from 1986…
A separate discussion should be reserved for the 1950 Flag Halyard Chair relaxation armchair, one of the very rare Wegner projects not in wood, but with a stainless steel structure and 240 meters of rope to form the seat and back, with the addition of a long-haired sheepskin resting on top. Despite having obvious preferences for wood, Wegner shows his bold and courageous appetite for creation in this project. With the Flag Halyard Chair, the designer pays tribute to the first modernist designers such as Le Corbusier, Mies van der Rohe and Marcel Breuer, and proves to be able to master stainless steel with the same elegance as the wood master. The Flag Halyard Chair remains one of the highest examples of Danish design and one of the most desired royal armchairs in the world.

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