vitra eames chair and ottoman

How To Hide Your Sky Box And Still Be Able To Control It Tv Storage Unit Your Sky Eames Lounge Chairs Study Rooms Tv Cabinets Lounge Ideas Cool Stuff And Still Picture Rail Forwards I like things to work without seeing (or knowing) how it’s done. I like things to be tidy, neat and done in a particular way. Most importantly though, I like to hide things. This is probably one of the reasons that I hate TVs and all things gadget that seem go with them. This stylish ottoman is crafted with materials and workmanship of the highest quality and perfectly complements the Eames Lounge Chair. It’s made from bent plywood to create its distinctive shape and features a soft leather cushioned seat for maximum comfort. In the late 1940’s Charles and Ray Eames were looking for new materials and ways to create distinctive furniture and started to experiment with metal wire rods and mesh. Eventually they developed a range of pieces that have become classics of modern design, including wire chairs, plastic chairs with wire bases, storage units, and elliptical tables.

Please note: not all our ranges are on display in our shops. For more information, please speak to a furniture Partner in store, or call 03452 661805 and we can tell you where the range you'd like to view is on display. 0% APR Representative: this product is eligible for Interest Free Credit, available when you spend £1000 or more on selected home products. Call 03456 065019, or visit our shops. Terms and conditions apply; H42 x W63 x D56cm Eligible for International Delivery Delivery from 3 working days (lead time and available delivery slots will vary by postcode) International delivery not available How we may still help you Vitra Eames Office Furniture RangeVitra Miniature: Charles & Ray Eames Lounge & Ottoman Chair Vitra Miniature Chair & Stool, new in wooden collectors box with brochure. Eames Lounge and Ottoman 1956 Vitra Miniature Chair. Vitra original Eames miniature chair & ottoman. Miniature No. 670 und 671, Lounge Chair and Ottoman, Designer: Charles und Ray Eames, 1956.

provides art-historical information on the background to the design, biography of the designer, and the production history of the respective chair & ottoman.
chair cover hire lancashire Size: 6.10" x 5.71" x 9.84" (15.5 x 14.5 x 25 cm). Materials: bent plywood, cast aluminium, leather cushion. 1. Lowest Price Guarantee on this product. 2. Free shipping, includes insurance and tracking. 3. No added sales tax. Plus: sign up for 'super saver' & get 10% off towards future purchase! FREE SHIPPING WITHIN THE US! Stock product, ships in 1-2 business days.Miniature Eames Lounge Chair and Ottoman (Charles Eames, 1956). All images courtesy Vitra Design Museum Miniature Karuselli (Yrjö Kukkapuro, 1964). Miniature Chair No. 14 (Michael Thonet, 1859). Miniature Barrel Chair (Frank Lloyd Wright, 1904). Miniature Ball Chair (Eero Aarnio, 1965).

Miniature Chaise Longue à Réglage Continu (Le Corbusier, 1928). Miniature MR 90 Barcelona (Mies van der Rohe, 1929). Miniature La Chaise (Charles Eames, 1948). Miniature W.W. Stool (Philippe Starck, 1991). Miniature Antony (Jean Prouvé, 1950). Miniature Tulip Chair (Eero Saarinen, 1956). Miniature Wiggle Side Chair (Frank Gehry, 1972). Miniature Well Tempered Chair (Ron Arad, 1986). Miniature Lockheed Lounge (Marc Newson, 1986). It’s difficult to find aesthetic beauty in a functional object that you use every day. Corkscrews, milk jugs, boomerangs — they’re all amazing works of art in their own way; it’s just that most people are too busy using them to stop and take notice.Along with cars and telephones, they’ve always inhabited a different plane of the form/function continuum. They are signposts and showpieces for entire eras of design — the materials they use, the production techniques they’re built with, and the aesthetic sensibilities they represent.

The history of chair design is punctuated by easily identifiable pieces such as the Viennese cafe chairs of Michael Thonet, the bent-plywood and molded-plastic chairs of Charles and Ray Eames, and the Aeron chair designed by Don Chadwick and Bill Stumpf. But throughout history, big-deal chairs haven’t just been designed by big-deal chair designers. Some of the most iconic seats have been created by architects, artists, and legends of industrial design: Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, Frank Lloyd Wright, Salvador Dali, Dieter Rams, Frank Gehry, and Philippe Starck. Some chairs are already considered pieces of art that you’re permitted to sit on. But just in case you need a full separation of form and function to appreciate them aesthetically, the Vitra Design Museum has a solution. They make miniature replicas of some of history’s most iconic chairs, and they’ve done so for about 20 years. You can’t sit in them. But you can place them on your desk and admire them as works of art.

Don’t mistake these for superficial lookalikes, either. Each of the chairs in the Vitra Miniature Collection is made with the same materials and moving parts as the original pieces. Sixty-nine chairs are currently available as part of the Vitra Design Museum Shop’s U.S. catalog, and each piece is an exact 1:6 scale replica of the real deal. In comparison to the full-size versions, the price for each chair has also been hit with a shrink ray. But temper your expectations, because they’re still very expensive. The cheapest mini-chairs you’ll find are a tiny three-piece polyamide set of Ronan & Erwan Bouroullec’s Vegetal chair priced at $185 per trio or a lilliputian version of Frank Gehry’s Wiggle Side Chair for $145. And should you want a miniature version of the leather-and-plywood Eames Lounge Chair or Marc Newson’s aluminum Lockheed Lounge, you’ll need to sit down in a full-sized chair before reading the prices: They cost $755 and $1,400, respectively.