eames office chair auckland

eames office chair auckland

eames office chair adelaide

Eames Office Chair Auckland

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Eames® Hang it all - special edition Designer: Charles & Ray Eames Herman Miller - Striad Lounge Chair and Ottoman POSH by Herman Miller - Express POSH by Herman Miller - Activity POSH by Herman Miller - Imagine POSH by Herman Miller - Optimis Herman Miller - Keyn - Sled Base Herman Miller - Keyn - Star Base Herman Miller - Keyn - 4 Leg Go Home - Hollywood Barstools Go Home - Hollywood Walter Knoll - Isanka Pedrali - Dome 260 Pedrali - Babila Armchair 2755 Herman Miller - Augment Herman Miller - Sayl Stool Herman Miller - Eames® Moulded Wooden Barstools -- All Catalogs --DesignersNewsletter Categories---Herman Miller - Keyn Chair GroupProducts---Quick Ship---Workstations---Office Chairs & Stools---Meeting------Boardroom------Meeting---Tables---Café---Timber Chairs---Café Tables---Barstools---Soft Seating------Armchairs------Sofa's---Coffee & Side Tables---Collaborative Furniture---Outdoor Furniture---Executive---Storage and Shelving---Lighting------Interior Lighting---------Pendant Lights---------Table Lamps---------Floor Lamps------Lighting Brands---Accessories---Conference------Chairs------Training Tables---Healthcare------Carts------Patient Seating------Plus Seating------Sleepover Seating------Systems and Workstations------Occasional and Overbed Tables------Welcoming and Waiting------Lounge Seating------Multiple and Tandem Seating------Recliner Seating------Stools and




Benches---------Stools---------Benches---Products By Brand------Ateljé Lyktan------Billiani------Bocci------Casala------Frezza------George Nelson®------Go Home------Herman Miller------Herman Miller - Healthcare------Herman Miller - Naughtone------Howe------Kristalia------Methis------molo------Muuto------Muuto Lighting------Pablo------Pedrali------POSH by Herman Miller------Prooff------Segis------Stua------ThinkingWorks------Unison Custom Solutions------Walter Knoll Herman Miller - Healthcare Herman Miller - naughtone POSH by Herman Miller "We CREATE workspaces that are open, engaging, flexible and communicate a positive corporate culture and brand" © Copyright Unison Workspaces. Website design by Fuel [fuel portal]Mid century and modern design "Karakter" A Danish word pronounced and meaning "Character". With a passion for mid 20th century and modern design, we spend our days sourcing the finest examples of original furniture and home accessories from the




leading designers and manufacturers of the world. We don't stock copies, selecting only the best examples of genuine pieces that showcase stunning materials and production methods. Our showroom is like a who's who of design heroes such as Mackintosh, Eames, Wegner, Jacobsen, Starck, Citterio and Magistretti. We regularly feature contemporary pieces by B&B Italia, Cassina, Vitra, Knoll Studio, Ligne Roset and Poltrona Frau and we're adding to our collection on a weekly basis and would love to help you find the ideal piece for your home or office. 10 Melrose Street, Newmarket, Latest from the blogA couple of days before I went to watch the new series of Mastermind being filmed, I emailed the show's publicist asking if she could tell me the contestants' specialist subjects. A list was promptly sent back, with a small clarification: "N.B.," I was politely scolded, "in Mastermind lingo they are referred to as contenders, not contestants." It's a quarter of a century since the show was last broadcast in New Zealand, but Mastermind's unique air of gravitas has been carefully preserved from the ravages of time.




And, with the exception of one major change - the introduction of a "New Zealand" round in addition to the specialist subject and general knowledge rounds, the format of the iconic 80s quiz show has also remained intact. There are still the intense 90-second barrages of questions, invariably ending with new host, Peter Williams, uttering the show's eternal catchphrase: "I've started, so I'll finish." Contestants still sit in the majestic Mastermind chair. The chair was the first thing I saw when I ducked through the heavy black curtains encircling the set, built around the stone pillars at the centre of the University of Auckland's Clocktower building. It's a classic mid-century Eames office chair, worth around $6000. The winner gets to take it home at the end of the series. "And no, you aren't allowed to sit on it," the floor manager wryly informed all 20 or so audience members. Instead I sat on a bog-standard stackable chair placed within touching distance of contender number one, a guy called Jon from Waiheke, whose specialist subject was the Stone Roses.




At the end of the 1990 final - won by Kiwi quiz show wunderkind Hamish McDouall with the specialist subject of "The Life and Work of David Bowie" - host Peter Sinclair asked New Zealand's first ever Mastermind, 1976 winner Patrick Bowles, how the show had changed since his day. "The special questions have got that much more abstruse," Bowles replied with a hint of sadness. "Nobody takes history or the Bible these days." What would he make of this new crop of contenders, whose specialist subjects include not just the Stone Roses, but "The Simpsons season six" and "The 2011 Rugby World Cup"? He could at least take some comfort from this year's prize pool, which has been strictly reined-in from the opulent quiz show heyday of the early 1990s, when, in addition to the chair (made by Morgan Commercial Interiors), McDouall also took home a Parker Duofold pen ("the pinnacle of writing excellence") and scored a 14-day trip for two to London. "I'm a bit envious about that," admitted Bowles. "I got a New Zealand Atlas, and you've got a trip to Britain."




This year's winner isn't going anywhere, but will be presented with a heavy glass trophy to admire from the comfort of the Eames chair. Of course, the prestige of being crowned Mastermind is and always has been the main prize motivating the 32 contenders, competing across eight heats to to qualify for the semis, then the final. Behind the quiz master's lectern, filling the seat of the late Peter Sinclair, it seems like Williams' whole broadcasting career has been leading up to this moment. He has been on television since before I was born. Seeing him in the flesh triggered the same deep sense of recognition I feel when I see my own dad. But for all his comforting familiarity, Williams has always been a closed book. His on-screen persona is unfailingly polite and friendly, but rarely warm. In other words, he was the perfect choice to carry the torch of Mastermind into the 21st century. He came in holding an armful of envelopes, each one containing a stack of question cards, which grew in untidy piles on his desk as the show progressed.

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