red blue chair reproduction

red blue chair reproduction

red armchair for sale uk

Red Blue Chair Reproduction

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Rove ClassicsEgg Chair Reviews Financing available starting at $109.81/month Customize & AddMaterialClassic Bouclé WoolPremium Cashmere WoolCamira TweedClassic LeathersWaxy LeathersColorBlackBlueBrownGreenGreyOrangePurpleRedWhiteYellow On Sale In Stock BlackAvocadoBeach BeigeBurnt OrangeCarnationCharcoalFossilLondon FogMerlotPersimmonPurpleRedTwilightWhiteAquamarineAegeanAmethystCardinalCitrineConcreteDark GraniteLight GraphiteOnyxPearlRubySandstoneSmoky QuartzTanzaniteWinter BlueGravelBlack BirdMidnightLavender MistBluebellBlueberryOlive TreeGolden MapleAutumnCranberryBlack / White PonyBrown / White PonyModena BlackModena CamelModena CoffeeModena EggshellModena IvoryModena RedModena SandModena TaupeModena TerracottaSiena WhitePalermo BlackPalermo CaramelPalermo Dark ChocolatePalermo Dark TanPalermo OlivePalermo Tan Get FREE Swatchescustom Qty *Custom Order Financing available starting at $109.81/monthWhy Rove?Beautifully hand-crafted furniture at fair prices, from workshop floors to your door.$89 flat rate shipping on your entire order, to anywhere in the US and Canada.30 days hassle-free return, no restocking fees, plus a 5 Year Warranty.




Shop the look @Anonymous Pops of color.Shop the look Shop the look @DerekShop the look Shop the look @Gillian Stevens Morning bakeshop inspired by natural materials and warm tones.Shop the look Shop the look @Pamela Lee Every day we hang out in our small dining room over a table of food and share a thought or two aboutShop the look Shop the look @Austin Loving our new Marcus dining table!Shop the look Shop the look @Chris Soderberg We love our new Warren Coffee table in our office's lounge!Shop the look Overview Standard Dimensions 34.5 in x 32 in x 42 in (Width x Depth x Height)* View the "Dimensions" tab for more details DetailsThis premium Rove Concepts reproduction features:Premium upholstery Hand-stitched using braided lockstitch technologyCurvature-true fiberglass shellHigh density CA-117 cushioningPU-injected foam wrapped in synthetic Dacron silk360 degree swivelPolished aluminum base resistant to chipping and flakingThis item is not manufactured by or affiliated with the original designer(s) and associated parties.




DimensionsStandard Dimensions 34.5 in x 32 in x 42 in (Width x Depth x Height) Reviews 4 Leave a review Your customer care was very 5Great piece 4Happy with purchase 4My Review 5Arne Jacobsen View All Products From Arne Jacobsen Don't pass these up Tulip Side Table+ More Tri Coffee Table+ More Warren Coffee Table Warren Side TableVitraSlow ChairInformationProducts of the familyDesigner Slow ChairRonan & Erwan Bouroullec, 2006Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec created this expansive armchair by using an extremely strong, precisely shaped knit which is stretched over the metal frame like a fitted stocking. Thanks to the knit sling cover, the Slow Chair combines soft comfort with ergonomic support, which is further enhanced by thin seat and back cushions. The translucent sling cover replaces the thick cushions of traditional armchairs, resulting in a design that is lightweight, yet generously proportioned. In the living room or on a sun porch, the Slow Chair maintains an understated presence while offering superb comfort.2)4)4)4)4)4)4)4)3)1)Frame/Cover: tubular steel frame with extremely strong, precisely shaped knitted fabric which is stretched over the frame.




Upholstery: polyurethane foam and polyester fibre, including a seat cushion and two backrest cushions.Base: die-cast aluminium legs with polished or powder-coated finish.Glides: all bases fitted with hard glides for carpet; felt glides optionally available for hard floors.Range of use: recommended for residential use only.YOU ARE HERE: LAT HomeCollections Nowadays, the bizarre shapes and kooky colors of Memphis furniture appear dated, English-style rooms look cluttered, and Louis-the-whatever fauteuils seem either pretentious or terribly grand. Even that constant Southern California standby, Southwest decor, is becoming stale. So what happens when popular decorating styles grow tired? Design trends inevitably return to Modernism.This once-revolutionary minimalist style, which swept aside centuries-old traditions of European ornamentalism when it was introduced in the first decades of the 20th Century, never seems to wear out its welcome. Hastened by the speedy rise and fall of whimsical, sometimes-kitschy Post-Modernism during the last 10 years, it is back again.




In response to this growing demand, Southern California stores offer reproductions of Modernist classics, including chairs, tables, lamps and even vases.On the face of it, Modernism's continuing success seems surprising. Why should a style inspired largely by the need to inexpensively house German and Austrian workers dispossessed by World War I appeal to today's affluent consumers? The answer is simple: because Modernist furniture looks so good in contemporary houses. Whether one calls home a high-rise apartment in Bunker Hill Towers or a hacienda-inspired, stucco house in Orange, most people live in rectangular rooms where only the plainest of baseboards and moldings enliven the white-painted walls--exactly the setting the Modernists designed for. Southern Californians warm to Modernism for another reason: The movement's clean-lined furnishings offer visual respite from urban hustle and bustle as well as the region's hot colors and desert heat.Among the great figures in 20th-Century furniture, the earliest was Scottish architect and interior designer Charles Rennie Mackintosh, who blended the old, curvaceous art nouveau sensuality with a new, crisp rectangularity.




Mackintosh's 1902 ladder-back Hill House chair, in ebonized ash, has a fairy-tale quality. Seat pad notwithstanding, this chair is built for looks rather than comfort. Think of it as a sculptural essay on verticality.The Hill House chair is one of those ambiguous talismans that appears every so often in the history of art, offering inspiration to the following generation. Its bony structure can be found, fleshed-out and masculinized, in the tall slats of Frank Lloyd Wright's Robie chair, designed for Wright's 1908 Robie house in Chicago.Viennese architect Josef Hoffmann also was a Mackintosh devotee. It seems that he gazed long and lovingly at the checkerboard grid atop the Hill House chair because the pattern became a Hoffmann idee fixe , especially for his metal-grid accessories. Italy-based Bieffeplast reproduces Hoffmann ashtrays, vases and wastepaper baskets. The fruit bowl, available in white or black at about $135, or a diminutive Vienna hexagonal vase, at $95, offers an economical entree into historic reproductions.




What Mackintosh did for lines, Gerrit Thomas Rietveld did for planes. As World War I ended, a group of Dutch painters known as de Stijl introduced a rigorously abstract style, reducing shapes to geometric verticals and horizontals, with colors limited to the three primaries--red, blue and yellow--plus black, white and gray. Piet Mondrian was the best-known member of de Stijl , and interior designers during the '50s and '60s brightened their spare, disciplined compositions of Modernist furniture with walls of bold, primary "Mondrianesque" colors. The Red-Blue Chair by Rietveld, built in 1917, translates a Mondrian canvas into three dimensions. It's the overstuffed Victorian seat on a starvation diet.Speaking of painters, who better evokes Vienna in 1900 than Gustav Klimt? His famous canvas of two lovers embracing, known as "The Kiss," conjures up the suppressed emotions and erotic drives that his contemporary Sigmund Freud was then trying to fit into the theory of psychoanalysis. The discs ornamenting Klimt's sensuous painting find an analogue in the round cutouts perforating the curved back support in the Banker's Chair, designed in the studio of Viennese art nouveau architect Otto Wagner between 1900 and 1906.

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