buy steelcase think chair

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Green and gorgeous—that’s Think. Up to 98% recyclable at life’s end, Think’s innovative seat flexors offer superior comfort to match your natural movements. innovative back and seat flexors pneumatic seat height and fully adjustable arms optional back lumbar available Choose whether you’d like to work with turnstone space planners for expert design ideas, find a dealer for local support or shop the Steelcase store on your own.Get our best content sent straight to your inbox. Ergonomic offices: Steelcase Think chair reviewCGTrader - 3D Models / 3D Designers5 Sign inDescriptionSteelcase Think Chair 3D modelSteelcase Think Chair Crate and Barrel - Steelcase Think Ebony Leather Office Chair The 1 Best Office Chairs You Can Buy Right Now - High resolution Steelcase Chair all materials and lights scene setup for V-Ray renderer. - The materials are available in the Max file format with V-Ray. *.3ds max 2010, 2012 or higher *.max V-Ray - with materials for V-ray 2.0 or higher




*.obj - with mapping without materials..obj file, ready to import to any software. *.fbx - with mapping without materials- Autodesk FBX files Overall Depth : 559 to 616mm Overall Width : 724mm Overall Height: 946 to 1066mm Seat Height : 419 to 546mmPreviews rendered with V-Ray. If you like this product, please rate it. 3darmchairbarrelchaircratecrateandbarrelebonyergonomicfurnituremanagementmeetingmodelmodernofficeroomseatingsteelcasethinkvraywork Email or usernamePassword Remember MeUsernameEmailPasswordBy registering you confirm, that you accept our Terms of Use, Content and Privacy Policy.Herman Miller� Replacement Casters Reduces Scratches, Nicks, Scrapes, Gouges Antimicrobial, Cleanroom, Conductive, Decorative, Electronic, Plate, Polymer, Stainless Steel & Stem Self Stick on WheelsTk OfficeOffice SpecialOffice DecoOffice LayoutOffice SpaceModel OfficeOffices SignageOffices InhouseOffice WindowsForwarddirectional signage for interviewing rooms, waiting rooms, and resource room (but with paint on wall instead of decal)




Two of the biggest names in office chairs, Herman Miller and Steelcase, both recently released a relatively affordable task chair, each with its own quirks and charms. But which should you convince your office manager to buy? First, we have to establish the definition of a task chair. They are, according to this site, meant for medium duty use; they're the chairs you see gathered permanently around a meeting table, or in front of a desk for guests—as opposed to behind a desk, where the boss sits, in a true "desk chair." Comfortable, but not exactly meant to be used all day, they tend to have list prices ranging from $500 to $700. Still they're often used by secretaries or other type of office workers (everyone who isn't a boss who can't convince someone to give them a nicer chair) whose jobs require them to get up once in a while. They usually have backs that rise up not quite as high as desk chairs, like the $1000-and-up Herman Miller Aeron and Embody, or Steelcase Leap. The $650 Setu might be about half the price of the current top seat, but it is definitely not, as we initially reported, a "poor man's Embody."




The Setu is Lennie to the Embody's George: simple, straightforward and lacking in sophistication. That is to say, there's no real customization you can do with knobs and levers, because there are none, save for the obligatory height adjustment. Its "elastomeric" fabric does contour somewhat to the curve of your back, but it's nowhere as customizable as actually being able to change the angles of the chair's spine. It's as if Herman Miller tried to build a chair with as few parts as possible, making sure each beam, back and support did the job of one-and-a-half beams, backs and supports. However, their frugality regarding use of material has one downside: the seat is too shallow. Imagine sitting with your ass all the way into the back of the seat; even then, the seat would only come forward to about 3/4 of your thigh. It's not horrible if you're short or if you'd rather sit on the edge of your seat, but those of you who expect support all the way up to the back of your knees will be disappointed.




Otherwise, the Setu is quite a good task chair. It provides ample back support for a full eight-hour day, and the aerated fabric breathes enough that you can even work shirtless on a hot day and things will be alright. (For you, not your co-workers.) The arms protrude enough to be usable, but not too much to be obtrusive. There's plenty of give in the seat and the back to feel like you're sitting with the chair, rather than fighting against it. Conforms to your back nicely The seat is a bit shallow; doesn't go all the way to the back of the knee Surprisingly, the Cobi is more like the Embody in design and build than the Setu, despite it being from a competing firm. What's cool about the Cobi is that you can actually customize parts of it yourself, picking the color, whether you want arms and whether you want it in stool form or chair form. Each piece adds a little to its $400 base, and our white-framed, fixed-armed, wasabi green seat totaled to $490. If you were going stool mode—high and sturdy, as in bar stool, not backless and stubby, as in foot stool—you'd actually end up at $720, which is $70 more than the Setu.




The look of the Cobi is definitely more traditional than the Setu, with its round seat, protruding arms and tongue-like lip of a back—and it sits the same way too. There are, like the Setu, no adjustments for the back or the seat or the arms, but it conforms more or less to your back as you're sitting. The cradling is less pronounced than the Herman Miller, but enough that you'll still be comfortable as you're working. And the seat is perfectly fine here, not a few inches shy of optimal length like the Setu. You can customize your own colors, frame, arms Doesn't conform to your back as well as the SetuYour decision here is one of tradeoffs. If you want to go a little cheaper, the Steelcase Cobi is great, but it won't spoon your back quite as well as the Herman Miller Setu. If you want stylishness, Setu's definitely going to impress, but you're going to have to live with that shallower seat and a slightly higher price tag. The Cobi is customizable at purchase, but all the design choices lead to a more traditional-looking chair, something you may or may not prefer.

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