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First disassembled
Beech wood chair -
The first modern chair
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First tubuar chair
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First steel chair to utilize the spring quality of bent steel legs
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Reclinable steel chair with various sitting positions
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Birch plywood (first plywood chair)
one flat sheet bent in two dimension -
Sheets of plywood and devised a sort of web to give added strength
where the plywood alone was not adequate.
Birch wood -
T-shaped sections for table legs, attaining great strength while retaining lightness. Weigh only about eight pounds apiece.
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Here the rigid and built-up wood frame is
replaced by a thin laminated shell of wood
veneers shaped to take the thrust of the springs
on seat and back and braced with wood strips at
the points where these springs are attached. In
stead of bulky stuffing, foam rubber has been
used here on top of the springs.
The original design had envisaged aluminium legs. This idea was discarded because the material was scarce during the war, and wood was used instead. -
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CORREALISM was coined by Frederick Kiesler (1890-1965) as the continual interaction between man and his environments, whether natural or technological. Oak and linoleum
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Correalistic movement Oak and linoleum
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Eight to twelve ply laminated woods, walnut-faced 37½ inches (95.3 cm) high, 27 inches (68.6 cm) wide, 13 inches (33 cm) deep, plywood laminate variable from 7/16 inches (11 mm) to 5/16 inches (8 mm)
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Bonze with brown wood covering
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forma con espuma de poliuretano flexible y tejido "Soara" en diferentes colores.