• Cherner Chair Company
    @chernerchaircompany
    The Cherner Chair Company has brought back many of Norman Cherner’s most popular designs. Utilizing his original drawings and specifications, the reissued designs are made in the USA with the same attention to detail found in the original handmade classics. Although best known for his furniture design, Norman Cherner’s work included almost all aspects of design: from graphics, glassware, and lighting, to his pioneering work in prefabricated housing. In addition to reissuing Norman Cherner designs, The Cherner Chair Company also features new designs by Benjamin Cherner.
  • The Industrial Farmhouse
    @ralphedge
    We design and create our industrial furniture right from our workshop in Chattanooga, Tennessee and ship pieces directly from our back door to your location, so you know you are getting high-quality wood furniture crafted with pride in America. The Industrial Farmhouse’s designs combine upcycled wood and metal in ways that are at once rustic and refined. Each piece balances masculine structural elements with feminine shapes, contrasting metal and wood, old and new for a one-of-a-kind style. Enjoy the beauty and pride of heirloom, American-made reclaimed wood furniture custom built to your specifications. From countertops to tables to shelving, The Industrial Farmhouse can create a special hand-hewn look and feel that transforms any space.
  • moonpod chair
    @moonpodchair
    Addressing misconceptions surrounding Moon Pod chairs, providing clarity on their design, functionality, and affordability. Separate facts from fiction.https://moonpodreview.com
  • Texas Farmhouse Homes LLC
    @texasfarmhousehomesllc
    Our passion is to work closely with our clients to develop and build the home of their dreams. Our team consists of some of the best in our field and that makes us very efficient. We primarily build completely on-site but we also provide a prefab/custom design build option as well. Our profile picture is prefab/custom.
  • Massage Chair Compare
    @massagechaircompare
    "MassageChairCompare is your place to find trustworthy content on the topic of massage chairs. Massages come with a number of benefits for the body, mind and spirit – but unfortunately it’s not always easy to experience them when you need them. Massages can be extremely expensive when you don’t have a loving partner that is willing to give them to you." You can also can visit at massagechaircompare.com
  • Four Chairs Furniture
    @fourchairsfurniture
    Unique home furnishings and accessories
  • Walking Chair Design Studio
    @walking_chair_design_studio
    a multidisciplinary think tank in the heart of vienna
  • Bemz Design
    @bemzdesign
    Upcycle | Recycle | Make it your own | www.bemz.com Give your IKEA furniture a new life with Bemz. We sell removable, washable, designer covers with a focus on 100% natural materials for a variety of IKEA sofas, couches, loveseats, chairs, footstools, beds, daybeds and cushions/throw pillows.
  • Hans Wegner
    @hanswegner
    Alongside Arne Jacobsen, Hans Wegner (1914-2007) was perhaps the most influential Danish furniture designer of the 20th century, coming closer to nearly any other to defining the look and feel of mid-century Danish modernism. As a young man he trained as a carpenter and cabinetmaker, but soon graduated into furniture design. He’s most noted for his work with wood, primarily in the design of chairs. His round chair (immortalized in the Kennedy-Nixon debates of 1960), China chair, swivel chair, deck chair, Y chair, flag halyard chair and wishbone chair stand out as classics amidst an oeuvre full of them. After his apprenticeship in cabinetmaking, he attended the Copenhagen School of Arts and Crafts then went to work in Arne Jacobsen’s architecture office. He founded his own office in 1943 and went on to design more than 500 different chairs.
  • Emeco
    @emeco
    In 1944, Wilton Carlyle Dinges founded the Electrical Machine and Equipment Company (Emeco) in Hanover, Pennsylvania utilizing the skills of local craftsman. During WWII the U.S. government contracted with Emeco to make chairs that could withstand water, salt air, and sailors while still being lightweight and strong enough to last for a lifetime. Aluminum was the obvious choice, and Emeco named the chair with a number: 1006, though most know it today as the Navy chair. Emeco believes in being sustainable by making products that last, and each Emeco chair is built to last 150 years.
  • Verner Panton
    @vernerpanton
    In the 1950s, while Scandinavian designers were paving the path with organic designs made of natural materials, architect Verner Panton (1926-1998) was concocting futuristic creations out of plastic with a Pop aesthetic. Born in Denmark, Panton was introduced early on to Danish design legends Pøul Henningsen and Arne Jacobsen. Henningsen introduced Panton to product design—Panton knew he wanted to be an artist and Henningsen helped him find his focus—and Jacobsen introduced him to Danish manufacturer Fritz Hansen, for whom Panton designed the Bachelor Chair and Tivoli Chair. Panton's boundary-pushing designs (inflatable furniture, chairs made of molded plastic) were capitalized by Vitra, who manufactured his Flying Chair and, perhaps Panton's most famous work, his eponymous chair. Over 40 years since its creation, the Panton chair rivals the Eames lounge chair in popularity among today's modern design enthusiasts.
  • Tammy Vinson
    @tammyvinson
    Director, Marketing at Dwell; Enthralled by bright colors, photography, solid playlists, the outdoors, and midcentury chairs.
  • Jacob Duque
    @jakeduque
    Midcentury Modern, Modern Farmhouse
  • Jasper Morrison
    @jaspermorrison
    With offices in Tokyo and Paris, British designer Jasper Morrison has worked for a staggering array of companies including Flos, Vitra, Samsung, Muji, Olivetti, Cappellini, Canon, Alessi, and others. An industrial designer trained at the Royal College of Art in London, Morrison's furniture design ranges from the contemporary classic Air Chair and the Eames-inspired Lotus Lounge Chair to bus stops, benches, and a tram for the city of Hannover, Germany. He's certainly one of the most respected industrial designers working today. He also represents the height of English industrial design, along with Tom Dixon.
  • Bertjan Pot
    @bertjanpot
    Born in Nieuwleusen, the Netherlands, in 1975, Dutch designer Bertjan Pot uses his infatuation with textures and skins to create furniture and lighting for famed manufacturers like Montis and Moooi. After learning to weave and knit while studying at the Design Academy Eindhoven—which has also produced designers like Dror Behshetrit, Tord Boontje, Marcel Wanders, and Piet Hein Eek—Pot transformed his interests into now-iconic fixtures like the Random Light, Random Chair, Carbon Chair with Marcel Wanders, Non-Random Chair, and Lazy Bastard Chair. He continues to live and work in the Netherlands.
  • Eero Aarnio
    @eeroaarnio
    Finnish furniture designer, born in 1932, came of age as the post-war boom was sweeping Europe in the late 1950s and 1960s. Most famous for his Ball Chair, which evokes the Swinging Sixties better than nearly any other piece of furniture design. Aarnio's work has meant an expansion of what can be done with plastics and fiberglass. The Pastil Chair and Tomato Chair followed and he scored another hit with the suspended Bubble Chair.
  • Dylan Jones
    @jones
    landscape, home design, farmhouse modern, country living, cycling, woodworking
  • Arne Jacobsen
    @arnejacobsen
    Arne Jacobsen was born in 1902 and studied at the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts and became one of the country’s preeminent architects and designers in the mid-20th century. Though his early work was primarily private residents, he went on to design the SAS Royal Hotel—one of the city’s only skyscrapers—and the Danish National Bank, renowned for its hanging staircase in its lobby. Despite his public commissions, Jacobsen’s touch remained in the private realm as well, with lighting fixture designs for Danish manufacturer Louis Poulsen and furniture for Fritz Hansen. This includes his iconic Ant and Series 7 chairs made out of molded plywood, as well as the Swan and Egg chairs that were originally designed for the lobby of the SAS Royal Hotel.
  • Konstantin Grcic
    @konstantingrcic
    Konstantin Grcic is a German industrial designer known for harnessing new technologies and materials to create stunning works of modern design. Born in 1965, he apprenticed as a cabinet maker at Parnham College in the UK before studying industrial design at the Royal College of Art in London. In 1991, he founded KGID, Konstantin Grcic Industrial Design. His work has includes the MAYDAY lamp for Flos, Miura barstool and Myto cantilever chair for Plank, and Chair One and 360 Containers for Magis in addition to creations for Lassicon, Krups, Moroso, Vitra, Luminaire, and Muji. He lives and works in Munich.
  • Emily Harris
    @mleharris
    Crafts, modern farmhouse
  • One Nordic Furniture Company
    @onenordicfurniturecompany
    One Nordic Furniture Company was formed in 2012 by CEO Joel Roos. It manufactures furniture and lighting inspired by the Nordic mastery of simplicity, quality, functional excellence, practicality, and original aesthetics.Form Us With Love provides creative direction for the firm. One Nordic makes a varied line of pendant lights, tables, chairs, shelving, and decorative items.

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