Rebirth of the wingback

hayon-wingback.jpg 

It wasn’t long ago that the idea of a wingback type chair would have been far too olde worlde to be considered in anyway cool. I don’t if it’s because of my recent decampmant to the countryside or my advancing years, but recently there’s been a few zooper-kool examples surfacing around the place.

 Tom Dixon’s Wingback chair has already become a timeless classic bringing a little grandaddy irony to urban interiors and a little slickness to the growing twee-ness of my bolt-hole - if only I could afford one.

tomdixon-wingback.jpg 

The second one is a recent piece exhibited at the Salone Internazionale del Mobile 2007 in Milan (I have to go to this sometime!) designed by the spanish designer Jaime Hayon for Bd Ediciones de Diseño. This guy is currently doing lots of real nice things. Look at a little more on his site. The wingback is part of a gorgeous interior/exterior range. this chair (see page top) fits beautifully into a current vein of design that presses classical, craftsman-like styles with the modern. I’ll probably write about that particular subject in another post.

 wingbackdutch.jpg

Oh, there’s another. This chair featured as part of an exhibition called Family of Form that was put on as part of the Milan furniture show. Designed by X, this stunning piece (I little too large to sit by my fireside, but gorgeous nonetheless - if I had a spaceship and wanted a chair to sit in and look out of the window, it would be spot on) is one of the many objects created by the famous alumni of Design Academy Eindhoven (names include Jurgen Bey, Maarten Baas, Hella Jongerius and Joris Laarman - you really must look these people up!)

I don’t really have anything else to say so I’ll stop. I’ll think of something else soon though.

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