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North American Cork Chairs

Emeco Su Barstool in Black Aluminum with Cork Seat by Nendo
By Emeco, Nendo
Located in Hanover, PA
With the invisible values of design, engineering and strength, the Emeco SU collection follows the Japanese aesthetic of ‘su‘ — meaning plain or unadorned — the idea that simplicity ...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary American Modern Stools

Materials

Cork

Emeco Su Small Stool in Natural Aluminum w/ Cork Seat by Nendo
By Emeco, Nendo
Located in Hanover, PA
With the invisible values of design, engineering and strength, the Emeco Su Collection follows the Japanese aesthetic of ‘su‘ — meaning plain or unadorned — the idea that simplicity ...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary American Modern Stools

Materials

Cork

Emeco Su Small Stool in Black Aluminum with Cork Seat by Nendo
By Emeco, Nendo
Located in Hanover, PA
With the invisible values of design, engineering and strength, the Emeco SU Collection follows the Japanese aesthetic of ‘su‘ — meaning plain or unadorned — the idea that simplicity ...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary American Modern Stools

Materials

Cork

Emeco Su Counter Stool in Black Aluminum w/ Cork Seat by Nendo
By Emeco, Nendo
Located in Hanover, PA
With the invisible values of design, engineering and strength, the Emeco SU Collection follows the Japanese aesthetic of ‘su‘ — meaning plain or unadorned — the idea that simplicity ...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary American Modern Stools

Materials

Cork

Emeco Su Barstool in Wood w/ Cork Seat by Nendo
By Emeco, Nendo
Located in Hanover, PA
With the invisible values of design, engineering and strength, the Emeco SU Collection follows the Japanese aesthetic of ‘su‘ — meaning plain or unadorned — the idea that simplicity ...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary American Modern Stools

Materials

Cork

Emeco Su Counter Stool in Natural Aluminum with Cork Seat by Nendo
By Nendo, Emeco
Located in Hanover, PA
With the invisible values of design, engineering and strength, the Emeco SU Collection follows the Japanese aesthetic of ‘su‘ — meaning plain or unadorned — the idea that simplicity ...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary American Modern Stools

Materials

Cork

Emeco Su Counter Stool in Wood with Cork Seat by Nendo
By Emeco, Nendo
Located in Hanover, PA
With the invisible values of design, engineering and strength, the Emeco SU Collection follows the Japanese aesthetic of ‘su‘ — meaning plain or unadorned — the idea that simplicity ...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary American Modern Stools

Materials

Cork

Emeco Su Barstool in Natural Aluminum with Cork Seat by Nendo
By Emeco, Nendo
Located in Hanover, PA
With the invisible values of design, engineering and strength, the Emeco SU Collection follows the Japanese aesthetic of ‘su‘ — meaning plain or unadorned — the IDEA that simplicity ...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary American Modern Stools

Materials

Cork

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Contemporary Oak Counter Stool 'TR', Fora Projects
By Fora Projects, Studio Theresa Rand
Located in Paris, FR
TR Bar / Counter Stool by Fora Projects Designed by Theresa Rand Material: Oak wood Color: Medium brown Brown surface treatment with non-toxic hardwax oil Dimensions: H: 88, L: 4...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Danish Scandinavian Modern Stools

Materials

Oak

Sori Yanagi ‘Elephant’ stool for Kotobuki, Japan 1954
By Kotobuki, Sori Yanagi
Located in Rotterdam, NL
Elephant stool by Sori Yanagi for Kotobuki Seating Company, Tokyo 1954. Yanagi originally designed the stool as a work chair for his studio, a couple of years later it was released b...
Category

Vintage 1950s Japanese Mid-Century Modern Stools

Materials

Fiberglass

Contemporary Black Stool in Iroko Wood, Senufo by Arno Declercq
By Arno Declercq
Located in Warsaw, PL
Contemporary Black Stool in Iroko Wood, Senufo by Arno Declercq Material: Iroko wood and sheepskin by Carine Boxy Dimensions: L 45 cm x W 45 cm x H 40 cm L / 17,7 ” x W 17,7 “ x H 1...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Belgian Modern Stools

Materials

Wood

Contemporary Black Stool in Iroko Wood, Senufo by Arno Declercq
By Arno Declercq
Located in Warsaw, PL
Contemporary Black Stool in Iroko Wood, Senufo by Arno Declercq Material: Iroko Wood and Burned Steel Dimensions: Dimensions: 50 cm H x 30 cm W Made by hand, in Belgium. Arno Decl...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Belgian Modern Stools

Materials

Steel

C603 Bar Stool, New Éditon
By Yuzuru Yamakawa 1, Feelgood design
Located in Courbevoie, FR
The C603 bar stool is a variation of the C603 Chair by the Japanese designer Yuzuru Yamakawa designed in 1958. A true icon of design, it has been reissued since 2017. Black lacque...
Category

Late 20th Century Japanese Stools

Materials

Rattan

C603 Bar Stool, New Éditon
C603 Bar Stool, New Éditon
H 40.56 in W 20.87 in D 19.69 in
Contemporary Black Stool in Iroko Wood, Four Legs by Arno Declercq
By Arno Declercq
Located in Warsaw, PL
Contemporary black stool in Iroko wood, four legs by Arno Declercq Dimensions: D32 x W32 x H50 cm Materials: Burned and waxed Iroko wood Made by hand, in Belgium. Arno Decl...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Belgian Modern Stools

Materials

Wood

Contemporary Pi Stool, Ebonised Oak Frame, Black Danish Cord Seat
By par-avion co.
Located in Norwich, GB
Our iconic pi stool range draws it's inspiration from the 20th century modernist idiom, Scandinavian Modern design, Danish furniture, and Japanese aesthetics. Also influenced by the ...
Category

2010s British Scandinavian Modern Stools

Materials

Papercord, Wood, Oak

Schwarzwald Stool Satoshi Itasaka
By Satoshi Itasaka
Located in Shibuya-ku, Tokyo
Stool coated with rust. This work expresses the warning about environmental threats. Artist tells that "There once existed a dense forest with abundant trees in Schwarzwald, Germ...
Category

2010s Japanese Modern Stools

Materials

Cut Steel

Schwarzwald Stool Satoshi Itasaka
Schwarzwald Stool Satoshi Itasaka
H 16.93 in W 12.21 in D 12.21 in
Mid-Century Modern Black Lacquer Low Japanese Stool with Gold Leaf Accents
Located in San Diego, CA
1950s solid black lacquer wood and gold leaf accents low stool/table, stamped made in Japan solid construction with a polished finish that shows natural wear age soft scratches, a co...
Category

20th Century Japanese Japonisme Stools

Materials

Wood, Lacquer

Pair of Isamu Kenmochi Japanese Bentwood & Shag Wool Stools
By Isamu Kenmochi, Akita Mokko
Located in Los Angeles, CA
Pair of Isamu Kenmochi Japanese Bentwood & Shag Wool Stools Japan, circa 1960s Manufactured by Akita Mokko Beautifully preserved, timeless classics Sculpted bentwood beech base newl...
Category

Vintage 1960s Japanese Stools

Materials

Beech

Contemporary pi Stool, Natural Oak Frame, Black Danish Cord Seat
By par-avion co.
Located in Norwich, GB
Our iconic pi stool range draws it's inspiration from the 20th century modernist idiom, Scandinavian Modern design, Danish furniture, and Japanese aesthetics. Also influenced by the ...
Category

2010s British Scandinavian Modern Stools

Materials

Papercord, Wood, Oak

Danish Modern Stool / Sidetable in Teakwood and Black Leather, 1960s
By Hvidt & Mølgaard, Finn Juhl
Located in Odense, DK
Cool little stool or side table made in Denmark in the 1960s. The stool is made from solid Bangkok teakwood with an amazing grain. It features the original elegant black aniline leat...
Category

Vintage 1960s Danish Scandinavian Modern Stools

Materials

Leather, Teak

Isamu Kenmochi Japanese Bentwood & Italian Boucle Stool
By Isamu Kenmochi, Akita Mokko
Located in Los Angeles, CA
Isamu Kenmochi Japanese Bentwood & Italian Boucle Stool Japan, circa 1960s Manufactured by Akita Mokko Beautifully preserved, Timeless Classic Sculpted bentwood beech base has been ...
Category

Vintage 1960s Japanese Stools

Materials

Beech

Black Chiquita Stool by Kenneth Cobonpue
By Kenneth Cobonpue
Located in Geneve, CH
Chiquita black stool by Kenneth Cobonpue Materials: Rattan, Polyurethane foam, steel. Dimensions: Diameter 45 cm x height 46cm Chiquita is a bundle of charms with its clever d...
Category

2010s Philippine Modern Stools

Materials

Steel

Contemporary pi Stool, Limed Oak Frame, Black Danish Cord Seat
By par-avion co.
Located in Norwich, GB
Our iconic pi stool range draws its inspiration from the 20th century modernist idiom, Scandinavian Modern design, Danish furniture, and Japanese aesthetics. Also influenced by the m...
Category

2010s British Scandinavian Modern Stools

Materials

Papercord, Oak

Pair of Isamu Kenmochi Japanese Bentwood & Italian Wool Boucle Stools
By Isamu Kenmochi, Akita Mokko
Located in Los Angeles, CA
Pair of Isamu Kenmochi Japanese Bentwood & Shag Wool StoolsJapan, circa 1960s Manufactured by Akita Mokko Beautifully preserved, timeless classics Sculpted bentwood beech bases have ...
Category

Vintage 1960s Japanese Stools

Materials

Bouclé, Beech

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Emeco for sale on 1stDibs

While they’re best known for their revolutionary Navy chair, iconic American furniture company Emeco makes a whole range of seating and other furniture — not just seaworthy chairs. The development of each product is guided by an eco-friendly ethos and pragmatic approach to design.

Emeco began to take shape during the 1940s, when the U.S. Navy needed a lightweight, fireproof chair that could withstand a torpedo blast and hold up to use by “big, burly sailors,” says Gregg Buchbinder, Emeco’s chief executive.

With experts from the Aluminum Company of America, an engineer named Wilton C. Dinges (1916–74) delivered, and the Emeco 1006 — that is, the Navy chair — an aluminum classic, was born. In order to demonstrate the chair’s sturdiness, Dinges threw it from the eighth floor of a hotel in Chicago, and when it landed, the chair bounced in lieu of breaking or bending.

The engineer secured a contract to manufacture the Navy chair beginning in 1944 at the Electrical Machine and Equipment Company (Emeco), which he’d founded a few years earlier in Hanover, Pennsylvania. In the ensuing decades, the factory’s craftsmen would stamp out by hand hundreds of thousands of Navy chairs for battleships, aircraft carriers and submarines — a process that requires more than 70 steps.

Today, the impossibly durable Navy chair, which is recyclable and made of at least 80 percent recycled aluminum, inspires knockoffs left and right and can be found in a variety of public settings, from upscale restaurants to hotels and offices. But it took time to get here.

In 1979, Gregg’s father, Jay Buchbinder, a businessman whose Long Beach, California, furniture company manufactured seating for fast food restaurants, purchased Emeco. The company hit a rough patch in the 1990s. When Gregg acquired Emeco from Jay in 1998, he took the $2 million in debt that came along with it. Fortuitously, Gregg learned that the Navy chair had taken on a new nonmilitary identity around the same time and that it was increasingly seen as sleek and retro in addition to being great submarine seating. Orders for the Navy chair were coming in from design luminaries like Ettore Sottsass, Giorgio Armani and a daring young French designer named Philippe Starck, who purchased a large number of 1006s for Ian Schrager’s Paramount hotel in New York City.

Gregg seized on Emeco’s newfound popularity, initiating a partnership with Starck, who would design the company’s Hudson Collection, a line planned for Manhattan’s Hudson Hotel that saw the Navy chair take on the form of a barstool and other pieces. He also partnered with Frank Gehry, whose Superlight chair for Emeco can be hoisted off the ground with one hand. Collaborations with Jasper Morrison, Jean Nouvel and others followed, and today, Emeco continues to build durable seating furniture from a range of recycled materials with a variety of designers.

Find authentic Emeco chairs, stools, tables and other furniture on 1stDibs.

A Close Look at Modern Furniture

The late 19th and early 20th centuries saw sweeping social change and major scientific advances — both of which contributed to a new aesthetic: modernism. Rejecting the rigidity of Victorian artistic conventions, modernists sought a new means of expression. References to the natural world and ornate classical embellishments gave way to the sleek simplicity of the Machine Age. Architect Philip Johnson characterized the hallmarks of modernism as “machine-like simplicity, smoothness or surface [and] avoidance of ornament.”

Early practitioners of modernist design include the De Stijl (“The Style”) group, founded in the Netherlands in 1917, and the Bauhaus School, founded two years later in Germany.

Followers of both groups produced sleek, spare designs — many of which became icons of daily life in the 20th century. The modernists rejected both natural and historical references and relied primarily on industrial materials such as metal, glass, plywood, and, later, plastics. While Bauhaus principals Marcel Breuer and Ludwig Mies van der Rohe created furniture from mass-produced, chrome-plated steel, American visionaries like Charles and Ray Eames worked in materials as novel as molded plywood and fiberglass. Today, Breuer’s Wassily chair, Mies van der Rohe’s Barcelona chaircrafted with his romantic partner, designer Lilly Reich — and the Eames lounge chair are emblems of progressive design and vintage originals are prized cornerstones of collections.

It’s difficult to overstate the influence that modernism continues to wield over designers and architects — and equally difficult to overstate how revolutionary it was when it first appeared a century ago. But because modernist furniture designs are so simple, they can blend in seamlessly with just about any type of décor. Don’t overlook them.

Finding the Right Chairs for You

Chairs are an indispensable component of your home and office. Can you imagine your life without the vintage, new or antique chairs you love?

With the exception of rocking chairs, the majority of the seating in our homes today — Windsor chairs, chaise longues, wingback chairs — originated in either England or France. Art Nouveau chairs, the style of which also originated in those regions, embraced the inherent magnificence of the natural world with decorative flourishes and refined designs that blended both curved and geometric contour lines. While craftsmanship and styles have evolved in the past century, chairs have had a singular significance in our lives, no matter what your favorite chair looks like.

“The chair is the piece of furniture that is closest to human beings,” said Hans Wegner. The revered Danish cabinetmaker and furniture designer was prolific, having designed nearly 500 chairs over the course of his lifetime. His beloved designs include the Wishbone chair, the wingback Papa Bear chair and many more.

Other designers of Scandinavian modernist chairs introduced new dynamics to this staple with sculptural flowing lines, curvaceous shapes and efficient functionality. The Paimio armchair, Swan chair and Panton chair are vintage works of Finnish and Danish seating that left an indelible mark on the history of good furniture design.

“What works good is better than what looks good, because what works good lasts,” said Ray Eames

Visionary polymaths Ray and Charles Eames experimented with bent plywood and fiberglass with the goal of producing affordable furniture for a mass market. Like other celebrated mid-century modern furniture designers of elegant low-profile furnishings — among them Ludwig Mies van der Rohe and Finn Juhl — the Eameses considered ergonomic support, durability and cost, all of which should be top of mind when shopping for the perfect chair. The mid-century years yielded many popular chairs.

The Eameses introduced numerous icons for manufacturer Herman Miller, such as the Eames lounge chair and ottoman, molded plywood dining chairs the DCM and DCW (which can be artfully mismatched around your dining table) and a wealth of other treasured pieces for the home and office. 

A good chair anchors us to a place and can become an object of timeless appeal. Take a seat and browse the rich variety of vintage, new and antique chairs on 1stDibs today.