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Dieter Rams Stereo

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German 606 Modular Shelving System by Dieter Rams for Vitsoe, 1960s
By Dieter Rams
Located in London, Lambeth
Dieter rams modular. For over fifty years, Dieter Rams has left an indelible mark on the
Category

Mid-20th Century German Mid-Century Modern Bookcases

Materials

Aluminum

1960s Dieter Rams CSV 60/1 Amplifier for Braun, Germany
By Braun, Dieter Rams
Located in Amsterdam, NL
A rare vintage CSV 60/1 tube amplifier designed by Dieter Rams, manufactured by Braun in Germany
Category

Mid-20th Century German Mid-Century Modern Musical Instruments

Materials

Metal

Braun Atelier Hifi and Speakers System, Dieter Rams, 1980
By Braun, Dieter Rams
Located in Porto, PT
Complete Atelier 3 HiFi Stereo and L15 speaker system by Dieter Rams for Braun, 1980 Atelier3 Braun
Category

Vintage 1980s German Mid-Century Modern Musical Instruments

Collection Tables by Dieter Rams for Vitsoe Zapf
By Dieter Rams
Located in JM Haarlem, NL
Dieter Rams (1932) is one of the most prominent Modernist designers of the era between 1955 and
Category

Antique 1660s German Mid-Century Modern Side Tables

Materials

Plastic, Polyester

Reel to Reel TG1000 Tape Recorder by Dieter Rams for Braun, 1974
By Braun, Dieter Rams
Located in Porto, PT
Reel to Reel TG1000 tape recorder by Dieter Rams for Braun, 1974. Silver finish, 4-lane, speeds
Category

Vintage 1970s German Mid-Century Modern Musical Instruments

Materials

Metal

Atelier 3 Hifi Stereo by Dieter Rams for Braun, 1984
By Dieter Rams
Located in Porto, PT
Atelier 3 Braun HiFi stereo designed by Dieter Rams. Turntable P4 with new cart, T2, A2, CD3 and
Category

Vintage 1980s German Modern Music Stands

Materials

Metal

Atelier 3 HiFi Stereo and L715 Speakers by Dieter Rams for Braun, 1984
By Braun, Dieter Rams
Located in Porto, PT
Complete Atelier 3 Braun HiFi stereo-system designed by Dieter Rams. Turntable P1 with cart
Category

Vintage 1980s German Modern Musical Instruments

Materials

Steel

1960s Grey Stereo System by Dieter Rams Made in Germany
By Otl Aicher, Braun, Dieter Rams
Located in Frankfurt, Hessen, DE
Stereo System, Design made in Germany, original by Dieter Rams. Original Dieter Rams for Braun
Category

Vintage 1960s German Mid-Century Modern Musical Instruments

Materials

Aluminum, Steel

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Dieter Rams for sale on 1stDibs

German industrial designer Dieter Rams is revered for the pared-down, intuitive electronics and consumer goods he created for Braun — where he worked from 1955 to 1997, most of that time as chief design officer — and his timeless furniture for Vitsœ, a company with which he continues to collaborate today.

Less well known are Rams’s longstanding focus on sustainability and uneasy relationship with contemporary technology, even as Silicon Valley designers like Apple’s Jonathan Ive follow in his rational footsteps.

During Germany’s postwar rebuilding period, Rams and his team of designers at Braun, inspired by the Bauhaus and the Ulm School of Design, focused on extreme simplicity and usability while conceiving products with a modern, forward-looking appearance.

Among Rams’s most iconic designs is the SK 4 phonograph and radio, created in 1956, which had a compact white metal case topped by a revolutionary-at-the-time transparent Plexiglas lid that revealed simple gray controls inside (it was nicknamed Snow White’s Coffin). But it is the T3 portable radio, from 1958, that gets design aficionados most excited today: A white rectangular box with a perforated square for the speaker and a circular-dial control, it bears an unmistakable resemblance to Apple’s original iPod. (Many people also note that the iPhone’s calculator app looks remarkably similar to the Braun ET 66 calculator, with its circular color-coded buttons.)

In the late 1970s, Rams laid out his widely studied 10 principles for good design: It is innovative, makes a product useful, is aesthetic, makes a product understandable, is unobtrusive, is honest, is long lasting, is thorough down to the last detail, is environmentally friendly and is as little design as possible.

One of Rams’s principles that hasn’t translated to our contemporary era is his emphasis on longevity. “The time of thoughtless design and thoughtless consumption is over,” he said in 1976, stressing the need to conserve natural resources — even as he was busy designing plastic products.

Rams has also expressed reservations about how electronics have evolved in recent decades from tools for improving life to time-sucking obsessions. “Every time he crosses a street and sees people glued to their phones, he just can’t conceive of how we got to this point,” says filmmaker Gary Hustwit, whose feature-length documentary on Rams debuted in 2018. “I think he’s a little bit saddened by all this work they did in the fifties and sixties, which had a very idealistic point of view, being a stepping stone to where we are now, and the current lust for technology.”

If digital devices sometimes seem to be making life more complicated, Rams’s precept remains the same as always: “Back to purity, back to simplicity.”

Find vintage Dieter Rams furniture on 1stDibs.