Used Teak Adirondack Chairs
20th Century Adirondack Used Teak Adirondack Chairs
Teak
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1940s American Adirondack Used Teak Adirondack Chairs
Wood
1940s American Adirondack Used Teak Adirondack Chairs
Wood
Mid-20th Century American Adirondack Used Teak Adirondack Chairs
Teak
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Mid-20th Century American Mid-Century Modern Used Teak Adirondack Chairs
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1960s Used Teak Adirondack Chairs
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1970s French Used Teak Adirondack Chairs
Metal
2010s Italian Used Teak Adirondack Chairs
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Mid-20th Century French Mid-Century Modern Used Teak Adirondack Chairs
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1960s Italian Mid-Century Modern Used Teak Adirondack Chairs
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1870s British Victorian Used Teak Adirondack Chairs
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Mid-20th Century American American Classical Used Teak Adirondack Chairs
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Mid-20th Century Mid-Century Modern Used Teak Adirondack Chairs
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Mid-19th Century French Napoleon III Used Teak Adirondack Chairs
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1970s American Mid-Century Modern Used Teak Adirondack Chairs
Steel, Stainless Steel
2010s Mexican Modern Used Teak Adirondack Chairs
Oak
A Close Look at Adirondack Furniture
Evoking rusticity and relaxation through simple and elegant designs, vintage Adirondack furniture originated in the Adirondack Mountains of northeastern New York. The most famous piece is the Adirondack chair, which dates to 1903.
With its ample armrests and sturdy but comfortable slanted seat, the reclined Adirondack chair was designed by Thomas Lee for his own country home. The postwar golden age of modern patio and garden furniture production — led by the likes of Brown Jordan, Knoll, Salterini and Woodard — was decades away at the time, and there were few pieces of furniture specifically created for outdoor use.
Lee, a Massachusetts-born Harvard graduate raised in a wealthy family, was no furniture designer. He merely needed a durable, rugged chair for afternoons in the sun while he was vacationing on Lake Champlain in Westport, New York, in the summer. The amateur woodworker used just one wooden plank cut into 11 segments that were jointed together for his now-legendary seat, which is said to have been made of hemlock, hickory or basswood.
The story of the Adirondack chair continues with Lee’s friend, carpenter Harry Bunnell, covertly patenting the chair and going on to produce it as the Westport Plank chair for a growing audience over the next two decades. Over a century later, the Adirondack chair has gone through several design evolutions while maintaining its popularity and basic form with slats of wood such as pine offering comfort both indoors and out.
The widespread demand for rustic Adirondack outdoor furniture was bolstered by the turn-of-the-century establishment of rural escapes to treat diseases such as tuberculosis. The low-slung Adirondack chair became common in these places of convalescence, allowing patients to recline and breathe in the country air. It also complemented the camp-style architecture that was prevalent in the Adirondacks for recreation as well as restoration, where rugged furniture with exposed wood and minimal carving filled interiors and wide porches.
Today, Adirondack chairs are made in a range of materials and can be found around the world, from ski resorts to lakeside piers, their durability and classic form making them an enduring favorite for spending time in nature.
Find vintage Adirondack chairs, benches, lounge chairs, decorative objects, folk art and other furniture on 1stDibs.