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Globes

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Globes For Sale
Style: Mid-Century Modern
Style: Regency
Heavy Solid Brass Base Reploge Floor Stand Globe Paul McCobb MINT
Located in Rockaway, NJ
Heavy Solid Brass Base Reploge Floor Stand Globe Paul McCobb MINT
Category

20th Century American Mid-Century Modern Globes

Materials

Brass, Bronze

Mid-Century Illuminated Replogle World Floor Globe in Wood and Glass, Chicago
Located in Haddonfield, NJ
American 1950's back light green painted floor globe by Replogle, Mid-Century Modern. Remarkable and charming Chicago made world globe featur...
Category

Mid-20th Century American Mid-Century Modern Globes

Materials

Steel

Replogle Standard Globe with Atlas, C.1950
Located in San Francisco, CA
ABOUT A replogle standard globe with a metal bracket mounted on a metal pedestal. The original atlas slides into the base. CREATOR Replogle. DATE OF MANUFACTURE c.1961-1964....
Category

Mid-20th Century Mid-Century Modern Globes

Materials

Metal

Mid-20th Century Armillary Sphere Globe
Located in Los Angeles, CA
The armillary sphere is usually a ball representing the earth. It is used to demonstrate the motion of the stars consisting of a spherical framework of rings that represent lines of ...
Category

Mid-20th Century Italian Mid-Century Modern Globes

Materials

Metal

Mid Century Style Illuminated Floor Globe by Scan-Globe A / S Denmark
Located in San Diego, CA
Large luminous globe, created in the 1980s by the Danish label Scan-Globe A / S. Made in plastic and wood, this piece depicts the representation of land and political geography at a scale of 1: 32,000,000. The world ball...
Category

Mid-20th Century Danish Mid-Century Modern Globes

Materials

Wood, Acrylic

Antique, New and Vintage Globes

Antique and vintage globes can prove unique and interesting accents to your living space, whether on their own as provocative conversation pieces or part of a small collection dotting the shelves where your sculptures and other decorative objects live.

Globes are among the most ancient of scientific instruments. During the Age of Exploration, they were vital for navigation, bringing sailors home after perilous journeys on different trade routes. Globes didn’t just detail continental formations, they might also show astronomical positions — adventurous seafarers of the day would rely on stars’ positions in traveling the great waters ahead of them. Antique globes offer a glimpse into specific time periods and how peoples of the past navigated the world around them. These were tools that identified a region’s borders, the names of countries, territories and more as the Earth’s geography was once known or imagined. As information about a place became available to geographers over time, globes became more accurate.

Not all globes depict the Earth and its countries, landmasses and bodies of water. The models that do are known as terrestrial globes, while globes that detail the position of the stars and other heavenly bodies are called celestial globes.

Quite surprisingly, the construction of globes remains relatively unchanged from the 16th century. The base starts as two papier-mâché hemispheres, which have a wooden support pillar attached via the north and south poles. The hemispheres are joined with glue or sewn with string and are subsequently topped with more paper or even thin fabric. Lastly, the globe is covered with plaster, ready for the design to be pasted on top.

Perhaps even more surprising is that the decorative function of globes has not changed much since the 16th century. They’ve been given as gifts for hundreds of years, as globes have always been beautiful objects whether they’re in your home office or your living room, lining your mantel alongside other globes of different sizes. Recent globe designs offer modern variations in style and features, such as interior lighting, automatic rotation and more.

Today, vintage trunks and luggage have reappeared as furniture or decorative home accents in a bedroom or foyer. This likely owes to wanderlust, nostalgia and a shared love of good design. Decorating with globes is similarly rooted in the allure of travel and a penchant for the stylish finishing touch that collectibles bring to our homes. Antique globes add welcome doses of color and contrast to a house or apartment’s neutral corners, their sea blues and algae greens popping against reclaimed wood interiors or stone fireplaces.

On 1stDibs, you can find a collection of authentic antique and vintage globes including mid-century modernGeorgianArt Deco editions and more.

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