Lane Desk with Thonet Chair
View Similar Items
Lane Desk with Thonet Chair
About the Item
- Creator:Lane Furniture (Manufacturer)
- Dimensions:Height: 28.75 in (73.03 cm)Width: 47.5 in (120.65 cm)Depth: 24 in (60.96 cm)
- Style:Mid-Century Modern (Of the Period)
- Materials and Techniques:
- Place of Origin:
- Period:
- Date of Manufacture:circa 1950s
- Condition:Wear consistent with age and use.
- Seller Location:Santa Monica, CA
- Reference Number:1stDibs: f83141711018946593fs
Lane Furniture
When the first iteration of the Lane Furniture company began to produce its now-famous Lane cedar chests in the early 20th century, the family behind the brand was unsure of how successful they’d be, so they initially didn’t bother adding their name to the offerings.
The manufacturer was off to a modest start but the family was industrious: The Lanes were made up of farmers and contractors who’d built more than 30 miles of the Virginian railroad. They owned a cotton mill and purchased thousands of acres of land in Campbell County, Virginia, where the Virginian railroad was intended to cross the main line of the Southern Railway. The Lanes intended to start a town in this region of the state, and by 1912, streets for the town of Altavista had been laid out and utility lines were installed. In the spring of that year, John Lane purchased a defunct box factory at a bankruptcy auction. His son, Edward Hudson Lane, was tasked with the manufacturing of the cedar “hope” chests for which the Lane family would become known, even though the company was initially incorporated as the Standard Red Cedar Chest Company.
The Standard Red Cedar Chest Company struggled in its early days but introduced an assembly system at its small factory after securing a contract with the federal government to produce ammunition boxes made of pine during World War I. The company prospered and applied mass-production methods to its cedar-chest manufacturing after the war, and, in 1922, rebranding as the Lane Company, it implemented a national advertising campaign to market its products. Ads tied the company’s strong cedar hope chests to romance. Anchored by copy that read “The gift that starts the home,” the campaign rendered a Lane cedar chest a necessary purchase for young women to store linens, clothing and keepsakes as they prepared to marry.
Wartime production during World War II had Lane producing aircraft parts. In the 1950s, the family-owned company began to branch out into manufacturing tables, bedroom pieces and other various furnishings for the entire home. The brand’s vintage mid-century furniture is highly sought after.
Lane’s Acclaim walnut furniture line, which, designed by Andre Bus, has been compared to Drexel’s Declaration series for its blend of modern furniture’s clean contours and traditional craftsmanship. Ads for the Lane series suggested that it included “probably the best-selling table in the world.” (There are end tables, cocktail tables and more in the Acclaim collection, sporting graceful tapered legs and dovetail inlays.) Later, during the 1960s, Lane offered handsome modular wall units designed by the likes of Paul McCobb. Today, the company is owned by United Furniture Industries and is particularly well-known for its upholstered furniture.
Vintage Lane furniture is generally characterized by relatively neutral styles, which are versatile in different kinds of interiors, as well as good quality woods and careful manufacturing. All of these attributes have made Lane one of the most recognizable names in American furniture.
Browse storage cabinets, tables and other vintage Lane Furniture on 1stDibs.
- Mid Century Walnut & Oak Desk by LaneBy Lane FurnitureLocated in Brooklyn, NYBeautifully crafted seven drawer desk with finished back by Lane, features three drawers on each side with sculpted pulls and one center drawer. ...Category
Vintage 1960s American Mid-Century Modern Desks and Writing Tables
MaterialsWood, Oak, Walnut
- Lane Mid-Century Modern Walnut Desk Perception CollectionBy Lane FurnitureLocated in Las Vegas, NVThis Mid-Century Modern walnut desk from the Perception Collection by Lane Furniture features a finished back and the central drawer is the iconic three dimensional weave / woven, wo...Category
Vintage 1960s American Mid-Century Modern Desks and Writing Tables
MaterialsWalnut
- LANE Altavista Mahogany Chippendale Bookmatched Writing DeskBy Lane FurnitureLocated in Charlotte, NCA Chippendale style writing desk by Lane Furniture. Mahogany with brass hardware, a banded bookmatched top with an ogee edge, decoratively carved gallery, stretchers, and fluted stra...Category
Late 20th Century American Chippendale Desks and Writing Tables
MaterialsBrass
- Mid Century Modern Double-Sided Desk by Lane Furniture. Circa. 1960sBy Lane FurnitureLocated in Miami, FLVintage Mid Century Modern Double-Sided Desk by Lane Furniture. Circa. 1960s Features a beautiful walnut wood grain, a quintessential Mid Century Modern Design, a faux woodgrain lam...Category
Vintage 1960s American Mid-Century Modern Desks and Writing Tables
MaterialsWalnut
- Late 20th Century Lane Altavista Chinese Chippendale Writing DeskBy Lane FurnitureLocated in Germantown, MDThis is a charming little vintage Lane Furniture Chinese Chippendale, Mahogany wood writing desk. This features a beautiful banded inlaid center piping and a stretcher base, with brass handles on either side. It has a center drawer and fretwork inside corner...Category
Late 20th Century American Chinese Chippendale Desks and Writing Tables
MaterialsBrass
$2,171 Sale Price25% Off - Fully Restored Thonet Writing Desk, 1910´S, AustriaBy ThonetLocated in Prague 8, CZThis is a nowadays quite rare desk from the workshop of the Thonet company, produced around 1910. The table is made of bent beech wood, the table top is made of beech wood as well. B...Category
Early 20th Century Austrian Mid-Century Modern Desks and Writing Tables
MaterialsBrass
$3,057 Sale Price52% Off