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Showing posts with label Conant Ball. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Conant Ball. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

In the store: Cool tables and a lonnnnnnng credenza

At the same estate sale where we found the McCoy Unipet bowls, we ran across some cool walnut and glass end tables and a matching coffee table. We saw several people look them over and walk away with a perplexed expression. When we checked them out, we felt the same way at first...till we figured out that the glassless wooden bases were being displayed upside down. Once we turned them the right way and put the glass on, we realized they were great looking little tables. Thank goodness we figured it out first.


Kidney-shaped glass and walnut coffee table

Matching walnut and glass end tables


We also got another pair of end tables ready for the floor. They're very similar to some of the tables Russel Wright did for Conant Ball, but so far we haven't found any documentation to indicate that's what they are. Still, they're incredibly heavy, top quality tables that will look beautiful in someone's home.


End tables in the style of Russel Wright for Conant Ball

Last but literally not least is a Scandart credenza that is 7'4" long. This massive teak piece is simply spectacular.

Scandart credenza

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Russel Wright

Russel Wright (1904-1976) is considered by some to be the Martha Stewart of the mid-century era.  His affordable designs could be found in almost every middle-class home. Always ahead of other designers, he was the first to design a portable radio, a radio/record player console, sectional upholstered furniture, stove-to-table cookware and dishes and spun aluminum accessories. His wife Mary (1904-1952) helped with marketing, coming up with the term "blonde" for light maple furniture, suggesting to her husband that he sign his pieces, and co-authoring Guide to Easier Living with him in 1950.

Wright was the first to use rattan, hemp rope or wood in informal serving pieces, and his blonde wood furniture became a model for modern design.  He also pioneered the use of aluminum blinds, stainless steel flatware and Melamine in informal tableware.

His Steubenville American Modern china, followed by his Iroquois Casual china, have remained so popular that Oneida manufactured a Russel Wright reissue a few years ago.

I never tire of talking about Russel Wright.  I collect Iroquois Casual china in ripe apricot and avocado yellow, and I can get really passionate discussing it. (I know, I know...I really need to get out more.) I'd love to hear from you about your favorite Wright designs, about things you already have and about things on your wish list.


From The Man Who Was Martha Stewart Back Before She Was by Grace Glueck and Collector's Encyclopedia of Russel Wright by Ann Kerr


Rattan tea cart with spun aluminum canisters
antiquehelper.com

Conant Ball lounge chair
treadwaygallery.com

Conant Ball sectional sofa
1stdibs.com

American Modern china
ephemerascenti.com

Iroquois Casual china
antiquehelper.com

Spun aluminum floor lamp
decorumsf.1stdibs.com

An eBay find...not marked.

I got this spun aluminum lamp on eBay for next to nothing.  I did my homework and found out that some of the early Russel Wright lamps were not marked.  Do you know anything about this lamp? Could it be an early Wright?