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Showing posts with label Selig. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Selig. Show all posts

Sunday, December 11, 2011

In the store: Where do I start?

My SIL has moved so many new pieces into the recently expanded store that I'm going to have to show them to you a few at a time. Here are some of the pictures he sent me last night.


Chromecraft dining set

Selig lounge chair and ottoman

9' sofa, 8' coffee table and sofa table, all by Milo Baughman for Thayer Coggin

Sunday, June 12, 2011

Ib Kofod-Larsen

Ib Kofod-Larsen (1921-2003) was a Danish designer and architect. He was educated at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Copenhagen.

His storage units and chairs were popular in the 1950s and 1960s in Denmark where he designed for Selig and Faarup and in England, where he designed for G-Plan.

In the 1960s he also designed a line of furniture specifically for the Swedish market, but it had no commercial success, possibly because it was too minimalist for the Swedes.

His furniture, often in rosewood or palisander, is finally becoming recognized and appreciated in the United States. His organic designs of sideboards and chairs, usually with spindly legs and generous, comfortable seats, are fetching high prices these days among collectors of mid-century furniture.

From stylepark.com, matzform.com and deconet.com



Elizabeth chair and ottoman
liveauctioneers.com

Hoop chair for Selig
mid2mod.com

Daybed
deconet.com
Teak and leather lounge chair
deconet.com

Credenza for Faarup
mid2mod.com

Sofa
deconet.com

Rosewood sideboard
scandinavianmod.com

Shell Easy Chair
mid2mod.com

Armchair and ottoman
danishmodernia.com

Monday, April 11, 2011

Will the real Poul Jensen please stand up?

My SIL is negotiating for a Z Chair by Poul Jensen for Selig, and while doing research about that design, I found pictures of another arm chair attributed to Jensen that is like one we have. I also found some side tables attributed to him.

Interestingly, though, I could not find one scrap of information about the designer himself. Instead, I found several discussions online questioning his existence. Could it be that Selig invented a Danish designer name for their chairs, much like the "C. Jere'" name created by Kurt (aka Curtis) Freiler and Jerry Fels for Artisan House?

Research addict that I am, I won't rest easy till I find out.

Our arm chair, marked only "Made in Denmark" but likely a Selig
Arm chair for Selig...like our chair
sit-read.com
Z Chair for Selig
center44.com
Triangular caned occasional table
1stdibs.com
Square caned occasional table
shelterhill.com

Thursday, February 17, 2011

According to a Collector: Is it real?

I recently ran across an article entitled "Is It Real?" on the Jet Set Modern website. It is a three-part look at originals, knockoffs, reproductions and re-issues from the point of view of a collector, a manufacturer and an heir of a famous designer.

Collector Sandy McLendon contends that most people have a knee-jerk reaction to pieces other than an original for several reasons: respect for the designer's intent, the desire to protect an investment or plain ol' snobbery. McLendon also points out, and I think rightfully so, that most people don't understand design law and don't really have a clear understanding of the terms original, knock-off, reproduction or re-issue, even though they may think they do.

McLendon is quick to point out that there is much "gray area" surrounding these terms and warns against oversimplification but, with that caveat, gives a quick, general definition of each one:

  • Knock-off - An item usually of inferior quality that borrows liberally from a design without actually copying it
  • Reproduction - An exact copy of a item that is of equal quality (or sometimes even better) and sometimes even made by the company that made the original
  • Re-issue - An item that is put back into production after being discontinued, sometimes using original molds or dies and sometimes addressing design or production problems encountered when making the original, resulting in a better product

Authorized re-issues are usually produced because the original company no longer exists or no longer wants to make the product. In this case, the designer, his or her heirs or the old company gives permission to another company, as in the case of Vitra's George Nelson Coconut chair, which Herman Miller decided was too expensive to produce.

Unauthorized reproductions usually result when the original design patent expires, at which time it's anybody's game, but they can be the result of a company's having bought old molds and dies from a company going out of business.

And what does the law say about all this anyway? Interestingly enough, you can pretty much copy anything you want to as long as you make a few changes, even something as minor as a color change, don't call it by the designer's trademark name and don't apply a fake label.

But then you have to deal with the thorny issue of what exactly constitutes an "original." Is it the prototype of a product? Is it a production piece? And then is it the earliest production or the latest? Or if you've bought an "original" Eames lounge chair but it has been reupholstered or restuffed, is it really still "original"?

All these are things the collector must consider when buying mid-century pieces. McLendon suggested that there actually are some good reasons to buy reproductions or re-issues:

  • They're more affordable than very rare pieces.
  • They can be used as a "placeholder" in a collection till an original piece is found.
  • They can be substituted for pieces so valuable that actual use is impractical.

But does McLendon want repros or re-issues after somewhat making a case for them? No, not really.



Genuine Eames 670 Lounge Chair and 671 Ottoman ($7,250)
1stdibs.com

Genuine Eames Lounge Chair and Ottoman, 1956 ($9,800)
Made the first production year. Does this make it "more original"?
Price tag says "Yes!"

Unidentified Eames knock-off...Notice the extra leg on the ottoman?
jetsetrnv8r.wordpress.com

Selig "Eames" chair
oldschoolartifacts.com

Plycraft "Eames" lounge chair and ottoman ($549)
planetmodern.com

Vitra Eames Lounge Chair and Ottoman
vitra.com

When you line them all up, you begin to see why this is such a confusing and difficult issue. Everybody, it seems, makes a chair like this...and a few of them were actually designed by Charles Eames.

(This is the first of three posts on this topic. The second will run Thursday, February 24. The third will run on Thursday, March 3.)