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Showing posts with label Harvey Probber. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Harvey Probber. Show all posts

Monday, November 25, 2013

In the store: Harvey Probber game table and chairs

Bridge? Poker? Family game night? Whatever your pleasure, you'll be playing in style with this low slung and sexy game table and chairs by Harvey Probber, the designer of some of the most elegant furnishings of the 20th century.

The mahogany set has been fully restored and features dark legs with brass caps on the table feet, a beautiful, round piece of terrazzo in light tan with black and orange flecks in the center of the table, as well as four expertly upholstered chairs in orange.


Harvey Probber game table and chairs

Top view

Newly upholstered chairs

Front view of chair

Side view of chair

Game table

Table top

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Harvey Probber

Harvey Probber (1922-2003) was born in Brooklyn, New York, and designed his first sofa at age 16, selling it for $10. By the time he finished high school, he was selling sketches of furniture to companies in Manhattan. Probber was an autodidact, having very little formal training at a time when most designers had formal architectural or art degrees. He did, however, take a few night classes at Pratt Institute and had on-the-job training in furniture production while working for Trade Upholstery.

After serving in the Coast Guard during the 1940s, Probber worked briefly as a cabaret singer, but by 1945 he had opened Harvey Probber, Inc. Realizing that post-war families wanted more flexibility in their homes and their lifestyles, he was the first to introduce modular seating. Probber said in the 1950s that he thought consumers became easily bored with the purity of modern furnishings, so he balanced design with decoration. His pieces had understated modern lines combined with decorative hardware, rare woods and sumptuous upholstery, sometimes in surprisingly bright colors.

Probber was not a household name during his lifetime as were some of his contemporaries, but his furniture is considered highly collectible today.

From latimes.com and lostcityarts.com



Pair of loveseats
danaritenour.com

Credenza
metroretro.com

Lounge chair
treadwaygallery.com

Sectional sofa
machine-age.com

Nuclear coffee table
artnet.com

Rosewood and chrome desk
nohomodern.com

Deep tufted sofa
merrillantiques.com

Cane trimmed credenza
lindaandhowardstern.1stdibs.com

Chaise lounge
dualmodern.com

Club chair
irwinfelddesigns.com

Surfboard coffee table
dualmodern.com

Monday, August 1, 2011

Pssst...They're called plinths.

A plinth is a type of furniture base that sits directly on the floor, rather than having legs. I'd be willing to bet that if you stopped 50 people on the street, most of them would say that mid-century furniture has tapered legs, but a number of MCM designs incorporated plinth bases.


Edward Wormley side table
griffintrading.com

Gilbert Rohde Paldao table, with one leg and one plinth base
treadwaygallery.com

Harvey Probber night stand
1stdibs.com

Milo Baughman night stands
metroretro.com

Renzo Rutili credenza
metroretro.com

T. H. Robsjohn-Gibbings double plinth base table
1stdibs.com

Peter Hvidt chest
lookmodern.com

Paul Lazlo cabinet
1stdibs.com

Paul Evans credenza
galere.net

Paul Evans sofa
galere.net

Milo Baughman chairs
1stdibs.com

Vladimir Kagan Serpentine sofa
edition20.com


This is a contemporary sofa designed by Vladimir Kagan in 1999, but I just had to include it in this post.  The piece may not fall into the mid-century time frame, but Kagan opened his first shop in 1949 and has been designing gorgeous furniture for decades. Since this sofa appears to be a variation on his 1950 Serpentine sofa, it definitely deserves a look, in my opinion.


Bilbao sofa by Vladimir Kagan
1contemporary.com

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Pssst...It's called a tight seat.

No, not the kind you get by going to the gym. I'm talking about the upholstery term for a chair or sofa on which the seat fabric is attached directly to the frame and does not have a removable seat cushion.

While loose cushions were typical in mid-century pieces, I found some beautiful examples of classic MCM chairs and sofas with fixed seat cushions. My sofa has loose cushions, but I'm considering changing it to a tight seat and back when I have it recovered. Let me have some feedback on that. Which style do you prefer?

Hans Wegner sofa
1stdibs.com
Vladimir Kagan Fireside chair
vladimirkagan.com
Isamu Noguchi sofa
prweb.com
Terence Conran Steinbeck chair
Harvey Probber gondola sofa
1stdibs.com
Adrian Pearsall swivel chairs
vandm.com

Monday, October 4, 2010

Modern make-overs

Mid-century modern is enjoying a renewed popularity, and reproductions, reissues and current day interpretations of classic 1950s chairs, tables, and sofas are cropping up everywhere.  While vintage furniture by famous mid-century designers and even reissues are prohibitively expensive for most of us, some of the new knock-offs are excitingly affordable.

You can find pieces reminiscent of Platner, Knoll, McCobb, Wormley and others that start in the $200 range and fit right into the MCM homes of even the most discerning collectors.  While not exact replicas, the "inspired by" styles give more than a passing nod to their original designers.  I have the CB2 Tornado and Ergo tables alongside vintage furniture in my home, and I love them both.


Edward Wormley sofa
fatchancemodern.com

Night and Day sofa
urbanoutfitters.com

Harvey Probber side tables

Rustic Block side table
westelm.com

Platner side table
addonovo.com

Tornado side table
cb2.com

Paul McCobb chair
refurbmadness.com

Mid-century chair
urbanoutfitters.com

Knoll table
1stdibs.com

Ergo table
cb2.com