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Saturday, April 2, 2011

Florence Knoll Bassett

Born Florence Schust (1917- ) in Michigan and orphaned at age 12, she later became a protegée of Eliel Saarinen at the Cranbrook Academy of Art, as well as a close friend of his son Eero. She also studied at the Architectural Association in London and under Mies van der Rohe at the Illinois Institute of Technology.

After receiving her degree, she moved to Cambridge, Massachusetts, where she worked briefly for Walter Gropius, Marcel Breuer and Wallace K. Harrison. In 1943, she went to work for the Hans J. Knoll Furniture Company, which at that time was a small studio mainly manufacturing pieces by Scandinavian designers. By 1946, she had become a full partner in the firm and married Hans Knoll. Together they formed Knoll Associates and began to focus on International Style Modernism.

Her innovative concept of "total design" resulted in the formation of a "space planning unit," which created cohesive, comprehensive design by encompassing architecture, manufacturing, interior design, textiles, graphics, advertising and presentation. This reinvented Knoll's image and revolutionized the field. Her ideas still remain in practice today.

She acquired the rights to produce Mies van der Rohe´s "Barcelona" group, as well as work from other well-known designers, including Eero Saarinen, Isamu Noguchi, and Harry Bertoia.

She became president of the firm in 1955, when Hans Knoll was killed in a car accident. She retired in 1960, but she is still a consultant. In 1958, she married banker Harry Hood Bassett.

In 2004, the Philadelphia Museum of Art devoted a major exhibit to her life and work.

From lostcityarts.com and knoll.com




Florence Knoll bench
knoll.com

Florence Knoll chair
knoll.com

Armless sofa
treadwaygallery.com

Oval desk table
knoll.com

Chrome and glass coffee and end tables
knoll.com

Florence Knoll sofa
knoll.com

Maple desk
metroretro.com

Friday, April 1, 2011

Don't throw away those Green Stamps!

I hadn't thought about Green Stamps in years, till I found a Georges Briard ice bucket on eBay still in the original box with a Green Stamps sticker on it. I decided I'd do a little nostalgia piece for the blog, so you readers old enough to remember them could reminisce and you younger bloggers could smile and good-naturedly roll your eyes about my "back in the day" story.

The History: S & H Green Stamps were popular in the United States from the 1930s through the 1980s.  Part of a rewards program operated by the Sperry and Hutchinson Company, they were given away with purchases at grocery stores, department stores and gas stations. Stamps were pasted into booklets and then redeemed for merchandise shown in the company's catalog called the Idea Book. In the 1960s, the Idea Book was the largest publication in the country, and the S & H Company issued three times more stamps than the U. S. Postal Service.

The Surprise: S & H Green Stamps are still valid! They can be traded for the company's new digital currency called S & H Greenpoints, which can be redeemed for merchandise or gift cards to major chain stores and restaurants. The old Green Stamps can also be redeemed for cash. Yes, you heard me. Cash.

If you have a drawer full of books of Green Stamps, you might want to check out the instructions for redeeming them on at the Greenpoints site. You will receive $1.20 for every 1200 Green Stamps you submit, or you will receive 1 Greenpoint per stamp. Of course, they make you jump through so many hoops to redeem the stamps that it's almost impossible, but, at least technically, they're still worth something.

From ehow.com and thefullwiki.org


S & H Green Stamp
thefullwiki.org

1959 LIFE magazine ad
fortwortharchitecture.com

Green Stamp saver books over the years
hubpages.com

Green Stamps Idea Book
cdiannezweig.blogspot.com