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  • Ant chair Walnut image.
  • Ant chair Walnut image.
  • Ant chair Walnut image.
  • Ant chair Walnut image.

Ant chair - Walnut

Finish
From
£129.50
Normal price
£259.00
Delivered 12 - 16 weeks

This item is not manufactured by or affiliated with the original designer(s) and associated parties. We do not claim any rights on any third party trademarks.

Product Specification
  • Frame: Birch Wood, Painted Different Colors
  • Legs: Stainless Steel Legs
  • Style: Modern Designed
  • Warranty: 5 Years
  • Assembly: Fully
  • Instructions: N/A
  • Clean: Dust Polish
Product Information
  • Dimension: Width 40cm, Depth 47cm, Height 76.5cm
  • Seat Dimension: Height 43cm
  • Packing Dimension: Width 63.5cm, Depth 60cm, Height 58.5cm
  • CBM: 0.223 Product Weight: 6kg
Product Description

Origin

The Ant Chair, inspired by none other than Arne Jacobsen, is a special style of an original mid-century design made famous in 1952. It was originally designed for the Novo Nordisk, a pharmaceutical firm of Danish origins, and bears a unique name worth noting as well ---- in addition to its gorgeous single-color birch wood that comes in numerous selections; pick from Walnut, Oak, Red, White, or Black. But for more about the product name’s..see the section to the right. 

Ant chair

Leggy

Who inspired the initial name behind this now-modern, top-selling style masterpiece, in the first place? Well, see how this chair resembles an ANT, with its head raised, the bottom seat itself representing the ant’s rear area, just above its legs (which look similar to the legs of the chair as they are thin and lean outward instead of directly down)? And speaking of legs, did you also happen to notice that the ones seen here are of stainless steel with a small, black plastic-rubber base at the bottom to support them? This makes for a look that is simple, yet stylish, all at once. But more on the first prototype….The original piece created in the 1950s only had three legs, each fully made of plastic, and was remembered as such. It also had form-molded veneer, which was laminated, for its seat material. Only 300 chairs were ordered, and Fritz Hansen ensured their manufacturing. Later on, of course, the tubular steel you see here came to replace the plastic used for the legs.

Ant chair