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  2. Model 60 stacking stool - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Model_60_stacking_stool

    [1] [2] Aalto used the chair leg, named the "L leg" in his 1933 design for the model 60 stool, which was intended for use in the Vyborg Library. [3] Aalto notoriously tested the durability of his design by repeatedly throwing a prototype of the stool against the ground. [4] Production of the stool in 1937

  3. Turned chair - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turned_chair

    The evolution of the chair is from the simple backless stool, commonly three-legged for stability. As there is no wide back, there is no reason to have more than one rear leg. These gave rise to the backstool, a backless stool with one leg extended upwards and later widened by a flat pad. As this pad developed further and wider it began to be ...

  4. Windsor chair - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windsor_chair

    Modern tools for producing a Windsor chair. From bottom to top: six-degree reamer, a leg tenon cutter, an arm-stump tenon cutter, and a 1 ⁄ 2 inch (13 mm) spindle tenon cutter. The legs are splayed at angles fore-and-aft (rake) as well as side-to-side (splay) to provide actual and visual support of the person sitting.

  5. Stool (seat) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stool_(seat)

    A stool is a raised seat commonly supported by three or four legs, but with neither armrests nor a backrest (in early stools), and typically built to accommodate one occupant. As some of the earliest forms of seat , stools are sometimes called backless chairs despite how some modern stools have backrests.

  6. Cantilever chair - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cantilever_chair

    B55 Cantilever chair by Marcel Breuer. A cantilever chair is a chair whose seating and framework are not supported by the typical arrangement of 4 legs, but instead is held erect and aloft by a single leg or legs that are attached to one end of a chair's seat and bent in an L shape, thus also serving as the chair's supporting base.

  7. Model 3107 chair - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Model_3107_chair

    The chair is widely believed to have been used in Lewis Morley's iconic 1963 photograph of Christine Keeler; however, the chair used in this photograph was an imitation and not an original Jacobsen model. [2] [3] The Keeler chair had a hand hold cut in the back. After the publishing of the pictures, sales of the chair rose dramatically. [4 ...

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