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  2. Garden Egg chair - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garden_egg_chair

    The Garden Egg Chair is known by several names: seftenberger ei, pod chair, l’œuf en garden(egg)chair. Elastogran/Reuter produced the plastic polyurethane. Ghyczy's job was to start a design centre in order to show industrial customers polyurethane's potential. The Garden Egg Chair is one of the first chairs made with polyurethane.

  3. Metlapilcoatlus nummifer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metlapilcoatlus_nummifer

    Adults are short and exceedingly stout, commonly growing to 18–24 inches (46–61 centimetres) in total length. The snout is rounded with a sharp canthus. [3]At midbody there are 23–27 rows of dorsal scales that are strongly keeled, tubercular in large specimens.

  4. Easy Edges - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Easy_Edges

    Easy Edges side chair. Easy Edges is the name given to a series of furniture designs by Frank Gehry from 1969 to 1973. [1] These early designs were partially responsible for Gehry's rise to public recognition in the early 1970s.

  5. Gerber Legendary Blades - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gerber_Legendary_Blades

    Gerber LHR Combat Knife designed by Matt Larsen, Bill Harsey and Chris Reeve These are two of the most popular Gerber knives. The smaller is the Gerber LMF II and the larger is the Gerber LHR Sheath knife. Gerber Legendary Blades is an American maker of knives, multitools, and other tools for outdoors and military headquartered in Portland, Oregon.

  6. 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 ...

  7. George Hepplewhite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Hepplewhite

    Hepplewhite produced designs that were slender, more curvilinear in shape and well balanced. There are some characteristics that hint at a Hepplewhite design, such as shorter more curved chair arms, straight legs, shield-shape chair backs, all without carving. The design would receive ornamentation from paint and inlays used on the piece.

  8. The Round Chair - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_round_chair

    The American journalists shared the news of this chair back home and it was the subject of much attention internationally. The year the chair was created, the American magazine Interiors featured the chair and christened it "most beautiful chair in the world." [8] [9] [10] This was the first coverage of Danish Modern in the American press. [5]

  9. Wishbone chair - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wishbone_chair

    The Wishbone Chair, also known as the CH24 Chair or Y Chair is a chair designed by Hans Wegner in 1949 for Carl Hansen & Søn. The chair features a bentwood armrest and a paper cord rope seat in a woven envelope pattern. The chair is named after the Y or wishbone-shaped backrest. The design was inspired by Ming-era chairs. [1]