
Herman Miller
Eames Lounge Chair and Ottoman
$5,495 - $10,295
The 1956 icon by Charles and Ray Eames. Molded plywood shells, premium leather upholstery, and signature reclined positioning inspired by a broken-in baseball mitt.
Signature Product$1,195 - $1,795
The revolutionary 1946 molded plywood chair that earned Time Magazine's 'Design of the Century' award. The breakthrough that established the Eameses as design icons.
Buy from Herman Miller
Herman Miller
$5,495 - $10,295
The 1956 icon by Charles and Ray Eames. Molded plywood shells, premium leather upholstery, and signature reclined positioning inspired by a broken-in baseball mitt.

Herman Miller
$1,400 - $2,465
The 1994 benchmark for ergonomic seating by Bill Stumpf and Don Chadwick. Features Pellicle mesh suspension and is now made with over 50% recycled materials including ocean-bound plastic.

Herman Miller
$2,445 - $2,745
Isamu Noguchi's sculptural coffee table featuring two interlocking wood base pieces supporting a freeform glass top. In continuous production since 1948.

Herman Miller
$1,795 - $2,595
George Nelson's 1946 platform bench - a versatile piece that serves as seating, table, or display platform. Solid hardwood slats on maple or walnut base.

Carl Hansen & Son
$2,000-$3,000
Wegner's First Masterpieces from 1950. Features 400 meters of paper cord woven over 10 hours.

Vitra
$505
Reproduced from Charles and Ray Eames' prized folk art piece (circa 1910) using 3D scans of the original. Solid alder wood.

Knoll
$6,495 - $13,195
Eero Saarinen designed this groundbreaking fiberglass shell chair at Florence Knoll's request for 'a chair like a basket full of pillows' to curl up in.

Carl Hansen & Son
$795-$2,070
The world's most iconic dining chair, designed 1949. Y-shaped back and hand-woven paper cord seat requiring 100+ operations.

Vitra
$440
Charles and Ray Eames' 1945 plywood toy design, finally realized in durable polypropylene. Functional as stool or playful decor.

Vitra
$1,350
Jean Prouve's 1934 masterpiece combining steel and wood. Voluminous back legs bear weight while tubular front legs handle the rest.