
Knoll
Barcelona Chair
$7,195 - $10,995
Designed by Mies van der Rohe in 1929 for the Barcelona Pavilion, this iconic chair features hand-buffed stainless steel X-frame and hand-welted leather cushions.

$1,442 - $1,988
Jens Risom's 1941 design for Knoll was among the first pieces in their catalog. Features maple or walnut frame with woven cotton webbing.
Buy from Knoll
Knoll
$7,195 - $10,995
Designed by Mies van der Rohe in 1929 for the Barcelona Pavilion, this iconic chair features hand-buffed stainless steel X-frame and hand-welted leather cushions.

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.

Knoll
$3,397 - $5,682
Marcel Breuer's 1925 Bauhaus masterpiece, inspired by bicycle handlebars. Features bent tubular steel and leather or canvas slings.

Knoll
$2,495 - $15,000+
Eero Saarinen's iconic Tulip table eliminates the 'slum of legs' with a single pedestal base, available in marble, laminate, and wood tops.

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

Karimoku
$2,715-$2,915
Designed by Norm Architects for the Kinuta Collection. Combines wide armrests with a sleek dining chair aesthetic, blending Japanese and Scandinavian design sensibilities.

Herman Miller
$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.

Fritz Hansen
$1,295
Jacobsen's personal favorite from 1958. Relaunched in 2014 after 50+ years.

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.

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.