
Vitra
Panton Chair
$515
Verner Panton's 1960 icon - the first single-material, single-form injection-molded plastic chair. Sculptural and stackable.
Signature Product$630
George Nelson's 1949 Model 4755. Twelve wooden balls on metal spokes mark the hours - an icon of mid-century American design.
Buy from Vitra
Vitra
$515
Verner Panton's 1960 icon - the first single-material, single-form injection-molded plastic chair. Sculptural and stackable.

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

Vitra
$1,170
Sori Yanagi's graceful 1954 design using Eames' pressed plywood technique. Now in MoMA and Metropolitan Museum permanent collections.

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

Schoolhouse
$599
Hand-assembled industrial wall clock with spun steel case, domed glass lens, and quartz movement with sweep second hand. Made in Portland.

Herman Miller
$695 - $945
George Nelson's 1952 Bubble Lamp series with a translucent polymer skin stretched over steel wire frames. Soft, diffused light with sculptural presence.

Georg Jensen
$350
Minimalist wall clock with white dial and black stainless steel frame. Designed by Henning Koppel in 1978, featuring clean lines and timeless Scandinavian aesthetics.

Established & Sons
$690-$2,315
Iconic flip clock by Sebastian Wrong featuring twelve different typefaces that seemingly display randomly, with all fonts aligning for 5 minutes once per day.

Schoolhouse
$129
Retro flip clock by Twemco, one of the world's original manufacturers. Features battery-operated quartz German movement.

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.