BARCELONA CHAIR, CASHMERE
FRONT VIEW
BACK VIEW
PRODUCT DETAILS
CLOSEUP VIEW
DESCRIPTION
Frame:
CHROME LIKE POLISHED STAINLESS STEEL
Frame Upholstery:
STRONG HARD LEATHER STRAPS
​​
Cushion:
POLYFOAM MATTRESS COVERED WITH DACRON FIBRE
​
Cover:
HIGH QUALITY CASHMERE SQUARES WITH DOUBLE STITCHED LINING
MEASUREMENTS
PRODUCT BOX SIZE
PRODUCT SIZE
MATERIAL
Cashmere wool, usually simply known as cashmere, is a fiber obtained from Cashmere and other goats. Cashmere is fine in texture, and it is also strong, light, and soft. Cashmere is characterized by its soft fibers. It is noted as providing a natural light-weight insulation without bulk. Fibers are highly adaptable and are easily spun into fine or thick yarns, and light to heavy-weight fabrics.
AVAILABLE COLOR OPTIONS
ORDER FREE CATALOG
COLOR VARIATION
BLACK CASHEMERE
RED CASHMERE
BLUE CASHEMERE
VIOLET CASHEMERE
ORANGE CASHEMERE
GREEN CASHEMERE
SHOP
THE DESIGNER OF THE ORIGINAL
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe was born in Aachen, Germany in 1886. He worked in the family stone-carving business before he joined the office of Bruno Paul in Berlin. He entered the studio of Peter Behrens in 1908 and remained until 1912. Under Behrens’ influence, Mies developed a design approach based on advanced structural techniques and Prussian Classicism. He also developed a sympathy for the aesthetic credos of both Russian Constructivism and the Dutch De Stijl group. He borrowed from the post and lintel construction of Karl Friedrich Schinkel for his designs in steel and glass. Mies worked with the magazine G which started in July 1923. He made major contributions to the architectural philosophies of the late 1920s and 1930s as artistic director of the Werkbund-sponsored Weissenhof project and as Director of the Bauhaus. Famous for his dictum ‘Less is More’, Mies attempted to create contemplative, neutral spaces through an architecture based on material honesty and structural integrity. Over the last twenty years of his life, Mies achieved his vision of a monumental ‘skin and bone’ architecture. His later works provide a fitting denouement to a life dedicated to the idea of a universal, simplified architecture Mies died in Chicago, Illinois in 1969.