This Model FD-110 rocking chair, produced by France and Son of Denmark in the 1950s is constructed of a solid teak frame. The wood has been carefully sanded and oiled with danish oil restoring its rich patina.
The France and Sons makers mark is clearly visible on the inside back and the frame is sound.
We have made a removable seat pad for below the seat cushion to protect it from the webbing.
The new cushions have been upholstered in soft 'Ogden' boucle fabric by Scumacher in Ivory.
Dimensions,
Height - 75 cm
Width - 65 cm
Depth - 68 cm
Please contact us if you would like to take a look at the chair in our St Albans studio, or if you would like a fabric sample posted to you.
Ole Wanscher (1903-1985) studied under Kaare Klint at the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts and later worked at Klint’s design studio before becoming an independent furniture designer. He helped shape Danish furniture design as a designer and as an educator when he took over Klint’s professorship at the Academy.
Wanscher’s classic and contemporary designs made him popular. In 1958, the Danish newspaper Politiken wrote: “Owning a Wanscher chair is an adventure every day, and will be so even several hundred years from now, for this is how long it lasts”. Today, his modern classics are still revered for their detail and his deep respect for materials.
Wanscher viewed furniture design as a branch of architecture and emphasised slim dimensions and resilient forms. Creating his best-known designs between the late 1940s and early 1960s, in the post-war era when the “design for all” philosophy emerged. In Denmark, some of design’s biggest names created functional and affordable furniture for the Danish people and the small spaces they lived in. Wanscher took great interest in industrially produced yet high-quality furniture, designing several successful pieces.
Wanscher was awarded the Copenhagen Carpenters’ Guild Annual Award and the gold medal at the Milan Triennale in 1960