ArchitectMade Child’s Chair
- Regular price
- £349.00
- Sale price
- £349.00
- Regular price
-
Special order or made to order items
Orders placed for items that are not in stock in our warehouse are advertised as "Delivery within XXX".
Upon purchase, orders are placed with our suppliers, which are then delivered to our warehouse whereby they are then shipped directly to you within 24 business hours.
The delivery time advertised is a generous timeframe, and most items are received within this period.
However, this not guaranteed as we rely on production schediules and supply chains and quite often internail customs.
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Built to grow with
Kristian Vedel’s Child’s Chair was designed to combine children’s curiosity for exploration, play, and their continuously changing needs.
Child’s Chair has many possibilities. The seat can be adjusted to make a high or a low chair, and a smaller plate can be added to create a multipurpose table for eating, drawing or playing. Lay the chair on its back, and it can be used to put toys and other items too.
Made from plywood, it is easy to carry and stable for your child to sit and play in. Nurture your child’s interests with the Child’s Chair. This is made-to-order, and it will take about 4 months until delivery.
Plywood and Laminate, Blue and Red
Dimensions
W45,00 H31,00 L41,00 cm
Kristian Vedel
Point of view and empathy define the work of Kristian Vedel. Greatly influenced by Kaare Klint, the father of modern Danish furniture design, as well as the German Bauhaus school, his now-classic modern designs are characterized by a creative use of materials, especially plastics and wood, and with a strong sense for ergonomic and functional requirements. In an interview he famously stated, “The starting point for an architect’s work must always be that he, from his own point of view, and as objectively as possible, takes a position with regard to what he perceives as the needs of society and his fellow man; he must personally take a stand with regards to existing possibilities and responsibilities.”