Hedda
Hedda is the chair that looks just as good at your kitchen table as an exclusive bistro. Inspired by classical Chinese chairs and the Greek klismos chair, it is a Nordic interpretation with scaled-down forms. In classic David Ericsson spirit, the chair has plenty of fastidious details. The side struts are angled to create symmetry with the seat, the frame has rounded ends as a wink to David’s earlier chair, Madonna, and the backrest has a perfectly balanced angle to provide good back support. The narrower shape of the arms enables the chair to be pushed in under a table or hung off the tabletop. Hedda is available with a leather seat from Tärnsjö tannery or an envelopeweave seat made by hand with 166 metres of durable paper-cord twine.
“I wanted to cross a step chair with a stag chair, but with a lower back and that could be hung up. The initial idea was that it would suit a bistro, where you sit for a long while, but also withstands all the wear and tear that goes on there.”
www.garsnas.se
Hedda is the chair that looks just as good at your kitchen table as an exclusive bistro. Inspired by classical Chinese chairs and the Greek klismos chair, it is a Nordic interpretation with scaled-down forms. In classic David Ericsson spirit, the chair has plenty of fastidious details. The side struts are angled to create symmetry with the seat, the frame has rounded ends as a wink to David’s earlier chair, Madonna, and the backrest has a perfectly balanced angle to provide good back support. The narrower shape of the arms enables the chair to be pushed in under a table or hung off the tabletop. Hedda is available with a leather seat from Tärnsjö tannery or an envelopeweave seat made by hand with 166 metres of durable paper-cord twine.
“I wanted to cross a step chair with a stag chair, but with a lower back and that could be hung up. The initial idea was that it would suit a bistro, where you sit for a long while, but also withstands all the wear and tear that goes on there.”
www.garsnas.se