In 1951, Charles and Ray Eames held a tea ceremony at their Pacific Palisades home with a whimsical mix of guests including sculptor Isamu Noguchi, poet Iris Tree, and actors Charlie Chaplin and Ford Rainey. Japanese actress and singer Shirley Yamaguchi participated in the event as a student. The tea master, Shizuye Sosei Matsumoto, was teaching Yamaguchi how to perform the tea ceremony for the film “East Is East.” Like everything done by the Eameses, the ceremony was a spirited artistic statement—a singular experience impossible to replicate.
The singularity of the experience recalls the Japanese saying “Ichi-go ichi-ye,” which in essence means “one time, one meeting.” Eames Demetrios, grandson of Charles Eames and head of the Eames Foundation, took this phrase to heart when considering a reenactment of the original ceremony. He and members of the Eames Foundation, tasked with preserving and restoring the Eameses’ home, thought reenacting the ceremony would be a compelling way to raise money for repairing the home’s floors.
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Check out Eye Delight-2011 for more interesting images.

The award-winning Washington, DC, office of LivingSocial with SAYL work chairs for everyone. Photo: OTJ Architects

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A Herman Miller shipping box upcycled into a Re-Ply Chair, a reclining seat made from several layers of cardboard and a metal base. Photo: there-ply.com
Mac, a 12-year-old West Highland Terrier, is only allowed on the Eames lounge chair after he’s had a bath—or so his owner thinks. Photo: Richie via Living Edge
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The mix of modern design—like the black Noguchi Table—and decorative accessories give this living room its cozy personality. Photo: Unknown
Creative use of reclaimed wood, a living wall of air-filtering plants, and a few Mirra Chairs helped earn this office LEED certification. Architecture: Jones Haydu
Blue Eames Chairs provide a splash of color in the cool interiors of the Dallas office of TM Advertising. Photo: Bruce Damonte
Why is this man upside down on an Eames Sofa? That’s a question best asked of fashion photographer Terry Richardson. Photo: Terry Richardson for Sergio K.
An Eames Molded Plywood Coffee Table in the living room of this modern Los Angeles home. Photo: Marcia Prentice
A peaceful waiting room at New Jersey’s Virtua Voorhees hospital with Pause seating by Herman Miller Healthcare partner Nemschoff. Architecture: HGA
Exposed brick, rustic tables, and Mirra chairs—the bohemian style of Free People is evident in the design of the brand’s new office space. Photo: Meyer, Scherer & Rockcastle
I count four. How many Herman Miller pieces can you spot in the living room of this Houston, Texas, home? Photo: Chris Nguyen
Modest materials were used to maximum effect in this headquarters for SEI Investments. Photo: Laura Swimmer
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A quiet place to study with a comfortable chair at the library of the University of Chicago Law School. Photo: Cannon Design
A Coconut Chair in the living room of this renovated British Colombia home. Photo: Pete Rose Architecture + Interiors
An Eames Molded Plastic Chair supports this young woman and her stylish prosthetic leg—a collaboration between designer Scott Summit and an orthopedic surgeon. Via: BBC
The University of Chicago Law School Library choose Eames Aluminum Group Chairs for the public spaces of their newly renovated building. Photo: Cannon Design
Bombo Stools complement the warm, wood accents in the kitchen of this modern Australian home. Photo: Fox Johnston
Aeron Chairs —check. Protective gear—check. Sticks are all Easton Bell Sports needs for an impromptu game of office hockey. Photo: Marco Zecchin
Comfortable with a touch of luxury was the request of this condo owner; the Noguchi Table fit the bill perfectly. Interior Design: Eleven Interior
What kind of “tree house” has Eames Molded Plywood Chairs? The kind BC/PIC requested for their Melbourne, Australia, headquarters. Architecture: BVN Architecture
Perhaps an unconventional location for an Eames Lounge, but every room is deserving of a comfortable seat. Design: Joni Spear
Modern pop, courtesy of several Eames designs in the bedroom of this New York City condo. Design: Kristen Rivoli
Table, stool, or spa companion, the Capelli Stool is an award-winning design that can play many roles. Photo: SB Architects
“An Embody for everyone” seems to have been the mantra of the award-winning offices of this Chicago trading firm. Design: Perkins+Wills
A great view and afternoon sun make this Eames Lounge a contender for the best seat in the city. Design: Kristen Rivoli
Pull up a Bombo Stool and appreciate the clean lines and modern finishes of this contemporary kitchen. Design: Anthony Wilder
Start the day off right with a sunrise and seaside view. Photo: James Silverman
Family dinner, game night, or birthday party, there’s a seat for everyone around this kitchen table. Photo: Hive Modern
A pair of Coconut Chairs: the perfect place to spend a quiet evening in with your toes curled up in a sheepskin rug. Photo: Fab
Enjoy the view of Lake Geneva from a living room that embraces the warmth of wood and leather. Photo: James Sliverman
Table, stool, or stand, Eames Walnut Stools have a myriad of uses, not least dressing up the kid’s playroom. Design: Wentworth Studio
A New York penthouse with an interior slide; what better way to arrive at the dinner table? Photo: Travis Dubreuil
Stainless steel and colorful linen accents abound, but you’ll not find a trace of wood in the headquarters of Lee Steel. Design: Davis & Davis
Take in the New York City view from a vintage Nelson X-leg Table surrounded by Eames Molded Plywood Chairs. Photo: Elizabeth Felicella
Simple and spacious was the intent of the combined dining room, kitchen, and living area of this Japanese home. Photo: Studio Skilm
This warm, contemporary home gets a modern edge courtesy of a great pendant light and some Magis chairs. Photo: cdlworkshop.com
There’s something satisfying about green grass between your toes, even if it’s not the real stuff. Photo: davidlauerphotography.com
Kick your shoes off and get some work done in this clutter-free home office. Photo: gaileguevara.com
Take one handsome cat, add two vintage Eames chairs, and you have a Pinterest perfect photo. Photo: Jason Forest
Sit back and relax or get down to business, this office was designed with both in mind. Photo: aplusi.com
How do you know when your boardroom table is big enough? When it takes 20 Eames Aluminum Group Chairs to surround it. Photo: aplusi.com
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If breakfast is the most important meal of the day, then this cozy corner is the perfect place to dig in. Photo: fiorelladesign.com
It’s only fitting for a media company like Horizon to have monitors prominently on display in this cool conference room. Photo: Magda Biernat for a+i Architecture
Whether it’s a weeknight dinner or a weekend crossword, this dining room has a grown-up allure for all occasions. Photo: natalieyounger.com
The spectacular city view from this home office is unimpeded by bulky furnishings and clucky technology. Photo: terratelms.com
Choosing a comfortable place to sit may be the only easy decision made at this big, angular boardroom table. Photo: arupassociates.com
Blending life and work together into a single space, Intexure Architects opted to line the perimeter of a casual meeting table with Magis Air Chairs. Photo: tm-studio.com
Clean and uncluttered, everything in this home office was thoughtfully selected from the art to the Aeron work chair. Photo: tm-studio.com
A couple of Eames molded plywood chairs and table and a lamp—that’s all the minimalist interior of this renovated Swiss farm building needed. Photo: Daniela Droz
Eames Time-Life chairs on display alongside several other soon-to-be classics at Braan’s Frankfurt, Germany office, circa 1960. Photo: Hans G. Conrad
Cheer up the dreariest of board meetings with a touch of color—in this case some purple Eames Aluminum Group Chairs. Photo: clivewilkinson.com
Colorful artwork and a comfortable Aeron Chair make this home office feel less like the office. Photo: H. Tokuyoshi
A handy little piece to have around, the Eames Wire Table is perfect place for a laptop or dinner in front of the TV. Photo: CBY
Who says a chair is just for sitting? This Eames Molded Plastic Chair makes a fine bedside table. Photo: Trecompany
This vintage photo captures the graceful repose of a model seated in an Eames Aluminum Group Lounge Chair, featured in the November 1960 issue of “Vogue” magazine. Photo: Karen Radkai
A colorful collection of Eames Molded Plastic Chairs take sides in the dining room of this Belgium retreat. Photo: Louis-Philippe Breydel
Sometimes work requires a quiet sanctuary away from the buzz of people, an Aeron Chair ensures the time will be spent comfortably. Photo: Matt Winquist and and Kat Nania
What better way to enjoy the desert air than dining al fresco in these vintage Eames Molded Plastic Chairs. Photo: ruemag.com
The warmth of a vintage Nelson Basic Cabinet complement the white tiled walls and floors of this apartment designed for Tile of Spain. Photo: fotoarquitectura.es
The simple look of Setu helps make this home office a cozy place to check a few emails on Saturday mornings. Photo: Barry Calhoun
Magis Chair_One on a four-star base is a rare sight; that makes the set of eight around this table quite a treat. Photo: ideastosteal.com
JetBlue chose Setu Chairs to sit around the giant boardroom table of their New York headquarters. Photo: Adrian Wilson
Standing while you work has been in fashion since Herman Miller designed the first office system in 1964. Photo: Herman Miller
Contrasting with the sea of red carpet, these white Eames Aluminum Group chairs surround a custom-made table in the boardroom of Kids II. Photo: Emily Followill
Enjoy the California sun while working in a pair of apple green Eames Aluminum Group Chairs. Photo: midcenturymodernist.com
A place for everything in the shelf-lined home office of architect Steven Shortridge, complete with Eames Soft Pad chair. Photo: bethanynauert.com
Almost too many to count, Eames molded plastic chairs dot the interior of this office workspace for design blog DesignLoveFest, among others. Photo: bethanynauert.com
Magis Stool_One complement the ultra modern lines and limited palette of this renovated Greek home. Photo: studiopaterakis.com
Rebuilt after devastating tornados in 2011, the new Mercy Hospital in Joplin, Missouri chose to outfit patient rooms with the flexible Compass System. Photo: mercy.net/node/4582
A set of Magis Chair_One provide a place to enjoy the outdoors in the courtyard of this Greek seaside residence. Photo: studiopaterakis.com
Brand new Eames molded plastic armchairs complete the look of this 1950s conference room. Photo: ro-lu.com
Trying their hardest to act natural, the employees of Japanese web developer Colony Interactive pose in their Aeron chairs. Photo: hermanmiller.co.jp
Eames wire chairs in this photo for Marazzi, an Italian maker of fine ceramics and stoneware. Photo: marazzi.it
A place for your drink and magazine, with room to spare. The Eames elliptical table in the living room of a Scandinavian apartment. Photo: Birgitta Wolfgang Drejer
Don Draper and his fellow Mad Men discuss business while in their Eames executive chairs. Photo: blogs.amctv.com
George Nelson Swag Leg chairs provide a modern touch to the dining room of this hundred-year-old Northwest Portland home. Photo: jhinteriordesign.com
Not even a leaping lion can distract from the design of a Nelson platform bench in the apartment of Eric Goode. Photo: personaproduction.com
A simple palette complemented by the warm touch of an Eames molded plywood chair. Photo: birgittawolfgangdrejer.com
Stand, sit, or pull an Aeron chair up to a pallet/desk in the office of Amsterdam-based BrandBase. Photo: MOST Architecture
A pair of Eames Aluminum Group lounge chairs in the living room of this Australian flat. Photo:Elizabeth Bay
An old parking garage became a state-of-the-art research lab stocked with Equa chairs for the Weill Cornell Medical College. Photo: Stonehill&Taylor
Creative juices flow free with the aid Aeron chairs at the office of Manchester-based creative studio the Neighbourhood. Photo: the-neighbourhood.com
Eames molded plastic chairs line both sides of the dining table in the energy efficient Hudson Passive Project. Photo: Peter Aaron
A Danish modern desk and Eames Aluminum Group chair, a cozy pairing in this home office. Photo: the10centdesigner.com
A community space with Eames molded plastic chairs in Red Bull’s new headquarters. Photo: Ewout Huiber
A Nelson platform bench in harmony with the Scandinavian style of this living room. Photo: Apartment Therapy
The office of typographer of Nick Keppol, outfitted with a Herman Miller Aria desk, Embody chair and Eames LTR. Photo: Apartment Therapy
Sayl chairs make a guest appearance in the Gamemakers control room of The Hunger Games. Photo: Lionsgate
Eames molded plywood chairs in front of a cloud backdrop used by Eameses in various photo shoots and films. Photo: Wright 20
Avive tables and Ethospace workstations in the busy Boston office of architectural firm Shepley Bulfinch. Photo: Shepley Bulfinch
"Take Note of Spring's Best Looks" advises the Bloomingdale's catalog featuring this sunny Nelson Marshmallow sofa. Photo: Bloomingdale’s
Eames Soft Pad chairs and tables provide a place to chat in the lobby of Marquette University’s Ray and Kay Eckstein Hall. Photo: Shepley Bulfinch
Molded plywood chairs by Charles and Ray Eames lend a mid-century touch to the bedroom of this Nashville loft. Photo: Reid Rolls
Eames molded plywood chairs and storage unit in the dinning room of House Industries founder Andy Cruz. Photo: Rose Callahan
Eames molded plywood lounge chairs set a casual tone for a community area at the headquarters of creative agency Parliament. Photo: Weareparliament.com
The shipping container office of Jeff Wardell, complete with an Aeron chair designed by Bill Stumpf and Don Chadwick. Photo: Drew Kelly.
Eames Aluminum Group chairs are center stage at hair salon, club, and sometimes gallery Club Milano. Photo: Oficina Stoberl
SAYL work chairs flank a Geiger Peer table in the headquarters of Plantronics in Santa Cruz, California. Photo: Plantronics
A green Eames Aluminum Group management chair sits behind the desk of this beautiful home office. Photo: unknown
A pair of Eames molded plywood dining chairs in the light-filled living room of this Seattle home. Photo: Aaron Leitz
Vintage Eames molded plastic chairs pleasantly contrast the traditional details of this Swedish home. Photo: Idha Lindhags
A community space with Aeron work stools in the award-winning Armstrong Oil and Gas office, Denver, Colorado. Photo: Lake Flato
An Eames aluminum group management chair, part of a study under the stairs in this light-filled Bozeman, Montana residence. Photo: John Clark, Dwell
This Riverside loft offers guests both an Eames lounge and ottoman and molded plywood lounge chair. Photo: John Heineman, Blue Ant Studio
Twelve Eames molded plastic chairs are the entire seating capacity for the Parisian rooftop restaurant Nomiya. Photo: KleineFenn
The angular interiors of Arthouse Cafe perfectly match Konstantin Grcic’s Chair_one for Magis. Photo: Joey Ho Design Limited
The complementary warmth of an Eames molded plywood coffee table in the incredibly energy efficient Hudson Passive Project. Photo: Peter Aaron
Enjoy a panoramic view of the Dutch seaside from this dining room, complete with Eames wire chairs. Photo: Hotze Eisma, Elle Decor.
Paper doesn’t require any special equipment—“All you have to do is sit down, cut paper out, and score it, bend it, and glue it.” Designer Irving Harper has a way of making it sound easy; when you see his creations you realize it’s not. Harper is just humble and extraordinarily talented.
This fact becomes even more apparent when you reflect back on his long and distinguished career. A long-time member of George Nelson’s design office, Harper is widely acknowledged as the creator of some of the 20th century’s most iconic designs: the Marshmallow Sofa, the Ball Clock, and (something very close to our heart) the Herman Miller logo, among many well-known designs.
Much in same way he transforms paper into art, Irving Harper has always had a knack for turning humble materials and seemingly simple ideas into something special.
In Irving Harper’s hands, you can imagine any material to be versatile.
See more of Irving Harper’s paper sculptures at Why Design, a series of eight videos featuring designers from Herman Miller’s creative network.
Charles Eames used to say, “The details are not details. They make the product.” Today, we honor Charles’ belief in the way we craft the designs of the Herman Miller Collection.
Working with local suppliers and manufacturers, we balance handcraft and industrial process. We utilize the newest technologies and latest materials to create a designer’s vision to the highest level of precision, durability, and sustainability. We then rely on skilled craftspeople to provide individual human touches: finishing, upholstering, and assembling each piece by hand.
These details make a difference; we believe that Charles would agree.

When Yves Béhar says, “Design’s purpose is not only to show us the future, but to bring us the future,” he means it. Whether it’s the frameless back of the SAYL Chair, the dock-killing wireless speakers of JAMBOX, or tackling mobile commerce for Paypal, it’s clear that Béhar follows his own philosophy.
So, what does Yves Béhar see on the horizon? Good question, and the topic of his upcoming talk, “Designing for Tomorrow,” at the Chicago Humanities Festival on November 3. A few seats are still available, so if you’re in the area, this is your opportunity to catch a glimpse of the future.
Check out Eye Delight-2011 for more interesting images.





