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Design, Products February 23, 2010

The Real Thing: Eames Aluminum Group Chairs

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201497582_8aeac534c8Eames Aluminum Group chairs at The Sea Ranch – a home designed by Obie Bowman. Via The Mid-Century Modernist.

So many home offices sport an Eames Aluminum Group (EAG) chair (I’m writing this blog perched on one!) That, are the Aeron, seem to be the most popular home office chairs coming across my desk.

The EAG series was designed in 1958. Eero Saarinen and Alexander Girard were designing the Columbus, Indiana, home of J. Irwin Miller, founder of Cummins Engines. They wanted an outdoor chair and asked Charles and Ray Eames to develop one. The Eameses constructed their chairs with cast aluminum and a seat frame meant to support a stretched synthetic mesh. The seat-back suspension was a major technical achievement and it represented a departure from the concept of the chair as a solid shell. The original mesh was short lived and in 1969 the Eames added  plush, individually upholstered cushions. Then in 2001 a new mesh was added to the repertoire that was similar to the fabric used on Aeron chairs.

eamesaluminumgroupchairs

During a recent visit to the factory in Michigan where the chairs are produced I learned that they are one of the most copied products on the furniture market. So what do you look for when you want to buy an original? According to Gregg VanderKooi, the Classics product manager,  there are three tell-tale signs.

1. FORM “There’s really two levels of knock-off Eames Aluminum Group chairs, those that attempt to be a literal reproduction and those that are a low-cost inspiration.  The low-cost versions are easiest to determine, the form is usually noticeably off, the arms are typically only partially formed – meaning they aren’t a continuous ‘D’ shape, and the pneumatic area looks very clunky.”

2. SIGNATURE “The easiest way to determine an authentic EAG is to flip it over and see if it’s marked as Herman Miller on the underside.  Ever since 2007 (the 50th anniversary of the EAG), this is even easier since I added a sewn-in tag to the underside that carries the HMI logo, Eames signature, and Eames Office logo.  Prior to this, we either branded it through the use of a ‘Herman Miller’ sticker, or on older chairs, the Herman Miller name was formed directly into one of the aluminum parts of the base.  This is probably the only sure way to determine if it’s authentic (but like many other things, knock-off producers will eventually copy this too).

3. FINISH “Herman Miller only polishes the aluminum frame, we don’t use chrome.  I don’t recall ever seeing a knock-off use any other finishing process other than chrome (polishing to our level of quality adds too much labor cost to the product, chroming covers up many of the defects of the aluminum parts, allowing knock-offs to use sub-standard parts).  Again though, we unfortunately can’t say that all chromed chairs are knock-offs because Vitra -who is authorized –  offers their chairs either chromed or polished.  They’ve said that 80% of theirs go out chromed too. ”

Comments (13)

I am wondering if I can purchase new seat pads for an aluminum series manager chair

is it possible to recover this chair?

the chairs I have came out of a bank in the mid 80′s
they have a Herman miller stamp and pat no. in the casting.

Thank you.

I am checking for you…
C

The best thing to do is send an email to our customer care department and they can help you. hmhome@hermanmiller.co

Hello,

I’ve heard that due to the patent on these chairs it’s illegal to own a reproduction and that “Eames” take this very seriously. Is this the case?

Kind regards,

D.

It’s not illegal to own a reproduction. We’d like you to buy authentic pieces but there’s no law that stops you buying a reproduction.

I was wondering if it is possible to order little rubber plugs to replace the wheels/castors with?
Thanks,
Jaime

Long have I dreamed of owning a vintage Eames chair. I am currently looking at an aluminum group lounge with a four leg base, black upholstery, no side arms, and curiously, the casting mark is simply a Herman Miller symbol without any text. Is that possible?

I recently acquired an EAG chair and ottoman that belonged to my late uncle. I believe it dates from the early 60′s or earlier and I’m trying to date it more precisely. Stamped into the aluminum is the Herman Miller logo and the words “Patent Pending”. I’m looking for a patent that would establish a latest date for the chair but so far I’ve been unsuccessful. Can I get some help with this?

Mitchell: I got this answer from David Foster, the editor of our Discover blog:

1958. “Patent Pending” was only stamped on the first year of production. Ottomans from that year are hard to find.

Hope that helps. Thanks for stopping by!

Amy

I was recently at an auction with my daughter and she pointed out a chair in the back yard with tools and some car parts on it and said “I think that’s an Eames chair.” It has the patent pending stamp and we are trying to find out it’s value. We paid $50 and people said “Those must be some old car parts.” Any help on the value woul be greatly appreciated.

I have an aluminum group five star base and was wondering how to order wheels to replace the glides. There does not seem to be a parts or accessories area one the store website.

Thank you.

If jamie from above wants to trade, I will take my glides and send them for the casters.

I recently purchased several EAG chairs and wanted to verify their authenticity. There’s a peeling clear coat on the arms which I’ve heard only the authentic ones have this coating. The frame and legs appear to be raw aluminum as they respond to polishing and have the dull silver look of oxidized aluminum. I could not find a Herman Miller logo, stamp or tag, but I do see a sticker with the following:

EA336 L
258
0000000 122299

and also what appears to be a FF8 1999 stamped on the base.

Checking in the current product catalog, there is no EA336 model, only a EA335 or EA337.

Can anyone add any insight to this? There’s a great story behind the chairs that I believe to be true, but I would want to know they are real before believing it.

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