Designed by Charles and Ray Eames

Eames Walnut Stools

A solid wood Eames Walnut Stool.
 

Sculpture as seating

Three Eames Walnut Stools, each with a distinct profile.

Eames Walnut Stools

Are they really stools? Places to sit? Are they tables? Plant stands? Accent pieces for homes, offices, lobbies? Yes. They’ve been called abstract chess pieces. Well, no. Made of solid walnut, these stools designed by Charles and Ray Eames can be used anywhere, alone or in groups, and are beautifully versatile.

Three Looks to Choose From
The center section of the Eames walnut stool is done in three distinctively shaped profiles. Choose the one you like, or choose two or three—the same or different. Each stool is made of turned walnut; pick it up—you can tell instantly that it’s solid wood. 38 cm high. Top diameter 33 cm, bottom diameter 28 cm.

 

Design Story

In September 1958, the United States Information Agency appointed George Nelson as chief designer of “The American National Exhibition,” which was set to open in Moscow the following summer. Nelson brought in Charles and Ray Eames in November of that year to help. The Eames Office conceived a multiscreen film called “Glimpses of the U.S.A.” Because of the tight deadline, the film needed to rely heavily on stock footage. Charles asked Henry Luce, chair of Time-Life, for access to the media company’s vast archives. Luce agreed, on condition that Charles and Ray might one day return the favor.

A year later, Luce commissioned the Eames Office to design three lobbies for the newly constructed Time-Life Building at Rockefeller Center: the main reception lobby on the 27th floor, and two smaller lobbies on the 28th and 29th floors. Every element of the floor-to-ceiling designs was produced by Herman Miller. Two of the project’s famous elements—a padded leather swivel chair and a series of small, solid wood stools—went into production as the Eames Executive Chair (aka the Time-Life Chair) and Eames Walnut Stools.

The final design drawing of the Eames Walnut Stool, dated September 1960.

The details are not the details, they make the product.

More about Charles & Ray Eames

Product Designers Ray and Charles Eames