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The company has lost money every year since 2007 and was delisted from the New York Stock Exchange twice in less than a year. Analyst Budd Bugatch of Raymond James & Associates compared Furniture Brands board members to the pigs in George Orwell's Animal Farm. [28] On September 9, 2013, Furniture Brands filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy.
He has designed bath plumbing for Waterworks; [2] furniture for Hickory Chair [11] and Century Furniture; [15] lighting for Visual Comfort; [16] textiles for Lee Jofa, owned by Kravet; [17] rugs for Safavieh; [18] and tableware and accessories for silversmith manufacturer Reed & Barton. [19]
The Pace Collection was a high-end contemporary furniture company in business from 1960 to 2001. The company was founded by Irving and Leon Rosen in New York City. The showroom was located in Manhattan on East 62nd Street to offer its fine furniture and services to the contract interior design trade.
W. & J. Sloane advertisement from September 1902. W. & J. Sloane, (W&J Sloane, Sloane's), was a chain of furniture stores that originated from a luxury furniture and rug store in New York City that catered to the prominent, including the White House and the Breakers, and wealthy, including the Rockefeller, Whitney, and Vanderbilt families.
Parsons chair, curving wooden chair named for the Parsons School of Design in New York, where it was created and widely copied today; Peacock chair, a large wicker chair with a flared back, originating in the Philippines; an exaggerated Windsor chair design by Hans Wegner (1947); also a chair designed by Dror studio for Cappellini [39]
Furniture by A. H. Davenport and Company is in the collection of the White House, the Smithsonian Institution, Historic New England, [38] the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, the Art Institute of Chicago, [39] the Carnegie Museum of Art, [40] the Brooklyn Museum, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and St. Patrick's Cathedral in New York City. [41]