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  2. Egg (chair) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Egg_(chair)

    Related to the Egg is the Swan chair and, to some degree, many of Jacobsen's plywood chairs such as "7", the Ant, the Cigar, the Grand Prix-chair, the Pot, the Drop and the Giraffe. The Egg (like the Swan) was also designed as a couch. While the Swan couch is still in production, only a handful of Egg couches have ever been made.

  3. Garden Egg chair - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garden_egg_chair

    The Garden Egg Chair is known by several names: seftenberger ei, pod chair, l’œuf en garden(egg)chair. Elastogran/Reuter produced the plastic polyurethane. Ghyczy's job was to start a design centre in order to show industrial customers polyurethane's potential. The Garden Egg Chair is one of the first chairs made with polyurethane.

  4. 12 Collectible Toys From the 1970s Worth More Than You Think

    www.aol.com/12-collectible-toys-1970s-worth...

    Introduced in the early ’70s, these adorable egg-shaped toys famously “wobbled but didn’t fall down.” Appealing to vintage toy collectors for their whimsical design and nostalgic charm, ...

  5. Ovalia Egg Chair - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ovalia_Egg_Chair

    The Ovalia Egg Chair was designed by Danish industrial designer Henrik Thor-Larsen and first displayed in 1968. It resembles Eero Aarnio 's Ball Chair , but has narrower proportions. It featured in the films Men in Black [ 1 ] and Men in Black II .

  6. Model 3107 chair - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Model_3107_chair

    The chair is widely believed to have been used in Lewis Morley's iconic 1963 photograph of Christine Keeler; however, the chair used in this photograph was an imitation and not an original Jacobsen model. [2] [3] The Keeler chair had a hand hold cut in the back. After the publishing of the pictures, sales of the chair rose dramatically. [4 ...

  7. 1970s in furniture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1970s_in_furniture

    Another major aspect of 1970s furniture is the use of teak wood. [2] The use of teak in fashionable furniture and panelling regained popularity in the 1960s and items became chunkier as it progressed into the 1970s. Because of the popularity of wood in homes, dark color palettes also became more widely used as the 1970s progressed.