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CH28 Lounge Chair

c. 1951

by Hans J. Wegner
for Carl Hansen & Søn

CH28 Lounge Chair

by Hans J. Wegner
for  Carl Hansen & Søn

or Call to Order

Func­tional and sculp­tural, with an excep­tional finish, Hans J. Wegner’s CH28 lounge chair design features many of the master’s signa­ture elements. Sharp and shapely lines contrast beau­ti­fully in this highly-appeal­ing chair. Ease back in comfort with rounded edges and deli­cate touches. Though angular and precise in its expres­sion, the CH28 lounge chair, closely related to Wegner’s famous Sawbuck Chair, show­cases Wegner’s dedi­ca­tion to finding the optimal balance of func­tion and visu­ally pleas­ing form. The design also achieves excel­lent comfort. Note­wor­thy details include rounded armrests, wooden seat buttons that contrast with the wood grain of the seat and back, and the intrigu­ing dynamic between the thin, bent seat and back and the more robust round legs.

The CH28 lounge chair is avail­able in solid oak and walnut as well as in a combi­na­tion of these wood types, with various finishes. The seat and back are also avail­able uphol­stered in fabric or leather from the collection.

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Credit: Carl Hansen and Søn

Hans J. Wegner

Denmark (1914–2007)

If Danish modernism is best known and beloved for the use of traditional techniques to emphasize materiality—graceful curves honoring the grain of fine walnut, for example—that’s thanks in large part to Hans J. Wegner. Born in southern Denmark, at 14 Wegner began an apprenticeship with Danish master cabinetmaker H. F. Stahlberg, where he honed a preternatural talent and learned skills he’d bring to bear throughout a career lasting some eighty years and full of design masterpieces.

While studying at the School of Arts and Crafts in Copenhagen, Wegner worked for Arne Jacobsen and Erik Møller on a range of furniture for the Aarhus City Hall. Four years after graduation, he had showcased a chair at the Copenhagen Museum of Art and Industry, and opened his own firm. Sculptural, surprisingly comfortable seating became Wegner’s trademark: for Fritz Hansen, the floating Chinese chairs; for Carl Hansen & Sons, he designed the instant classic Wishbone, Shell, and Elbow chairs; for PP Møbler, the cozy Papa Bear, iconic Round, and buoyant Circle chairs; and countless others, most still in production.

Wegner retired in 1993 and died fourteen years later, but his work lives on in its ubiquity across residential, hospitality, and corporate design—not to mention the Museum Sønderjylland’s permanent exhibition of the three dozen chairs he felt were his very best in a water tour in his hometown of Tønder.

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