Knoll — Chair Blog

You never know what will land on the showroom floor!  Recently two chairs designed by Warren Planer arrived.  Below picture Liz and Paul – check them out.  They both said the chairs were very comfortable.  The chairs were used in the Bond film Quantum of Solace per the below blog posting from chairblog.eu.


Knoll supplied 12 tables and 48 chairs designed by Warren Planer to the Bond film Quantum of Solace for use in final restaurant scene and no they were not all blown up.  A few Knoll dealers still have a few of the tables and chairs from the film set available to buy. The furniture pieces are supplied with a letter authenticating their use in the film.

via Knoll — Chair Blog.

Aeron – Office Chair – Herman Miller

Herman Miller Task Chairs For Sale in Newport News

The Herman Miller office chair is one of the staff’s favorites at Office Furniture Outlet.  The chair is a great ergonomic chair

Below is from the Herman Miller web site.


We wanted a totally new kind of chair. So we turned to the two designers who had produced the groundbreaking Equa chair and asked them to start with a clean slate and no assumptions. A bold challenge!

So Don Chadwick and Bill Stumpf began their work of thinking about what a chair ought to do for a person by consulting people who spend a lot of time in their chairs—older people in retirement centers. Chadwick and Stumpf came to some solid conclusions.

via Aeron – Office Chair – Herman Miller.

Give your home a ‘Mad Men’ makeover | Fox News

Mad Men returns this week, and if you’re a fan of the hit show, you may have wondered how you can emulate some of those incredible ’60s styles and fashions at home. After all, while the carousing, drinking and comically bad parenting gives the show its nostalgic appeal, it’s the close attention to mid-century design that helps bring Mad Men to life.

In the 1960s, design was heading in bold new directions, embracing bright colors and a bold, minimalist aesthetic. But a big part of what made 1960s design so interesting was that it straddled two eras: a time when men still wore ties and hats, but women were starting to wear miniskirts. It had both class and sex appeal, restraint and vibrancy.

If you’d like to emulate some of these styles at home, we’ll show you where to find period-perfect furniture, and some low-cost alternatives for those looking to redesign on a budget.

The Eames Chair

Two of the most towering figures in post-war design, the husband and wife duo of Charles and Ray Eames pioneered a bold new aesthetic that used mass-production techniques developed during the war, as well as materials like plastic, plywood and fiberglass, which were still fairly uncommon. These weren’t meant to be twee, hand-crafted showpieces, but products for everyday use in the everyday world, and a large part of the Eames’ genius lay in their ability to create bold, sexy new designs that could still be mass produced on a massive scale.

But relying on plastic wasn’t just a convenience of mass-production. It also allowed for strange shapes and bright colors, a stark departure from the austere look of the traditional wooden bankers chair that had long dominated the office setting. One of their most iconic works, the Eames Molded Chair, was said to look “like a potato chip,” and was sure to draw stares when it first debuted in 1948. But the fact that it was affordable, stackable, durable and comfortable made it a winner. A few of these clustered around the kitchen table and you’ll have domestic setting fit for the Drapers.

In the living room, Charles and Ray continued to revolutionize the way we recline with their Lounger, which the couple developed for film director Billy Wilder. With the lounger, the Eames were looking to capture the comfort of an English club chair, but with a modern flair, eventually creating a style that resembled a “well-used first baseman’s mitt.” It’s a chair built for kicking back after a long day of work, cut crystal tumbler of scotch in hand and a record on the hi-fi.

Knoll’s Saarinen Table

Many of the styles favored by designers in the 1960s — clean lines and spartan styles — would fit right in with the Mac-obsessed esthetic of the present. Take Knoll’s Saarinen table, with its sleek curves and milk-white minimalism, it looks like something you’d pick up at the Apple Store, but actually serves as Roger Sterling’s desk on the show.

Pair the table with the company’s Tulip Chairs and you’ll have the austere, space-age aesthetic that came from a time when we still got excited about ascending into the heavens, but wouldn’t look out of place in today’s technology-saturated age.

Herman Miller Couch

Herman Miller’s Mr. Nilsson Sofa is a throwback, an homage to many of the company’s great mid-century designs, and is intended to conjure up the swagger of the Rolling Stones and willowy sex appeal of Twiggy. Sitting low to the ground and featuring bold, clean lines, the Mr. Nilsson Sofa is the perfect place to take a scotch-induced mid-afternoon nap.

Doing it On the Cheap

While Herman Miller, Knoll and Vitra still crank out their classic designs, these cherished styles now command a premium, and unless your willing to part with several thousand dollars for a piece of Mad Men-era furniture, you’re going to have to put your Don Draper dreams on hold.

Fortunately there are a number of places to get these styles for a fraction of the cost. While an Eames Lounger will set you back around $5,000, you can get an Eames-inspired chair for a tenth of the price from Ikea. Herman Miller’s Mr. Nilsson Sofa is probably out of the reach of most, but for less than $500 you can get mid-century style couch from Urban Outfitters. And Knoll’s kitchen table can cost thousands, but fortunately you can get a knockoff from Walmart for less than $1,000.

Finally, a 1960s paint job will give your home that final touch of authenticity. Sherwin-Williams has the lowdown on the favored color schemes of the day, so for the cost of a few buckets of paint and a few pieces of furniture, you can recreate one of these swinging, stylish homes.

via Give your home a ‘Mad Men’ makeover | Fox News.

Corporate Wellness: Do You Sit Too Much?

Below is a great article that discusses prevention of the “Sitting Disease.”  Our bodies need activity and sitting at a desk all day does not lend to a healthy body.  The answer is to get up and move.  The article suggests prevention is simple, adding 30-45 minutes of activity daily and drinking plenty of water.

Stand-Up Desk By Knoll

Activity can be broken up to several different intervals of standing while you work, stretching at your desk, walking meetings, a walk to the water cooler or, doing a lap around the office.  The point is you can break the 30 minutes up just make sure to fit them in.

Standing while you work is a growing trend. Office Furniture Outlet receives requests for standing desks.  We liquidate all kinds of offices along the east coast and we have seen an increased inventory of standing or adjustable desks.

Office Furniture Outlet used office furniture selection is one of the largest in Hampton Roads.  If you can’t find what you are looking for in our used inventories we sell new office furniture as well.  We have been servicing the Hampton Roads community for over 18 years!  Come by our 10,000 square foot showroom and find all your office furniture needs at affordable prices in one location. Visit our web site at www.ofova.com or give us a call at (757) 855-2800.


Wes Emmert: Dont let your job hurt your fitness level – Post Bulletin

I took the notes for today’s column, literally on the go.It was a beautiful day and Andy Wood, PT, MS — my profile for today — suggested a “walking interview.” So out the door we strode and ended up walking west on the Douglas bike trial.Andy is currently an industrial therapist and wellness team leader for Olmsted Medical Center. He is involved in the rehabilitation of worksite injuries and helping companies implement employee wellness programs. Andy was the head of corporate wellness at General Mills in Minneapolis for 25 years. During his tenure at General Mills, he was involved in health and wellness, ergonomics, and physical therapy. Ergonomics is the science of indentifying and designing work stations to reduce fatigue and overuse injuries in the work place.Andy is leading the charge for companies and employees to acknowledge the presence of the sitting disease and to fix it. Sitting disease manifests itself in employees who sit at their work places for long periods of time without moving. Sedentary jobs will cause the body to slow down because there is no activity to stimulate the body to produce energy. When the body slows down, all sorts of undesirable things can happen. Calories are not burned and if you don’t adjust your caloric intake, the pounds come on over time. Poor posture due to fatigue from the same position can set in and can produce shortening of connective tissue i.e. tendons resulting in a loss of range of motion around a joint.How do we “inoculate” ourselves against the dreaded sitting disease? Woods answers; “Simply move. All employees need to do is add 30 to 45 minutes of some form of physical activity to their daily routine. Try standing at your work station. Office furniture makers are even producing standing desks. If you want to take to an even higher level, there are walking treadmill work stations.”He goes onto to explain, “Every hour or so, just stand up, raise your arms over your head, bend right, bend left, rotate one way and then the other. Walk down to the break room and back.” The 30 to 45 minutes of activity can be broken out into bouts of two to three minutes. Once you have performed some simple activity, it will wake you up and you will be more alert at your job. He suggests walking meetings for participants of up to four. If more than four, stand in the conference room. With a sly smile he adds, “Standing meetings tend to be shorter than traditional ones.”He advises, “Stay well hydrated by drinking plenty of water throughout the day. Not only is water good for you in general, it will also force you into walking down to the bathroom and back.”In summary, to fight a sedentary job, you have to make time for physical activity and get up and MOVE. To regular readers of this column, does this sound familiar? I thought so.Andy’s other skill among many is his ability to come onto a worksite and conduct an ergonomic and safety evaluation. Often he is called in by companies experiencing high employee absenteeism or work-related injuries resulting in high workers’ compensation insurance premiums. He regards employees in the manufacturing trades as “industrial athletes.” He explains, “The employee is being called upon to perform repetitive tasks over an eight- to 10-hour day with little to no mistakes much like an athlete in a game. They have to learn to warm up before attempting lifts, use proper technique, condition the body for their respective jobs, and take care of themselves in general.”All of these attributes are much like those of an athlete. An athlete relies on his body to make a living and the importance of taking care of that body. If they are sick or injured, their livelihood could come to an abrupt end.After chatting for some time, we realized we were going to wind up in Pine Island if we didn’t double back. It was a great way to do an interview and get some activity on a warm sunny day in March.On a side note, Andy inherited his love for the sciences through his father, Dr. Earl Wood. Dr. Wood was a member of a team of researchers that perfected the G-suit during World War II. For a 10-minute film on Dr. Wood, go to; http://vimeo.com/1924164.One tip for walking meetings and writing: use a clipboard. I speak from experience. Have great week.

via Wes Emmert: Dont let your job hurt your fitness level – Post Bulletin.