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CH388 | Dining Table
Architonic ID: 1075624
The CH388 round dining table for four people, with a stainless steel frame, is a smaller version of a similar table for six people that Hans J. Wegner designed in 1962. The use of steel in the 1960’s was not unusual for Wegner, who at this time, often also chose to use stainless steel frames in his chairs.
The CH388I insert leaf is sold separately.
In the small CH388 dining table for four people, there is a round wooden tabletop supported by two trestles with round legs and a uniquely shaped rail. The result is a well thought-out composition that still seems extremely modern today.
The round tabletop is in solid oak with a vertical edge. The cylindrical, removable stainless steel legs meet the floor with visible floor protectors with a small rounded edge on the side. The legs are attached to both the tabletop and the two rails for maximum stability.
The dining table is available as a single plate or as a split tabletop. If the table is split, the two halves can be pulled apart, so that the table can be enlarged with leaves to a maximum of eight seating places.
CH388 is in the same series as Hans J. Wegner’s CH322 dining table which has the same tabletop profile and similar frame.
oak, soap, stainless steel, Prepared for 2 leaves, Ø120 cm, H72 cm
This product belongs to collection:
Base metal, Metal, Oak, Stainless steel, Tabletop solid wood
You can visit the product page for these variants—just click on them!

Denmark
Hans J Wegner was one of the world's most famous furniture designers in the 20th century, and one of the driving forces behind the rise and influence of Danish design. The Life of Hans J Wegner Hans J Wegner was born on 2 April, 1914, in Tønder, Denmark. His talent for wood carving was recognised early on, during his apprenticeship as a carpenter. He went on to study design and also architecture at what would later become the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts in Copenhagen, where he taught furniture design between 1946 and 1953. In 1940, he initiated a project to fit out the Town Hall of Aarhus, together with fellow architects Erik Moller and Arne Jacobsen. That same year, Wegner began collaborating with the master cabinetmaker Johannes Hansen. The Danish Museum of Art & Design first bought one of Wegner’s chairs in 1942; but his most popular chair was the 1949 Wishbone Chair which has been produced since 1950 by Carl Hansen & Son. In 1982, Hans J Wegner won the CF Hansen Medal for architecture, the highest award for the discipline in Denmark; and in 1997 he won the 8th International Design Award in Osaka. He was also awarded with an honorary doctorate from the Royal College of Art in London in 1997. Hans J Wegner’s design approach Hans J Wegner was one of the most creative and productive furniture designers of his time. He designed numerous chairs, living-room furniture, dining tables and other home furnishings. He was best known for his chairs however; and following his motto ‘a chair is a chair only if someone sits on it’, Wegner united form and function with his chairs, and brought Scandinavian design to the fore. Wegner was concerned not only with the appearance of a chair, but with its function – to support the human body. Hans J Wegner's creativity and his extraordinary sense for sculptural expression made him the pioneer of Danish modernism. His approach to minimalism was inspired by the material properties of wood, and the sculptural, organic forms found in nature. For Wegner, the experience of a chair was not limited to the merely visual; it should be an artwork that appeals to all the senses, touch included. Hans J Wegner’s CH24 Wishbone Chair The CH24 Wishbone Chair, also known as the Y-Chair, is one of Hans J Wegner’s most successful designs. He created it for Carl Hansen & Son, who have produced it since the 1950s, as part of a series of chairs inspired by antique Chinese armchairs. The characteristic element that gives the chair its name is a Y-shaped, clavicle-like element supporting the backrest. The ergonomic design and strong, structural form of the Wishbone Chair have made it a design classic, and the chair became world famous when, in 1961, it was used during a TV debate between John F Kennedy and Richard Nixon. The CH25 Lounge Chair: a Danish design icon The CH25 Lounge Chair was one of the first chairs designed by Wegner for furniture manufacturer Carl Hansen & Son. The sloping rear legs give the CH25 Chair its characteristic appearance: restrained and yet structurally dynamic at the same time. The CH25 Lounge Chair was designed to be relaxing, while offering enough support so that the occupant would not fall asleep. Its strong form, and sculptural use of wood, is similar to that of the Wishbone Chair. © by Architonic