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Architonic ID: 1552938
SKU: 412 377 00
Year of Launch: 1969
Concept
The Soft Pad Chair was designed in 1969. In terms of construction and design it is identical to the Aluminium Chair. The attached padded sections form an interesting contrast to the elegant aluminium frame. They make the Soft Pad Chair softer and plusher, without detracting from its transparency and clear lines.
The models comprising the Soft Pad Group are suitable for a large number of uses: in the office, in conference and reception areas, but also at home.
Written Guarantee
The Aluminium Chair by Charles and Ray Eames is one of the greatest furniture designs of the 20th century. Vitra has produced the Aluminium Chair programme and the models of the Soft Pad Group, based on the same construction principle, for many decades to a consistently high quality. On the basis of this experience we are now granting a 30-year guarantee on all chairs of the Aluminium Group and the Soft Pad Group that were purchased after September 2003, provided the purchaser has registered at www.vitra.com/register.
The guarantee is that if any Aluminium Group or Soft Pad Group chair purchased by you develops a manufacturing or materials fault within 30 years from the date you purchased it, Vitra will repair or replace it free of charge. Note that surface marking, weathering and normal wear and tear is not covered by the guarantee, nor is damage caused by deliberate attack or misuse. This guarantee is in addition to your statutory rights. The Vitra symbol gives you the security of owning an authorised original product by Charles and Ray Eames.
Materials
For versions in leather nero, brown and red, the colour of the backrest covers in Plano are adjusted to match the leather covers. For leather asphalt versions, the backrest covers are dark grey, for chocolate leather they are brown, and for marron leather, brown, for sand leather mauve grey, for snow leather white, for clay leather in stone, for olive and camel leather in coffee. Back cover in leather available for an additional charge.
Technical
Chair with medium high backrest, with or without armrests. Swivel or nonswivel on 4-star base. Upholstered with three stitched-on cushions in leather. Die-cast aluminium clamping brackets, frame, armrests and bases, either polished or chromed. With glides for carpets. Glides with felt pads for hard floor surfaces are available upon request.
This product belongs to collection:


Eames Alu Softpad Group GS
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United States
Charles and Ray Eames are two of the most important product designers of the 20th century. The celebrated duo experimented with plywood, fibreglass, steel wire and aluminium, creating some of the most popular mid-century classics, including the Lounge Chair and Ottoman, the Aluminium Group chairs, and the DSW Chair. Charles & Ray Eames: a biography Charles Eames was born in 1907 in St. Louis, USA, and studied architecture at the Washington University in St. Louis. In 1938, he continued his studies at the Cranbrook Academy of Art in Michigan. He later became the head of the Design Department. Beatrice Alexandra (Ray) Kaiser was born in 1912 in Sacramento, California. She studied painting at Bennett College in New York before she met Charles Eames at the Cranbrook Academy. They married in 1941. As designers, Ray and Charles Eames experimented with moulded plywood, and together with Finnish architect Eero Saarinen, they won the “Organic Design in Home Furnishings” competition in 1940. In 1946, the duo's work was exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York. In addition to their prodigious furniture output, the pair had also designed the IBM-Pavilion at the 1964 New York World's Fair. In 1969, they participated at the Musée des Arts Decoratifs exhibition “Qu'est-ce que le design?” and MoMA presented a retrospective of their work in 1973, entitled “Furniture by Charles and Ray Eames.” Charles Eames died in 1978, while Ray Eames died in 1988. The Work of Charles & Ray Eames The duo's early work is associated with the moulded plywood technique pioneered by Alvar Aalto. In 1956, they designed the famous Lounge Chair and Ottoman – a contemporary version of a club chair. The seat offers unparalleled comfort and quality, combined with luxurious materials such as rosewood and leather. In 1958, the designers followed up with the Aluminium Group, a series of chair designs using cast aluminium and a wide variety of canvas and leather seats, available in different colours. The chairs were easily adaptable to both office and home environments. Charles and Ray Eames also worked extensively with steel wire, as well as fibreglass and plastic. Eames House The Eames House was built as the couple's house and studio in 1949 in the Pacific Palisades neighbourhood of Los Angeles. Built as a part of the Case Study Houses Program initiated by Arts & Architecture magazine, it is sometimes known as Case Study House Nr. 8. The architecture of the Eames House serves as a frame for an ever-changing mix-and-match interior, in which Eames furniture was often paired with exotic and primitive objects. Eames Chair The Eames Chair combines comfort with high design, and the multitude of available seats, bases and colours enables combinations such as Plastic Side Chair and Eames Armchair and Eames Rocking Chair. The chairs were originally made from fibreglass, but are now produced from moulded plastic (polypropylene) by the manufacturer Vitra. Eames Hang it all Originally designed as a children's wardrobe, Hang it all is made of white steel wire and colourful wooden spheres. A modular design, it can be repeated almost endlessly without losing the compositional harmony of the original unit. Plywood Group The concept behind the Plywood Group furniture series was that three-dimensionally moulded plywood could be designed to fit human anatomy. Additionally, plywood furniture is light and durable, if treated correctly. The LCW Eames Chair optimises the support for the seat and the backrest by fastening the components to the steel frame with rubber screws, an innovation pioneered by Charles and Ray Eames. © by Architonic