CHILDREN’S PLYWOOD CHAIR

DATE - 1945

The Children’s Chair was designed and produced using the wartime tooling they developed for leg splints and airplane parts. The chairs were made in two parts-the seat back extended downward as a brace, which was attached by a single rivet to the one-piece seat itself, molded with compound curves that folded down as its legs. 

Eames Children’s Plywood Chair

The Eames Children’s Plywood Chair is practically featherweight, so that even small children could lift and move this furniture, the Eameses added an extra thoughtful touch. Each chair back had a cutout hole, in the shape of a heart, a place where each chair could be easily grasped, even by a tiny hand.

In addition to the chair, Charles and Ray also created stools and tables. All three parts, the chairs, the stools, and the tables, could be nested into one another and thus stacked for easy shipping and storage.

Charles and Ray made 5000 of them on an assembly line at the Evans Products Company, a trial run. While they exhibited the children’s furniture along with their other molded plywood products both in December 1945 and in June 1946 at the Museum of Modern Art, this first batch were only offered in a few shops, run by friends of Charles and Ray Eames. Herman Miller, who entered into an exclusive distribution agreement with the Eameses and the Evans company for the other Eames molded plywood products, declined to take on the children’s furniture. It did not fit conveniently into the usual groupings of living-room, dining room, or bedroom furniture.

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