70th Anniversary of the Emeco 1006 Navy Chair

Reports

In 1944, Wilton Carlyle Dinges founded the Electrical Machine and Equipment Company (Emeco) in Hanover Pennsylvania utilizing the skills of local craftsman. During WWII the U.S government gave him a big assignment, make chairs that could withstand water, salt air and sailors. Make chairs lightweight and make them strong, build them for a lifetime. Aluminum was the obvious choice, engineered for practical purposes, designed by real people. Emeco named the chair with a number: 1006, some people call it the Navy chair. We still call it the Ten-o-six. Forming, welding, grinding, heat-treating, finishing, anodizing- just a few of the 77 steps it takes to build an Emeco chair. No one else makes chairs this way. No one can. It takes a human eye to know when the process is done right, and it takes human hands to get it that way. Our goal. Make recycling obsolete and keep making things that last.

The 77 step process in which an handmade Emeco aluminum chair is made. Every hand thats holds a chair is passing on decades of experience. It's simple not easy. A film by Eames Demetrios, grandson of the famous American industrial designer Charles Eames: video 77 step process

More products Emeco here

Gallery

Enjoy the
photo gallery

Similar articles

Showroom Molteni&C|Dada v Konsepti

9 minutes Reading
Molteni Group, jeden z nejvýraznějších italských výrobců designového nábytku s více než osmdesátiletou historií, otevírá nový “shop in…
  • Reports

Vzpomínka na Ingo Maurera

3 minutes Reading
Ve věku 87 let zemřel minulý týden Ingo Maurer. Na německého designéra, který byl často označován jako "básník světla" vzpomíná David Řezníček,…
  • Reports
Up