Beyond the Wishbone and the Ant (insider shorthand for Hans Wegner's CH-24 Chair and Arne Jacobsen's Series 7 Chair). A new wave of designers is reimagining the classic midcentury Scandinavian dining chair. Here are 10 future classics we're betting on.
Above: Designed by Stockholm architects Claesson Koivisto Rune for Swedese, the Rohsska Chair has a solid oak frame and a laminated oak seat and backrest; €825 ($930.55) from Finnish Design Shop. The chair is available in white, black, and lacquered oak.
Above: Nicholai Wiig Hansen reinterprets the classic shell chair with his molded plywood My Chair for Normann Copenhagen; £154.17 ($238.67) from Nest UK (available in ash and black-stained ash).
Above: Made of black-stained molded beech plywood, the Esbojorn Chair is $89 at Ikea.
Above: Designed by Mika Tolvanen, the stackable Visu Chair for Muuto is $279.
Above: The delicate yet sturdy three-legged Afteroom Chair, designed by Menu, is an instant classic; $300 from the Dwell Store.
Above: Designed by Jakob Wagner for Hay, the JW01 Chair features a flexible bent-veneer back and molded seat with a black powder-coated frame (also available in solid stainless steel); $325 from A+R Store in Los Angeles.
Above: Designed by Squad One, the Bark Chair in black lacquered beech is $420 from Normann Copenhagen.
Above: The Gubi 1F Chair, designed by Poul Christiansen and Boris Berlin of Komplot Design, is made of molded plywood with a steel base. It's $669 from the Danish Design Store.
Above: The Nap Chair, designed by Kasper Salto for Fritz Hansen, is $396 from Switch Modern.
See more dining room chair picks here: 10 Easy Pieces: Folding Dining Chairs, 10 Easy Pieces: Red Dining Chairs, and 10 Pieces: Wood Dining Chairs for Under $200.
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