Kardiel
Wegner Wing Chair & Ottoman, Carbonite
Construction
- Style Mid-Century Modern Wegner Wing Chair
- Fabric Type Vintage Tailored Twill
- Fabric Content 60% Linen, 20% Cotton, 20% Nylon
- Base Frame Tubular Bent Stainless Steel
- Body Frame Solid Birch Hardwood
- Seat Platform Reinforced seat cushion platform for firm longer lasting support
- Foam Type Multi-density foam seat cushion for comfort, support & cushion memory
- Construction Feature Inserted body bolt sleeves secure legs to frame
Dimension
- Overall Dimension Width 35" x Depth 29.1" x Height 39.4"
- Ottoman Dimensions Width 18.1" x Depth 24.8" x Height 13"
- Dimension Floor to Seat Height 16"
Features
- Smooth Contour cold pressed foam body wrap provides a meticulously smooth contour for this design
- Matching streamlined piping
- The entire chair & ottoman is stitched and crafted by hand
- Inserted body bolt sleeves secure legs to frame
- Flex angle adjustable floor protecting disks
- Kardiel 3 Year Limited Warranty
Wegner Mid Century Modern Wing Chair
Unmistakably Danish. Hans J. Wegner of Denmark created the original wing Chair in 1960. Kardiel specializes in reproducing this series and understand the details of the original design.
Making the Wegner Wing Chair Icon
Dimensionally correct from the groove recess to the angle and curve of the back. This reproduction of the CH445 Wing Chair is fully handcrafted using the finest materials: Cashmere Wool, a solid Birch Hardwood frame and pure stainless steel legs.
About Cashmere Wool Tweed
Cashmere wool fiber is obtained from “Cashmere goats.” Historically, fine-haired Cashmere goats have been called Capra hircus laniger, as if they were a subspecies of the domestic goat Capra Hircus. Cashmere goats produce a double fleece that consists of a fine, soft undercoat or under-down of hair mingled with a straighter and much coarser outer coating of hair called Guard Hair. For the fine under-down to be sold and processed further, it must be de-haired. De-hairing is a mechanical process that separates the coarse hairs from the fine hair. After this separating process, the resulting premium “cashmere” is ready to be dyed and converted into yarn.