In 1984, Herman Miller asked George Nelson to write an essay on the nature of his design relationship with Herman Miller. This is an edited version the result. Here, he reflects on unfaltering trust ...
Introduction -- Nelson in print / Stanley Abercrombie -- Planning with you : George Nelson as an architect of the home / Jochen Eisenbrand -- Bringing home a revolution : the domestic furniture of the ...
George Nelson’s 1952 Bubble lamps are icons of Midcentury Modernism, arguably some of the most enduring designs of the era. But now that famed illumination, so soft and diffuse, finds itself in the ...
Self-described "ballsy woman" Hilda Longinotti, now 80, was the first receptionist of American furniture giant Herman Miller in the age of Mad Men. See her witty stories animated in this delightful ...
Modernica, maker of those beloved George Nelson Bubble lamps, announced that it is bringing back the Bubble’s cousin, the Net. In 1959, the Net Light rolled out to not exactly a fervor. Fewer than ...
AMERICAN FURNITURE was fun in the ’50s, and George Nelson was a major reason why. The gregarious, chain-smoking architect ran a talent-packed New York studio that introduced the Coconut Chair, the ...
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