🟠 PASTOE / Cees Braakman / vintage teakhouten-Formica made to measure dressoir / 1970s
SOLD (Amsterdam / NL) /
Teak veneer and Formica “made to measure” sideboard by Cees Braakman for Pastoe, 1970s / Teakhouten vineer dressoir met Formica elementen uit de serie “meubelen op maat” ontworpen door Cees Braakman voor UMS Pastoe, 1960 / 70s. Het samengestelde modulaire dressoir met “made to measure” elementen (schuifdeuren, wanddelen en verbindingsbalkjes) bestaat uit twee gelijke kastdelen met planken en vier off-white Formica schuifdeuren. De gehele kast is demontabel en van eerste eigenaar.
Conditie: goede vintage conditie. Lichte gebruikssporen op hout- en binnenwerk (zie foto). Handgreepjes hebben gebruikssporen. Bijgewerkte kleine beschadiging op 1 van de Formica schuifdeuren (zie foto). Bijgewerkt kleine beschadiging aan het fineer rechterachterzijde (zie foto)
€750,-
Afmetingen: breed 185 cm, diepte 45 cm, hoogte 69,5 cm
>leuke set samen met hetzelfde dressoir, maar dan met teakhouten draaideuren > zie binnenkort andere advertentie.
Code: K2110
Teak veneer sideboard with Formica elements from the series “custom furniture” designed by Cees Braakman for UMS Pastoe, 1960 / 70s. The assembled modular sideboard with “made to measure” elements (sliding doors, wall parts and connecting beams) consists of two equal cabinet parts with shelves and four off-white Formica sliding doors. The entire cabinet can be disassembled and is from the first owner. Good vintage condition. Light signs of use on the wood and interior (see photo). Handles have signs of use. Handles have signs of use. Minor damage on 1 of the Formica sliding doors, was once repaired (see photo). Improved minor damage to the veneer on the back right (see photo)
Vintage leather easy chair, model 103, designed by Illum Wikkelsø (1919-1999) and produced by A/S Mikael Laursen, Denmark 1960s.
Illum Wikkelsø (1919-1999) trained as a carpenter and later studied at the School of Arts and Crafts in Copenhagen. He first worked for the Danish cabinetmaker Jacob Kjær and the architects Peter Hvidt and Orla Mølgaard until 1954, when he opened his studio on the outskirts of Aarhus. Here he designed exceptionally simple and elegant seating furniture with great functionality, which are now considered classics of Danish furniture design. The style of his work ranges from the classicism of Kaare Klint to the soft organic craftsmanship of Arne Jacobsen.