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Hirsty
(@hirsty)
New Member
Joined: 14 years ago
Posts: 1
07/12/2008 4:49 am  

I was given the below chair by a University friend 10 years ago. It was going to be thrown out so I saved it.

It has been up in the loft since then but I have a terrible soft spot for it, finally having a decent space for it.

I have been trying to find out some information on it - who designed it, how old is it, where is it from?

Any assistance would be greatly appreciated as I cannot find anything


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Brent
(@brent)
Illustrious Member
Joined: 14 years ago
Posts: 558
07/12/2008 6:01 am  

Friendly edit
.


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Robert Leach
(@robertleach1960yahoo-co-uk)
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Joined: 5 years ago
Posts: 3212
07/12/2008 1:03 pm  

Looks
like a G Plan 6250


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Robert Leach
(@robertleach1960yahoo-co-uk)
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Posts: 3212
07/12/2008 3:26 pm  

Yes
It is
Here it is in the 1960s G Plan catalogue


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barrympls
(@barrympls)
Illustrious Member
Joined: 14 years ago
Posts: 2649
07/12/2008 3:28 pm  

Should we all know
what
'G Plan'
is?


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Robert Leach
(@robertleach1960yahoo-co-uk)
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Joined: 5 years ago
Posts: 3212
07/12/2008 3:58 pm  

G Plan
is a British funiture maker
They have been in business since the 1940s, popularising the concept of branded furniture here in the UK
During the 1960s employed I B Kofod Larsen to design their Danish Range.
http://www.retrowow.co.uk/retro_style/furniture/g_plan_revolution.html


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NULL NULL
(@paulannapaulanna-homechoice-co-uk)
Illustrious Member
Joined: 5 years ago
Posts: 696
07/12/2008 4:15 pm  

Robert - good of you to reply...
Robert - good of you to reply to such a patronising comment...ever hear of Google Barry?


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Robert Leach
(@robertleach1960yahoo-co-uk)
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Joined: 5 years ago
Posts: 3212
07/12/2008 6:59 pm  

Well......
I do think there is a tendency on this GLOBAL board to think design begins on the East Coast of the US and ends on the West;)


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barrympls
(@barrympls)
Illustrious Member
Joined: 14 years ago
Posts: 2649
07/12/2008 7:18 pm  

Paulanna...that was sleazy
Whenever I post something, I try to explain myself as fully as I think is possible. Is G Plan well known outside of the UK? I don't think so.
I have mentioned to Patrick and Alix the need for country of origin to be attached to each person's sign-in, so when someone posts, we all know where they from, which would really help.
As to have I ever heard of Google....yes, duh, i have, but I hope that most people's postings will contain eough basic information that one would not feel the need to do research to find out what a person's talking about.
I'm sorry for not knowing about G Plan, but i think your reply was a bit snotty.


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Robert Leach
(@robertleach1960yahoo-co-uk)
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Joined: 5 years ago
Posts: 3212
07/12/2008 7:34 pm  

I
was addressing the person posing the question in my first post, so felt no need to lecture them about G Plan.
I had no doubt they were in the UK, so knew they would know G Plan.
I should have thought by now, Barry, you would know I am in UK ??
I hope my link was useful in adding to your knowledge.


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barrympls
(@barrympls)
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Joined: 14 years ago
Posts: 2649
07/12/2008 7:40 pm  

Robert...yes I remember you're in the UK
Sorry if got a bit touchy; I do appreciate your helpfulness.
I hope I haven't posted any new topics without providing enough basic information that the readers would not have to do additional research to understand my question!
This does bring up a useful point; US and Italian mid-century modern, as well as Scandinavian MCM is well documented. I wish someone would do a nice book on the post WWII Western European designers and companies, including England, France, Germany, Holland, Belgium, Spain, etc. It would make a nifty and interesting book.


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Robert Leach
(@robertleach1960yahoo-co-uk)
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Joined: 5 years ago
Posts: 3212
07/12/2008 8:00 pm  

Barry
I didn't post a new topic 'without providing enough basic information that the readers would not have to do additional research'
I answered a question that somebody has posed...
This included digging out a catalogue, photgraphing it, hosting the photo remotely and posting it here..all at 9am on a Sunday morning.
Sorry if you felt my answer lacking.
To make up for that:
It's more than 100 years now since Ebenezer Gomme set up his furniture making business in 1898 in the town of High Wycombe, in Bucks. He joined hundreds of other furniture makers in the area, satisfying the insatiable demand for furniture from the rapidly growing cities of Industrial Revolution England and drawing on the abundant supplies of timber from the Chiltern beech woods that surrounded them.
By dint of hard work and insistence on the highest standard of quality, the company grew steadily from its humble beginnings. There were interruptions and set backs. During the First World War the company was set to making DC9 aircraft; in 1922 the factory was completely gutted in a disastrous fire. But, by 1939 it had become one of the largest manufacturers in the industry at the time.
Then came war again and once more the company's services were required - this time they played a leading part in the production of the famous Mosquito aircraft.
The experience gained in machining and assembling wooden parts to tolerances normally associated with metal working stood the company in good stead when life eventually got back to normal in the 1950s.
Once again there was much pent up demand to supply and Donald Gomme - Ebenezer's grandson - was able and willing to supply it. One of his many bright ideas was to promote his products direct to the consumer - unheard of at that time for a manufacturer. And thus G Plan - the name he coined in 1953 - became the first furniture brand to be heavily promoted through advertising.
The first G Plan model - Brandon in light oak - was ultra modern for the time and the company's fresh and vigorous approach became all the rage, leading to a hey day of success throughout the sixties. G Plan was one of the first to latch onto the fashion for teak, Scandinavian style furniture, for example.
In fact G Plan can lay claim to a whole series of 'firsts' in the world of furniture. It was the first company to introduce the concept of whole house furnishing - much boosted by significant TV advertising in the early seventies. In those heady days there was even a flagship London showroom in George Square, W1.
It was also the first to introduce modular furniture: Form Five was the name of the first range, which had a base unit with a sliding door mechanism and five bookcase display elements for the tops.
G Plan was also the first to introduce flip action extending dining tables; and the first to put stops on cutlery drawers to prevent them (and their contents) from being spilled onto the floor.


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Robert Leach
(@robertleach1960yahoo-co-uk)
Illustrious Member
Joined: 5 years ago
Posts: 3212
07/12/2008 8:01 pm  

Pt 2
In 1987 the Gomme family - major shareholders in the company, which had gone public in 1958 - decided to retire. They sold the business to the then directors, who, three years later, sold it to the Christie Tyler group of companies. In 1996 the Morris Furniture Group acquired the licence to make and market G Plan Cabinet furniture from its state of the art facilities in Glasgow. It has since developed and extended the range into today's highly successful collection, securing the future of the famous brand for the 21st century.
Today the ethos behind G Plan Cabinets retains many of the values that built the company's reputation in the past. Style, function, service and quality are at the heart of all that the business does. Thanks to continuing investment and innovation it remains a brand to respect and admire for a new era and a new generation of customers.
I hope this satisfies your need for information.


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NULL NULL
(@paulannapaulanna-homechoice-co-uk)
Illustrious Member
Joined: 5 years ago
Posts: 696
07/12/2008 8:15 pm  

Barry - I apologise for being...
Barry - I apologise for being a little beligerent earlier but to be honest whenever one of the lesser known American designers is mentioned on here my first reaction (if I'm interested) is to check them out online, in a book, or in the forum archives - rather than post a not particularly helpful comment. G Plan are actually a very well known furniture maker that nearly everyone, not just the design cognoscenti, in the UK will have heard of it and were very significant at the time in bringing a democratic, affordable version of modern design to a mass market - as two minutes research would have told you.


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NULL NULL
(@paulannapaulanna-homechoice-co-uk)
Illustrious Member
Joined: 5 years ago
Posts: 696
07/12/2008 8:17 pm  

I see that while I was...
I see that while I was composing my reply Robert has even saved you the effort of looking them up - what a fantastic forum this is


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