Skip to product information
1 of 11

Solid Stool / oak

Solid Stool / oak

The Solid Stool was first designed in 1954 for residential use in a house planned by Kiyoshi Seike. The structure of the stool reminds Torii Stool which is a representative work of Riki Watanabe, and its rectilinear and neat form is composed by the combination of the solid wood seat and the steel rod legs. There is Watanabe's great care in detail such as the angle of the seat which is easy to sit and the handle hole on the seat for carrying. This is a masterpiece which revived in 2005 with METROCS, after half a century from its first release.

About Material

As the products are made of natural wood, there are individual differences in the grain pattern.

    ----------------------------------------

    [Designer] Riki Watanabe (1954)
    [Size]         W 430 x D 300 x H 420 mm
    [Material]   Leg : steel rod (Φ 10mm)
                      Seat : Solid wood (Thickness 20mm)

    Regular price ¥54,000 JPY
    Regular price Sale price ¥54,000 JPY
    Sale Sold out
    Taxes included.

    * Delivery date : 1~2 weeks

    * Shipping charges will be added upon payment.

    View full details

    METROCS

    METROCS is an interior products brand selling masterpiece design items with a long history originating in Japan and Europe. By handling items that do not become outdated due to the flow of time but rather increase their presence with each passing year, METROCS supports evolution of the lifestyles of a broad spectrum of users, transcending both generations and gender. Selecting future masterpieces from among a range of outstanding products and creating a future for them is both our mission and our pleasure.

    view related items

    Riki Watanabe [1911-2013]

    Born in Tokyo, graduated from the Woodcraft Departmentat Tokyo Higher School of Arts and Design (now Chiba University) in 1936, and after joined Gunma Prefecture Industrial Arts Center under the direction of Bruno Taut, established his own design office in 1949. He got famous with the low-cost String Chair "Himo Chair" in 1952. In 1956, he formed the Q-designers, which brought about reforms in the early days of after-war Japanese design by inventing the "Torii Stool" and the "Riki Stool," among others. In his later years, he focused on clock design, and the "Riki Clock," named after his own name and released in 2003, became his masterpiece.

    view related items