Rocking chairs first became popular in England and Europe in the 1700s, but it was the American versions that really established the genre. From the Boston and Salem rockers of the mid 1800s to Shaker rockers, wicker rockers, Arts and Crafts mission oak and even Eames-style rockers, these fun chairs are a fixture of the antique furniture landscape.
This beautiful site showcases the collection of Stanley and Polly Stone of Fox Point, Wisconsin, consisting of earl… [more]
Steven Cabella's personal homage to Charles and Ray Eames. This site is as clean and visually appealing as the Eame… [more]
This Library of Congress microsite is an overview of the postwar modern design work of Charles (1907-78) and Ray (1… [more]
This website showcases several hundred pieces of furniture, held by thirteen museums, that were designed for Herman… [more]
An overview by the Minneapolis Institute of Arts of the design movements between 1880 and 1940 that comprised Moder… [more]
This microsite from the LA County Museum of Art provides a good overview of the Arts and Crafts movement in Europe … [more]
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