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Sam Maloof Lounge Chairs

American, 1916-2009

Along with George Nakashima and Wendell Castle, the woodworker Sam Maloof was a guiding spirit of the American Studio furniture movement — a postwar revival of craftsmanship fueled by a reverence for skilled labor and a disdain for mass-produced furnishings composed of plastic and other synthetic materials. Maloof brought a modern interpretation to traditional seating and cabinetry forms, and in doing so he created some of the most beautiful and artfully made furniture seen in the country since the 19th-century heyday of the Shakers.

Maloof was born in then-rural Chino, California, east of Los Angeles. His parents were immigrants from Lebanon, then still part of the Ottoman Empire. Maloof’s father sold fruits and vegetables from a cart, and his mother sold her handmade lace and embroidery. It was through her, Maloof would later say, that he found a love of fine craftsmanship.

Maloof tinkered with woodcarving as a boy, making things such as dollhouse furniture, but in high school he became known for his calligraphy and hand-lettered posters and signs. Into his 30s, Maloof made a modest living as a graphic artist. But in 1948, he and his newlywed bride, Alfreda Ward, a crafts teacher, moved into a new house. To save money, Maloof made their furniture from scrap oak planks, and he so clearly loved the work that his wife persuaded him to make woodworking his profession. Within two years, Maloof’s furniture was getting attention in the press, and in 1951 he received his first significant commission when the industrial designer Henry Dreyfuss hired him to make chairs and cabinets for a new office in Pasadena.

Entirely self-taught, Maloof was an intuitive designer, with a natural sense of scale and proportion. He never sketched plans for a piece in advance; on chairs, he said he worked from the legs up. Maloof used no metal hardware in his furniture; rather than bolts or screws, his pieces derive their strength and integrity solely from Maloof’s painstaking joinery.

Though he made all types of furniture, Maloof is best known for his rocking chairs. His are instantly recognizable by their long glides and attenuated, gently curved spindled backrests. Maloof lavished long hours shaping and sanding his chairs to conform to the human body, then oiling and rubbing the wood to give it a silky tactility.

Vintage Sam Maloof furniture is scarce, if not rare: At his peak of productivity in the 1970s, Maloof (by then, working with three assistants) made an estimated 300 pieces a year. His tables and smaller cabinets are priced at around $15,000; because they are his signature forms, rocking chairs made of walnut bring about twice that, more in exotic woods such as tiger maple and rosewood.

As you will see on 1stDibs, Sam Maloof designs are exemplary objects of both beauty and utility — warm, welcoming and rich in honest character.

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Creator: Sam Maloof
Double Rocking Chair by Sam Maloof
By Sam Maloof
Located in New York, NY
Double rocking chair by Sam Maloof, circa 1980's signed Sam Maloof f.A.C.C./©, dated 1988 and numbered No. 9. Literature Jo Lauria, Craft in America: ...
Category

1980s American Modern Vintage Sam Maloof Lounge Chairs

Materials

Wood, Walnut

Sam Maloof, Pair of Early Hueter Chairs, circa 1954, in American Walnut
By Sam Maloof
Located in Wargrave, Berkshire
Pair of Hueter lounge chairs by Sam Maloof, circa 1954 American walnut with dovetail joints, the interior of each frame branded designed-made/MALOOF/california Newly upholstered in...
Category

1950s American Mid-Century Modern Vintage Sam Maloof Lounge Chairs

Materials

Upholstery, Walnut

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Sam Maloof lounge chairs for sale on 1stDibs.

Sam Maloof lounge chairs are available for sale on 1stDibs. These distinctive items are frequently made of wood and are designed with extraordinary care. There are many options to choose from in our collection of Sam Maloof lounge chairs, although brown editions of this piece are particularly popular. Many of the original lounge chairs by Sam Maloof were created in the modern style in united states during the 20th century. If you’re looking for additional options, many customers also consider lounge chairs by John Hutton, George Nakashima, and Barbara Barry. Prices for Sam Maloof lounge chairs can differ depending upon size, time period and other attributes — on 1stDibs, these items begin at $23,654 and can go as high as $65,835, while a piece like these, on average, fetch $44,744.

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