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Showing posts with the label Frank Bros

Weekend / Stuff

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  Kipp Stewart, Arthur Umanoff, Kurt Versen, David Stewart, George Nelson and La Gardo Tackett These came from a designer who was doing prototype packaging for Frank Bros. The two smaller boxes have design games that were sold at Frank Bros.  The large box is still sealed! Scandi Stuff. Henning Koppel cookware, Stig Lindberg, Hans-Agne Jakobsson Jack Rogers Hopkins  Signed Isamu Noguchi poster from the Japanese American Cultural and Community Center Plaza I was in Mexico City the weekend before last and visited Casa Pedregal  again. The friend I was with had a discussion with person giving the tour about these Don Shoemaker chairs.   My first shopping stop back in the US, I found one.

Eames 670 / Dr C E Easley

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I bought another empty box. It's a big one.  The shear size and the markings show that it once housed an Eames lounge chair and ottoman.  It was sent to a Dr Clifford E Easley in Rolling Hills Estates, which is on  the north side of the Palos Verdes Peninsula, facing Torrance. Rolling Hills Estates was Incorporated in 1957. Since it was less than a half hour drive from his house, chances are that it was ordered from Frank Bros . This 1962 ad lists the price at $529. That's a little over $5,000 adjusted for inflation and quite a bit cheaper than what they sell for now. Today Herman Miller sells the Palisander lounge chair for $8,000. Also, apparently in 1962 only men could buy Eames lounge chairs at Frank Bros. Not cool bros. Source: Long Beach Press Telegram, 1962 This is where the chair was delivered. I hope Dr. Easley used it right there.  The house was built in 1962 which is probably when he bought the chair. The lack of a zip code on the box also points to pre-19...

Weekend / Stuff

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Iron: Fire dogs and a catch all Frank Bros box and George Nelson trays Inrepace ashtray In 1962, Gladding, McBean & Company merged with Lock Joint Pipe Company, forming International Pipe and Ceramics Corporation, or Interpace. Millard Sheets was hired as a consultant to Interpace in 1963. Big names in ceramics, like Harrison McIntosh, Rupert Deese, Jerry Rothman, and Dora De Larious were hired as designers for the company. Henry Takemoto was hired as a full-time dinnerware designer in 1969. Ken Price served as a consultant in the research & development group.  Sadly the building was demolished and it's now a Costco.  Before Interpace, the building was Gladding, McBean & Co's Los Angeles dinnerware and tile plant. Before that  it was Tropico Pottery Works. Tortured pot, Wayne Chapman plates, Bauer bisque planter. 

Mutual Housing Association / Site Office

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The Mutual Housing Association Site Office (1947)  by A. Quincy Jones, Whitney Smith and Edgardo Contini. The Mutual Housing Association concept began with four musicians who, in 1946, wanted to share an acre of land and a swimming pool. At one point, the association had 500 members. Mutual Housing Association was formed as a nonprofit entity. All of the members of the co-operative owned shares and would be entitled to a housing site. After looking at various properties around Los Angeles, they settled on the rolling hills of Brentwood. They purchased 835 acres for $400,000 and the sites for homes were estimated to cost between $11,000 to $25,000. A. Quincy Jones, Whitney Smith and structural engineer Edgardo Contini were selected to design the community.  Source: Arts & Architecture Here's a map for reference. The site office was the first building constructed and was essentially a full-scale mockup. Although not an actual house, the basic str...

Frank Bros / LB

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Frank Bros.: The Store that Modernized Modern, at the   University Art Museum at CSULB  Curated by Cara Mullio and Jennifer M. Volland. The exhibition sources the Frank Brothers archives at the Getty Research Institute and the Frank family collection. Photo: Julius Shulman,  Frank Bros.: The Store that Modernized Modern Unlike the Eames, the Frank Bros. were actually brothers. Maurice and Edward Frank joined forces to continue on with the family's furniture business. They opened Frank Bros in Long Beach in 1938. It was first located in downtown, and then relocated to Long Beach Boulevard, where it remained until 1982. It was one of the great retail entities bringing modern to the masses in post-war America.  A wall of the store's Arts & Architecture magazine ads. I didn't see this one in the exhibition, but with Maurice Martine, Eero Saarinen and Jens Risom,  it's one of my favorites. Source: Arts & Architecture Fr...