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    Risom Child's Side Chair

    Jens Risom 1943

    This product is currently unavailable.

    Jens Risom’s designs, described at their introduction as "good, honest furniture," were the first pieces ever designed for and manufactured by Knoll. Their brightly colored webbing and simple design make these scaled-down versions ideal for a kids craft station or mini-modernist tea party.

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    Finishes

    Nylon webbing straps are 60% nylon, 40% cotton with water repellent finish.

    • color Red Nylon
    • color Blue Nylon
    • color Orange Nylon
    • color Green Nylon
    • color Honey Beech

    Dimensions

    Additional Info

    Construction and Details
    • Available with or without webbed back
    • Nylon webbing is 60% nylon and 40% cotton with water repellent finish
    • Frame is solid Honey Beech hardwood with mortise and tenon construction
    • Catalyzed lacquer finish
    Sustainable Design and Environmental Certification
    • Risom Child's Side Chair is certified Clean Air GOLD

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    Originally known as the 600 Series, the Risom Collection was the first furniture ever commissioned and manufactured by the Hans Knoll Furniture Company. Prior to meeting Jens Risom, Hans Knoll operated as an importer and distributor of European Designs. Knowing that the war would disrupt his supply lines, Hans sought a designer to develop original Knoll Furniture that could be produced locally in New York. Serendipitously, Jens Risom was looking for a salesman to promote his work. They found each other in 1941, and the two young men—just 23 and 24—embarked on a four-month research tour of the United States. Risom later recalled: “There was no furniture, nothing to be had…everybody was anxious to buy everything they could get their hands on.”

    With this in mind, Risom designed a complete line of simple modern chairs, tables and storage that could be made locally, with materials not limited by wartime supply restrictions. Risom’s approach was perfectly suited for the challenge: “Design is a creative effort to successfully solve problems; ‘good design,’ therefore, is a ‘good solution’ which must satisfy the many requirements.” The resulting furniture, which Risom described as “very basic, very simple, inexpensive, easy to make” was made from offcast wood and discarded nylon webbing from parachute factories. 

    READ MORE ABOUT RISOM'S 600 SERIES ON INSPIRATION

    The first true Knoll designer, Jens Risom joined the young Hans Knoll Furniture Company in the early 1940s as the sole designer of interiors and furniture. Born in Denmark to the well-known architect Sven Risom, Jens worked in Stockholm for one year before graduating from the prestigious Kundstandvaerkerskolen in Copenhagen.

    Risom left Denmark for the United States in 1938 and, for two years, served as Director of Interior Design at the studio of Dan Cooper, Inc. in New York before starting a freelance career specializing in furniture and textiles. It was during this time that he met Hans Knoll. The pair collaborated on an exhibition for the New York World’s Fair. Knoll asked Risom, who had been searching for a promoter and manufacturer, to help him design interiors for clients around New York.

    With Hans handling client relations and Jens planning interiors and designing furniture when needed, the pair began to take on more design projects. In 1942 they printed the first Knoll Catalog, which included 15 pieces designed by Risom — the very first furniture to be commissioned specifically by Knoll. Working ingeniously within the constraints of wartime material shortages, Risom developed several chairs and tables using essentially scraps of wood and rejected nylon straps from parachute production. Despite these constraints, Risom was able to design innovative and truly modern pieces of furniture, a selection of which were reintroduced by Knoll in 1994.