Thayer Coggin Manolo Lounge Chair

SKU: 1339-103
$4,299.00 Regular price
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Width 38"
Height 31"
Depth 38"
Seat Height 17"
Seat Depth 24"
Arm Height 17"
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Designed by Ransom Culler, the Manolo Lounge Chair is a new contemporary classic from Thayer Coggin. The Manolo Lounger features elegant but powerful high-heeled legs in brushed bronze or polished stainless steel. Select any in-house curated Thayer Coggin fabrics/leathers or provide your own material. Coordinating sofa and modular sectional sofa items are also available.
  • ["Hundreds of fabrics and leathers to choose from
  • Available as a sectional
  • Height to top of the back cushion is approximately 34 inches
  • Arm width 6"
  • Stainless Steel or Brushed Bronze Base Options
  • Optional Throw Pillows
  • Ultra-plush seat cushions
  • Trillium (microfiber) Back Cushions"]
Proper care and maintenance will ensure your furniture gives you many years of trouble-free service. Many problems that arise with furniture are a result of improper maintenance and/or as a result of inaccurate or incomplete information when purchasing the furniture. Hansen Interiors will always provide the customer with required and suggested maintenance and care information on any product. Please contact us if you have any questions about your product's proper care and maintenance.

Ransom Culler

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Thayer Coggin

Thayer Coggin's love of furniture began one early Christmas morning, when all he asked for was a claw hammer. After receiving it, Thayer made his own bedroom suite. A few years later, in shop class at High Point High School, he made rocking chairs and cedar chests for tuition to attend High Point College. Then, after service in WWII, he returned to his first love and founded James Manufacturing. But, Thayer dreamed of producing designs that were innovative. He traveled to Europe for inspiration and he was impressed by the light-scaled upholstery he saw there. He said, "The simple, clean lines appealed to my sense of beauty...[their impression] hit me like a ton of bricks." Home in High Point, he developed a singular focus: to develop furniture featuring sleek, horizontal lines, synonymous with the ranch-style homes that characterized post-war suburbia.

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