Thonet Classic Dining furniture
Classic Dining with THONET
Classic Dining means classic dining with THONET. The THONET chairs S 32 without armrests and S 64 with armrests match the dining table S 1070, S 1071 or S 1072.

- Furniture
- Lighting
- Accessories
- Rooms
- Special
- Designer
-
Manufacturers
- Vitra
- USM Haller
-
Thonet
- Thonet Chairs
- Thonet coffeehouse chairs
- Thonet Bar Stools
- Thonet Dining
- Thonet Casual Dining furniture
-
Thonet Classic Dining furniture
- Thonet Coffee Tables & Side Tables
- Thonet Cantilevers
- Thonet High Dining furniture
- Thonet Lamps
- THONET Outdoor Dining furniture
- Thonet Shelves
- Thonet Desks
- Thonet Armchairs
- Thonet Tables
- Thonet Bauhaus
- Thonet Home Office
- Furnishing with Thonet
- Thonet in stock
- BuzziSpace
- Fritz Hansen
- Artemide
- Tecnolumen
- Fatboy
- Freifrau
- COR
- Belux
- Kartell
- KFF
- Houe
- Knoll International
- Richard Lampert
- Lapalma
- FM Büromöbel
- MOX
- Muuto
- Louis Poulsen
- Wilkhahn
- Interstuhl
- Brunner
- Leather on Top
The table is made of legendary tubular steel with a wooden tabletop. You can choose between oak, ash or walnut. The dining tables S 1071 and S 1072 can be folded up, so that even large families or visitors can fit into the dining room and eating together is great fun. Every combination is the perfect dining room furniture that offers plenty of space. The cantilever chairs S 32 and S 64 each have a frame of chrome-plated tubular steel, the wood is black-stained beech. The seat and back of the chairs can be ordered in classic wicker or fashionable mesh, the "Pure Materials" version is even more elegant. The cantilever chairs were designed by Marcel Breuer (1902-1981), who developed the tubular steel furniture around 1930. The table was appropriately designed by the German designer Glen Oliver Löw, who adopted Breuer's curved geometry to create the perfect dining table.
Dining chairs from THONET
The traditional company THONET stands for 200 years of design icons. In a unique family history, classics have always been brought to market with their finger on the pulse of the times, and they stand for groundbreaking innovations in material, form and production technology. While Michael THONET was the first to succeed in bending wood under steam to produce a chair industrially, Marcel Breuer succeeded in forming tubular steel together with his Bauhaus colleagues.
Designer Glen Oliver Löw
Glen Oliver Löw (born 1959) in Leverkusen, studied industrial design both in Germany and Italy. Between 1987 and 2000 he worked with the famous Italian designer Antonio Citterio. In 2000, Löw was appointed professor at the Hochschule für Bildende Künste in Hamburg, where he also designs furniture in his own studio and has been awarded design prizes such as the Red Dot Award.