PP66 Chinese Chair PP Møbler

PP66 Chinese Chair PP Møbler

New product

PP66 known as The Chinese Chair, signed by Hans J. Wegner for PP Møbler, has a high and comfortable back and full length low armrests that fits well under-neath the table top.The center board is moulded with a bend high enough to offer proper support for the lower back. PP66 was designed in 1945 and became the quintessential modern outcome of Wegner’s studies of Chinese chairs. 

  • Soap treated oak
    Soap treated oak
  • Soap treated ash
    Soap treated ash
  • Oil treated oak
    Oil treated oak
  • Oil treated ash
    Oil treated ash
  • Oil treated cherry
    Oil treated cherry
  • Clear lacquer oak
    Clear lacquer oak
  • Clear lacquer ash
    Clear lacquer ash
  • Clear lacquer cherry
    Clear lacquer cherry

Available in 8/12 months

PP66 known as The Chinese Chair, signed by Hans J. Wegner for PP Møbler, has a high and comfortable back and full length low armrests that fits well under-neath the table top.The center board is moulded with a bend high enough to offer proper support for the lower back. Wegner presented his first version of The Chinese Chair at the Cabinetmakers’ Guild’s Autumn Exhibition in 1943. He had been inspired by an old Chinese chair that he had carefully studied at the Danish Museum of Industrial Arts. The Chinese Chair became a cornerstone for Wegner in his early line of designs inspired by foreign cultures. Completing at least seven individual prototypes of Chinese inspired chairs, Wegner worked intensely on modernising the traditional concept, and eventually The Chinese Chair evolved into the Round One, also called The Chair. PP66 was designed in 1945 and became the quintessential modern outcome of Wegner’s studies of Chinese chairs. The pp56 version with the upholstered seat for a softer sitting experience was added in 1989.

100% Original

All the products from Miliashop are original and they are covered by warranty.

Length 58 cm
Width 56 cm
Height 79 cm
Seat height 42 cm
Armrest height 67 cm
Designer Hans J. Wegner, 1945