Our Journey to Make the Bertoia Chair Comfy
Jeremy and I live in an apartment. We also live with
furniture that has historical design significance. We have three Bertoia chairs around our dining table. These chairs are the real deal. These
are not high quality knock offs from IKEA.
We are regular, middle class people. You may wonder how we
came to own these three extremely expensive furnishings. If I were you, I would
wonder about this. I'd be scratching my head about it now.
About 25 years ago, plus or minus, Jeremy and I were working
as freelance still life photographers. One day, someone from Knoll contacted
Jeremy to see if he was available to do a photo shoot for them. They did not
have much of a photography budget to offer, but the client was able to sweeten
the deal. If Jeremy would do the job for a relatively low fee, he'd throw in a
couple thousands dollars of wholesale shopping money from Knoll.
Furniture from Knoll won't pay the rent. Furniture from
Knoll won't pay the electric bill. Furniture from Knoll will not be accepted at
the Health Food store In Park Slope. It could be a challenge at times to pay
for these things.
Jeremy accepted the job anyway. He wasn’t turning away a
more lucrative job to do it because no one else was inquiring at the time. It
was also an artistic project. In the professional photography parlance of the
1990s, it would be good for his portfolio.
A beautiful portfolio that includes photographs of Knoll
items could open a lot of doors. The implication was that this could elevate
one's cache. That would hopefully translate to money that would later be used
to pay the rent and the electric bill, along with food and an occasional dinner
out thrown into the mix.
Jeremy shot the job. We selected the three Bertoia chairs.
We did not select four chairs because that would have exceeded our Knoll
shopping budget. Besides, at the time we had a table that was pushed right up
against a wall in our kitchen. Three chairs looked perfect.
We selected some gorgeous, muted green seat covers from
swatches provided by Knoll. All in all, we were happy with this infusion of
high design.
Fast forward to last week. The mid-century modern table,
circa 1961 that my mother gave me after she re-did her kitchen has been
returned from the re-finishers. It has been beautifully transformed. The
Bertoia chairs look very apropos. Unlike the table pre-refinishing, the chairs
look as new as the day we got them.
The same could not be said for the seat cushions. Three
children, hundreds of meals, approximately 50 birthday parties, crumbs and
spillage happened. Next to the table and the freshly painted walls, the seat
covers looked depressing.
I set out to research my online options. I could buy
authentic seat cushions in red from Hive for $175.00 each. I could buy
authentic seat cushions on EBay or Etsy. I could buy brand new made to order
seat cushions in an array of color options from a guy who makes them but has no
affiliation with Knoll for $99.00 each. I started to lean toward this option.
Then my smart brain reminded me of something. The Bertoia
chairs are exquisite. The Bertoia chairs are valuable. The Bertoia chairs are
historic. The Bertoia chairs are extremely uncomfortable.
The chairs are made of metal. On top of the metal seat is an
incredibly designed, perfectly aesthetic seat cushion. It is artful. But it is
very flimsy. Not in a falling apart kind of way. Lord, knows, it lasted all
this time. It is so beautiful that you almost don't notice that there's almost
nothing between your ass and all that metal.
For the longest time, I thought it was just me.
Unfortunately, I have a bony ass.
But after having a little bit of a family meeting about the
Bertoia seat covers I learned that Jeremy and Hannah also found the chairs
uncomfortable. Noah has always refused to sit in the chairs. However, I didn't
think much about it because for the longest time he didn’t want to sit down in
any chair.
Our consensus was this. We all wanted to be comfortable
sitting at the table. No one wanted to admit we were uncomfortable previously.
But now we were working hard to make our apartment a comfortable place for
everyone. I was not willing to spend $99 dollars or more to preserve the
integrity of the Bertoia chairs. It was time to acknowledge that Harry Bertoia
designed uncomfortable chairs. It was time to acknowledge that we are not
living in a museum.
The next day, Jeremy went with Hannah to IKEA to purchase
some inexpensive knock off mid-century furnishing to match our authentic
mid-century furnishings and other IKEA mid -century knock offs. He took one of
the Bertoia chair set covers with him as a reference in case he found something
good.
As it turns out, he found something very good. The seat cushion is named Malinda.
This seat cushion is the opposite of the one designed to fit the chair.
The Malinda is cushy. It is cozy. It is several inches
thick. That's a lot of cushion between you and the metal. The Malinda is not
just thicker. It's also bigger around. A normally sized individual can sit in
our Bertoia chairs without encountering any sharp, metallic sensations.
There would have been another way to go with seat cushions
that would be comfier while respecting the lines of the chair. I could have
hired someone to custom make us cushions according to both aesthetic and ass
loving specifications. However, for me, this would be less fun than simply
going to IKEA and purchasing the Malinda. And much more expensive. Which brings
us to the next subject.
The Malinda is economical. The price used to be $4.99. Recently, it dropped to $4.49. By openly
admitting that Harry Bertoia designed a terribly uncomfortable chair, we saved
approximately 93.00 per seat cushion. By admitting that I did not want to hire
someone to make us seat cushions, we saved some unknown but not insignificant
amount of money.
The Malinda is machine washable. I washed our Bertoia seat
cushions in the sink. Machine washable is always better. This is a household on
a first name basis with OxyClean. OxyClean is a verb in this household.
Finally, the Malinda is colonial. Not literally colonial. But it has colonial references. Colonial is the
opposite of modernist. I enjoyed putting a colonial inspired cushion on the
modernist furniture. I even like the way the cushion does not follow the lines
of the chair. In a way, it disrespects the lines of the chair. If it followed the
lines of the chair, it would be much less comfortable.
While Jeremy was doing complex IKEA assembly, I busied
myself with the easier IKEA related tasks. I took duvets from space bag type
wrappings and installed duvet covers. I installed the new chair pads. I sat
down in a Bertoia chair, declared it extremely comfortable, and watched my day-to-day
life improve.
We selected a 4th dining chair from IKEA. It doesn't match
the Bertoia chairs, but it works nicely as a grouping. Jeremy did not buy a
seat cover for it. IKEA does not have anything available that would fit.
I thought about the idea of getting an authentic modernist
seat cushion to fit the new chair. The new chair is made of smooth wood and is
not nearly as uncomfortable as the Bertoia chair with the modernist seat
cushion. In the end, $99.00 is too big a chunk of change to spend on a $39.00
chair, even if it is called Vilmar.
Back to the drawing board for me. I'll find something. I
always do.
Our newly comfortable Bertoia chair.