Better known for their iconic lounge chairs, the mid-century designers Charles and Ray Eames spent a good portion of the post-war period applying their revolutionizing plywood-modeling process to radio housings. Dubbed "Design's Best-Kept Secret" by the Wall Street Journal, an estimated 200,000 of these radios were manufactured at the time and are now enjoying an afterlife on the auction circuit as a more affordable way of owning one of the couples masterful designs.
One of these radios, however, considered too modern looking for the time, never saw production. That is now changing thanks to Vitra; the Swiss furniture company that owns the license to many of the Eames's work has decided to revive this compact radio. Limited to just 999 units, the reissued radio comes encased in a walnut cabinet and equipped with up-to-date technology by the British manufacturer REVO. Priced at $999, the radio does not come cheap, especially when considered as tribute to designers who ran by an ethos of "the best for the most for the least."
2 Comments
Somehow loses all its appeal when there is a digital display (and all those buttons), I think/hope the Eameses would have come up with a different design when confronted with this brief and current possibilities.
I agree totally. The frequency band is an essential part of the original. Getting away from digital is an important part of what this is supposed to be about.
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