My debt is to the craftsmen who make our furniture. They are Thos. Moser – not me, them. – Tom Moser

creating the ultimate ‘chairness’

 

Even before founding his own company, Tom Moser had a love for furniture and was drawn to fine antiques. Through a process of discovery and exploration, he learned to scribe dovetails by reading old tool marks on the inside of drawers, to create lasting through tenons by examining ones that had failed, and to understand the unique characteristics of each hardwood species. By studying the mastery of past designs, he developed a deep understanding and appreciation for the inner architecture of the pieces made by craftspeople before him.

a student of history

Studying and refurbishing these antiques of early New England soon gave way to creating his own reproductions. Soon after that, Tom began to achieve an identity and style that was uniquely his own. In 1977, Thos. Moser sold its first Windsor-style chair: the Thos. Moser Continuous Arm Chair. Today, this chair serves as an icon synonymous with the Moser name.

 

 

Photo: early Windsor chairs were traditionally painted green. (CC by 2.0)

PRE-COLONIAL ROOTS & Bringing Back a Classic

The chairs we know as ‘Windsor’ originated in England at the beginning of the 18th century. Often used as outdoor furniture, ‘Windsor’ chairs were traditionally painted green to blend into the landscape. These early Windsor chairs found their way to America, where the design evolved over several decades until the American Windsor chair became its own distinct form. The style is often associated with America’s founding fathers and enjoyed popularity well into the 19th century.  By the 1970s, the Windsor style had fallen out of favor. But Tom saw a timeless grace that transcended style or fad. Taking several years to perfect, the Continuous Arm Chair demonstrates our enduring commitment to functionally driven objects, ornament-free simplicity, and the celebration of traditional materials and woodworking techniques – all with an emphasis on craftsmanship.

 

craft photos of creating the chair arm

The birth of a Moser Icon

Although derived from the traditional Windsor chair, the Continuous Arm Chair offers its own interpretation, including the continuous arm for which it gets its name, the absence of conventional stretchers, and the contrasting ash spindles. To form the continuous arm, eleven knife-cut slices of the same board, just one-tenth of an inch thick, are laminated together and molded into a curve. Then each continuous arm is painstakingly rasped, filed, and sanded to perfect smoothness. The chair legs are free of stretchers, instead gaining strength from curved braces called ship’s knees. These supportive yet elegant braces create the distinct light and airy profile that the Thos. Moser Continuous Arm Chair is famous for.

 

tmc arm detail

 BEAUTIFUL CONTRAST & ULTIMATE ‘CHAIRNESS.’

Ash is used for the legs and spindles because it provides ample strength and comfortable flexibility for the sitter. The contrast of light ash against a cherry or walnut seat base provides a distinctive beauty derived from the marriage of form and function. The Continuous Arm Chair embodies what so many people find endearing in Windsor: the adherence to minimalism principles. There are grace and musicality to the Continuous Arm Chair. There are no heavy lines, boxy cases, or overwrought flourishes – only fluid lines and curves and an economy of material. Nothing is superfluous, and everything exists in a state of balance. Among all Windsor chair variations, we believe the Thos. Moser Continuous Arm Chair epitomizes what Plato termed ultimate ‘chairness’ – an ideal where form and function are inseparable. It is the closest thing to sculpture that we can sit in, yet it is also entirely utilitarian.

 

collage of continuous arm chair

Experiencing the Continuous Arm Chair really requires all the senses. The eye doesn’t so much see the Continuous Arm Chair as dance across it. First, your eyes fall upon it. Then you are drawn to run your hand across the perfect curve of the back. And then you sit, and your body is both enfolded and transported. The elemental smell of the wood, the creak of the chair as it sighs and breathes, the glow of the finish in changing light – the chair casts a spell difficult to resist. And since Tom Moser first introduced the Continuous Arm Chair some four decades ago, it has consistently remained a customer favorite.

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