In 1951, Egon Eiermann didn't design a trend. He solved a problem: How does a person sit comfortably for hours without the chair dominating the room? The answer was the SE 68 — and it remains valid to this day.
Minimalism with a Purpose
Every line on the SE 68 is a deliberate decision. The ergonomically curved seat shell made of molded wood. The 18mm tubular steel frame that supports without boasting. The Silent-Block bearing that decouples the backrest and frame, giving the chair its characteristic slight flexibility. Nothing about it is decoration.
Three Finishes — Three Characters
Black is architectural and clear. Beech is warm and natural. Walnut is deep and subtly elegant. The same shape, three completely different statements.
A Chair That Ages Like Fine Wood
Mass-produced furniture loses value over time. The SE 68 gains it. The wood develops character, the patina tells a story. What we restore, we pass on for decades — not as a piece of furniture, but as an attitude.