Login

Your Name:(required)

Your Password:(required)

Join Us

Your Name:(required)

Your Email:(required)

Your Message :

0/2000

Your Position: Home - Furniture - A Guide To Choosing The Best Bar Stool For Your ...

A Guide To Choosing The Best Bar Stool For Your ...

A Guide To Choosing The Best Bar Stool For Your ...

Choosing a bar stool for your venue can’t be all that hard. After all, one bar stool is the same as the next right? The reality is that it isn’t as simple as it seems, and there are several key factors you’ll need to take into consideration. For example does it need to swivel? What height do you need it to be? What type of material do you want it to be? Do you want one with a footrest or not? Suddenly it all seems a bit complex and daunting.

For more Tolix Stool with Backinformation, please contact us. We will provide professional answers.

For this reason we’ve put together this easy to follow guide to help you make your purchasing decision. So let’s get going!

Bar stool height

The first thing to remember is that bar stools vary in height, so here’s what you need to know. Stool heights are always measured from the floor to the seat only and NOT from the floor to the backrest. The good news for you is that Australia has standard heights for commercial bar counters which is 105cms. Therefore the ideal measurement for a bar stool that should suit most customers is 75cms. Alternatively if you’re looking for low bar stools to match a dining table height, then 45cm stools are ideal for this purpose.

What about spacing?

In an ideal world you’d have sufficient bar stools along the length of the bar to maximise your floor space, but at the same time it won’t feel overcrowded for anyone sitting at the bar. In this case you should be looking at a 60cm gap between each stool. This allows plenty of room for customers to come and go from their seats without disturbing other guests.

Say it with style

Although bar stools come in an infinite number of styles and designs they can be broken down into 6 different categories. These include:

Contemporary – This includes chrome, or polycarbonate seating with sleek smooth shapes. Contemporary bar stools include slick geometric patterning and strong lines with bold splashes of colour and would suit a modernist feel.

Iconic – Bar stools like the Tolix and Bentwood stools have been around for years and are just as popular today as they were when they were first produced. Authentic versions can be pricey but great reproductions give a classic look but without the price tag.

Functional – Bar stools such as the gaming stool focusses more on functionality rather than fancy design and slick lines. It’s designed to be comfortable and encourages customers to sit longer.

Industrial – The Industrial look is incredibly popular and as such industrial style bar stools are plentiful. Look for rustic timber and powder coated metal framing, Stools like the Detroit adjustable stool epitomise this look perfectly

Classic/Rustic – classic styling usually consists of darker timber framed bar stools such as the cross-back Bentwood stool. They aren’t normally designed to swivel but can make a great impact if you choose an elegant rustic theme.

Outdoor – As the name suggests outdoor furniture is designed to be used on a terrace or pavement area. It’s usually treated and weatherproofed so it won’t warp, rust, or fade and is designed to be hard-wearing.

What about features?

There are several features that bar stools have. Firstly the swivel feature. This is ideal for bar counter tops and gaming areas but not necessarily for dining tables. The second feature is an adjustable height. Gas lift stools tend to fair better but make sure you opt for a quality component as cheaper varieties might not stand up to the rigours of a busy cafe, bar, or restaurant

Finally…

Make sure it’s commercial grade

Any bar stools you purchase should always be commercial grade. This is because they’ve been made specifically for use in busy establishments and therefore are more able to handle wear and tear.

So there you have it, everything you need to know about choosing the right bar stool for your venue!

If you’re ready to make the choice then why not pay a visit to Cafe Chairs Sydney. As well as our website where you’ll find a large variety of commercial grade bar stools and cafe seating, we also have a showroom located in the Wetherill Park area of the City. Why not give us a call on 02 8379 7737 for further assistance.

Contact us to discuss your requirements of How to Polish Plastic Chairs. Our experienced sales team can help you identify the options that best suit your needs.

About a year ago I was scouring the Internet in ...

About a year ago I was scouring the Internet in search of bar stools for my kitchen. I had two primary criteria: I wanted something with a retro look in a bright color. On overstock.com, up popped a pair of stools that immediately appealed to me. Labeled “Tabouret 24-inch Tangerine Metal Counter Stools,” they had clean lines, foot rests, legs that protruded at a slight angle, and a seat with a three-inch rectangular cut-out in the center. A set of two cost $89. I bought four, they looked fabulous at my kitchen’s island, and I basically forgot about them.

Then I started seeing them at just about every stylish Seattle restaurant or bar—not in the orange I chose, but in black or gunmetal gray. Stoneburner, Tray Kitchen, Manolin, Delancey, Il Corvo, Bitterroot, Pizzeria Gabbiano: The list goes on and on. Why the sudden proliferation of this particular counter stool—and where did it come from?

A call to Atelier Drome, a local architecture firm that designs many top restaurants in town, confirmed that I wasn’t crazy. They too had been seeing the stools a lot lately. Why? “Honestly, because they’re durable,” says Michelle Linden, principal architect at the firm. She also attributes their ubiquity to “all these design magazines that, instead of making things more unique, actually result in them becoming more common. At least three or four restaurateurs have showed me their ‘inspiration’ photo, and it’s exactly the same—something Swedish-looking.” But the chairs, she told me, are in fact based on a French design from 1934: the Marais line of chairs by Tolix, including the omnipresent Marais Counter Stool.

Tolix is still around, and authentic chairs are available through Design Within Reach. When I call the company’s Seattle outpost, staffer Theresa Crim tells me that DWR has been the “exclusive U.S. retailers” of genuine Tolix chairs for a year now (though you can still get them from a handful of smaller retailers, like Sundance, as in Robert Redford’s company). DWR works directly with Tolix, a company of only 70 employees that still makes the stools at their factory in Burgundy. (You can get the authentic stools in custom colors and even with a shimmer, starting at $305.)

Designer Xavier Pauchard’s stool became synonymous with Paris cafe culture in the ’30s. The original chair line was made in gunmetal gray—after the war, it is rumored, from the massive amount of scrap metal left over, Crim says. And those rectangular holes in the seats are more than just a design whim—or, as I thought, an easy way to pick the stool up: They allow water to drain off, since the stools were often used at outdoor cafes.

The stools are of course stackable and very durable. “You can really throw it around and they don’t look bad,” says Crim. Linden agrees, citing that metal works a lot better in restaurants because wood breaks easily. “Aside from a custom steel chair, there’s not a ton of options.”

“They also have that shabby-chic French thing, but with a refined element to them as well,” says Crim—refined and rugged enough to find a home even on the decks of the SS Normandie, the transatlantic ocean liner built in 1935 and known for its lavish Art Deco interiors. The chairs may have found more fans in 2011 when British lingerie company Agent Provocateur ran an ad campaign featuring an erotically clad model posed in a Tolix Marais chair. The chairs’ artful appeal goes beyond ad execs, though; a few can be found in collections at New York’s Museum of Modern Art and Paris’ Centre Pompidou.

But at $305 a pop and a need for dozens of them, it would be a stretch for most restaurants to carry the real McCoy—especially when imitations like the ones I own are all over the web and, according to many restaurant designers, hold up well. Stoneburner designer Deming Maclise says, “The look of the Tolix barstools are great because they can work in a lot of different design settings. They are very chameleon-like in that way. They can offer a bit of an industrial look without driving the design. I like using the copies, though, because you can get a very similar look at a fraction of the price.”

That unsurprising reasoning is also what drove Mike Easton to buy knockoffs four years ago for Il Corvo, and now for Pizzeria Gabbiano (in orange!). Where did he stumble on them? At Seattle’s Diller Room, where owner Rob Wilson says he first saw the famous stools in Australia. He had a client there, “a really cool, eccentric French guy,” who would bring all kinds of interesting stuff back from France, among them these stools “in a beautiful navy blue.” He kept them in mind and found the cheaper counterparts on overstock.com, as I did, in 2009, and had seat pads custom-made for them for extra comfort. “They’re very sturdy and the design is superior,” Wilson says. “Recently we thought about doing something else [for a room they were updating]. We briefly discussed changing all the bar stools, and then said, ‘No, that’s the one.’ ”

Googling “Tolix chairs” brings up a list of inspired versions (mostly made in China) from a slew of companies, identified often as “Tolix-style,” or in one listing as “Talix.” (It’s not authentic if it doesn’t have the trademark sign.) The critical difference between a Tolix and these replicas, according to Design Within Reach’s corporate PR representative, Kimberly Phillips, is the weld. On a Tolix, “everything that holds the chair together is welded”—the foot rest to the legs, say, or the base to the seat—with signature brass solder rather than lower cost spot welding. There’s no screws holding it together, as is the case with my Tabouret stools at home, bur rather traditional rivets.

To understand how else they differ, you need to know a bit about steel. While most of the replicas cite “100 percent steel” or “Metal Steel,” a closer look at the product information will often identify it as “cold rolled steel,” the most common and affordable type—which can rust over time. By contrast, Tolix chairs are galvanized sheet steel, meaning they’ve been coated with zinc to add rust and corrosion resistance. The company refers to the steel as “automotive,” which is extremely high-strength and allows for greater pliability. There’s also a difference in finish. For the gunmetal-gray chairs, for instance, Tolix employ a labor-intensive buffing process directly to the raw steel, while fakes tend to use gray paint to try and ape the buffed steel finish.

Crim says she knows of only one restaurant in town with authentic Tolix: Oddfellows. So go check for yourself: Just look for an embossed “Tolix” logo on it (it was started for the 2006 models, with “made in France” added in 2011). Given owner Linda Derschang’s penchant for bohemian style and her reputation as a tastemaker in Capitol Hill’s nightlife scene, I wasn’t surprised. A call to Oddfellows confirmed that they indeed have the real deal, in gunmetal gray.

Derschang saw them at a lot of cafes in France about a year after the restaurant opened, in 2010. She says she decided to buy them for her rustic-yet-chic cafe and bar because “it’s hard to find something that’s both stylish and comfortable.” She, however, has the Marais “A” chair, with a back. Why did she splurge on the authentic? She “loves mixing high-end and low-end together, and so we were either going to buy high-quality new Tolix chairs or look for some vintage ones rather than buying knockoffs.” She also adds that at the time, Tolix chairs were not as popular as they are now, so imitations were not as common. (She bought hers from Sundance for $295 each. They’ve replaced about half of them over the past five years.)

I couldn’t stop thinking, however, that I’d seen the originals elsewhere in Seattle. After running through my recent dining list, it finally occurred to me: Bottlehouse. Sure enough, the Madrona spot does have black and gray stools with the Tolix stamp. Owner Henri Schock, whose wife Soni does interior design for some restaurateurs, including Derschang and Maria Hines, says she bought vintage ones and refabricated them (they were beat-up to the point that customers didn’t want to sit on them). However, despite their telltale logo, the reseller she bought them from couldn’t verify that they were in fact authentic.

So was Derschang the first restaurant owner to have the stools (genuine or otherwise) in Seattle? Possibly, but maybe not. Delancey also has the real stools, as confirmed by owner Brandon Pettit, which they bought for their 2009 opening. But wait. A conversation with a friend led me finally to Susan Kaufman, owner of Serafina and Cicchetti. Sure enough, she bought the gunmetal-gray Tolix counter stools from British retailer Terence Conran in 2008 for Cicchetti—after seeing them in France and at New York restaurant Public—two years before Derschang bought her authentics and one year before Delancey opened. Because she sourced them from Europe, she said she paid “thousands,” mostly due to shipping costs. She has not had to replace a single one, however.

And so the mystery of the stool has seemingly been solved, at least here in Seattle. How much longer will the trend continue? It’s hard to say, but based on their durability and aesthetic appeal—and the low cost of imitations—I’m betting our butts will be sitting on them for the foreseeable future.

nsprinkle@seattleweekly.com

Top: an original Tolix Marais stool at Cicchetti. Bottom left: Oddfellows’ authentic Tolix Marais “A” chairs. Bottom right: Pizzeria Gabbiano’s knock-offs in red.

If you want to learn more, please visit our website China Plastic Table.

56

0

Comments

0/2000

All Comments (0)

Guest Posts

If you are interested in sending in a Guest Blogger Submission,welcome to write for us!

Your Name (required)

Your Email (required)

Subject

Your Message (required)

0/2000