LITHIC Lounge Chair

Regular price $10,404.00 CAD
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Rooted in ancient craftsmanship and inspired by prehistoric forms, the LITHIC Lounge Chair reimagines the basic chair frame as a soft, exaggerated silhouette.

Echoing the rounded shapes found in ancient cave drawings and the enduring strength of rudimentary joinery, it balances gentle curves with a low, grounded profile.

Crafted from solid oak wood, its carefully machined details invite touch, while the generous cushion adds inviting comfort. From every angle, the LITHIC Chair channels the timeless poetry of Stonehenge and early human creativity—melding history with modern softness.

Explore the full LITHIC collection.

PLEASE NOTE: This item is made-to-order with lead times being approximately 12-16 weeks. Please contact us for shipping quotes and more information.

DIMENSIONS →

28.0" H x 29.0" W x 23.0" D

MATERIALS →

Solid white oak carefully carved in Toronto and finished by hand.

DETAILS →

From Stone to Seat

The LITHIC Chair draws from prehistoric markings and ancient joinery, tracing the earliest gestures of human touch: stone carvings, simple timber joints, and the enduring silhouettes of megalithic forms like Stonehenge. Both functional and symbolic, these early shapes reflect how we first connected through material, inviting reflection on how form holds memory.

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Main Image 1

Photograph of Stonehenge for the National Photographic Record Survey, Godfrey Bingley, 1892. © Victoria and Albert Museum, London.

Main Image 2

JB Blunk by Geoffrey P Fulton

Main Image 3

Petroglyph photographed by Alfred A Monner 1953

Main Image 4

Stonehenge by Rachel Lynette, 2005

Product Image

Material Memory

Inspired by the mortise-and-tenon joints used in Stonehenge, crafted over 4,000 years ago, each LITHIC piece nods to a time when architecture relied on the fit of stone, not the force of metal.

Simple joinery held massive sarsen stones upright, locked together with carved knobs and sockets, no adhesive, no mortar, just intention and weight. Like the cave markings of Lascaux or Chauvet, these structures speak of survival and meaning etched into material.