This McIntosh sideboard was designed by Tom Robertson in Scotland for the Dunvegan collection, the most iconic collection of the designer.
The sideboard has a central two doors cupboard with a shaped tray to include taller items in our store, another cupboard on the right-hand side with a pull-out tray finished in melamine to permit lean drinks on it, and on the other extreme a bank with three drawers, the first drawer line-up for cutlery.
Burchaart Nielsen, a renowned Danish designer, created this beautiful sideboard, which was crafted by Dyrlund in Denmark during the 1960s. Renowned for its exceptional craftsmanship, Dyrlund has executed this sleek piece to the highest standards, this time using smaller dimension to manufacture a compact piece using a solid frame throughout and in vibrant colour teakwood grain. Unlike other long sideboards, this one boasts smaller dimensions, making it not only a unique piece but also perfect for various spaces. It features two cupboards with sliding doors and a bank of drawers in the centre, providing ample storage space.
Take advantage of the opportunity to own this one-of-a-kind piece of furniture.
Tom Robertson, the innovative mind behind A.H. McIntosh’s mid-century designs, crafted this sideboard in the early ’70s, in Scotland. A departure from the norm, Robertson replaced traditional hinged doors with sleek sliding doors, a design choice often seen in Danish or Scandinavian furniture.
Introducing a new level of convenience, the renowned pull-out tray covered in melamine, a signature creation of Robertson for his sideboards, is now easily accessible from the outside. No more need to open any door to reach the tray, a thoughtful design element that enhances the practicality of this sideboard.
The storage case has three drawers on the left and two sliding doors on the right, which enclose the shelving units.
The beautiful teakwood grain, a testament to the craftsmanship of this creation, adds a touch of versatility. This sideboard seamlessly adds to any contemporary interior, adapting effortlessly to various design styles.
This sideboard is a handcrafted piece from the 1960s, designed by Philip Hussey and made by the renowned cabinet maker White and Newton in Portsmouth, England. Hussey created this piece for the Peterfields Collection, featuring light teakwood, curved lines on the top and a flat front with minimalist built-in handles. This sideboard’s elegant and timeless design showcases Hussey’s mastery of his craft and the exceptional quality of White and Newton’s workmanship.
Philip is one of the unsung heroes of British furniture design who deserves to be far better known! As a young man of 24, he was appointed to replace Arthur Edwards as head designer of White and Newton in 1964. They were then a successful medium-sized maker of contemporary furniture, which was a little conservative in style. In the late 1960s, he pushed some boundaries, particularly in some of his sideboard designs, which moved White and Newton into a much more modern, stylish, minimalist direction. Some of these designs were very popular and came up for sale quite frequently, while others were too ahead of their time and are unfortunately rarely seen today. When they do appear, they’re now recognised as design classics.
We have one in stock pending restoration (photos belongs the last one we had)
This sideboard is a unusual model very rare to come across in the market. Tom Robertson the head of design of A.H. McIntosh created this model with more organic shape, solid sinuosity teak handles. The solid structure hold this long sideboard with three drawers at the left and a pair of twin cupboards on its right.
Tom Robertson designed this sideboard for its collection Dunfermline in Scotland for the high-end cabinet maker A.H. McIntosh. The sideboard, handcrafted in stunning rosewood, has all its original features. This sideboard belongs to one of its finest collections. It comes with beautiful solid handles in organic shapes. It wasn’t handcrafted with a stunning rosewood. With three drawers on the left, the first one linen up for the cutlery, two doors enclosing additional compartments in the centre divided with a curved shelf, and a cocktail cupboard on the right with a pull-down door containing a pull-out tray covered in black melamine. Professionals have wholly restored the sideboard, and it is in stunning condition; check and zoom the photos to appreciate all in detail. These three modules give us plenty of storage for our room.
Measurements
L.213 cm
W. 45 cm
H. 75 cm
The sideboard is wholly restored and looks in excellent condition with all its original features and a stunning top rosewood grain.
Tom Robertson designed this sideboard for its collection Dunfermline in Scotland for the high-end cabinet maker A.H. McIntosh. The sideboard, handcrafted in stunning rosewood, has all its original features. This sideboard belongs to one of its finest collections. It comes with beautiful solid handles in organic shapes. It wasn’t handcrafted with a stunning rosewood. With three drawers on the left, the first one linen up for the cutlery, two doors enclosing additional compartments in the centre divided with a curved shelf, and a cocktail cupboard on the right with a pull-down door containing a pull-out tray covered in black melamine. Professionals have wholly restored the sideboard, and it is in stunning condition; check and zoom the photos to appreciate all in detail. These three modules give us plenty of storage for our room.
Measurements
L.213 cm
W. 45 cm
H. 75 cm
The sideboard is wholly restored and looks in excellent condit. for its age. However, it came with a large black stain on top, which the restorer removed as much as he could, but a light, dark, stubborn shade remains on the top, disguisged with the grain. Zoom then photos, please.
Designed by Tom Robertson for A.H McIntosh and Co., it was made in the 1960s in Scotland.
This Mid-Century piece stands out for its balanced design, designed to create symmetry.
This sideboard has a large storage capacity, with four central drawers, the first adapted for cutlery. In addition, it has closets with two doors on each side; one with a removable tray covered in melamine to prepare your drinks without damaging the wood.
The teak wood used to create this piece is extremely beautiful with an incredible grain (please zoom in on the photos to appreciate the beauty of the shaped grain teak).
Tom Robertson designed dunvegan sideboard in teak wood for A.H. McIntosh in Scotland in the 1970s.
Tom Robertson updated this model in the early ’70s, belongs to its Dunvegan collection, and has been modified with long legs instead of the metal regulator to give it a more elegant look. This sideboard is divided into three modules:
A central cabinet that encloses a sinuous-shaped tray that allows us to store objects of different heights.
On the left, we find three drawers, the first one linen for cutlery.
To the right is a bar cabinet that surprises us with an extendable tray finished in melamine to support drinks.
Tom Robertson designed this beautiful sideboard in Scotland in the early ‘70s for the well-known cabinet maker A.H. McIntosh.
The sideboard has two sections: one bank of three drawers, the top one lined up for the cutlery, and on its right, a cabinet enclosed by two plain doors. The long curved handles and the beautiful teakwood make this sideboard unusual. It is featured being the narrowest sideboard of A.H. McIntosh
Measurements.
Length: 200 cm
Width:. 40 cm
Height: 76 cm
[McIntosh sideboard was designed by Tom Robertson in Scotland for the Dunvegan collection, the most iconic collection of the designer.
The sideboard has a central two doors cupboard with a shaped tray to include taller items in our store, another cupboard on the right-hand side with a pull-out tray finished in melamine to permit lean drinks on it, and on the other extreme a bank with three drawers, the first drawer line-up for cutlery.
Dimension 201×45 H75cm
Aparador de la marca McIntosh, diseñador por Ton Robertson para su afamada colección Dunvegan.
Mid-Century sideboard created by TomRobertson and manufactured by McIntosh in teak wood in the 60s in Scotland. This piece belongs to the Sunburst Collection.
This sideboard reveals the experience and success of Tom Robertson as a designer. He enhanced the beauty of the sideboard adding the marquetry design of a sunburst to the cupboard’s doors what it makes this pieces an awesome furniture.
The sideboard is beautifully handcrafted with a vibrant teak. Design and material minutely crafted to reveal an endless sideboard created to survive tendencies and mark influence.
Arthur Edwards designed this stunning Rosewood sideboard for the high-end cabinet maker White and Newton in Portsmouth (England) in the ’60s.
The sideboard is an unusual piece to come across in the market. A professional restorer has entirely restored it, conserving all its original features, with a refined design, no handles and this gorgeous wavy shape in solid teakwood for the drawers that hide the handles. The rosewood features the sideboard used for its cabinet doors, making this sideboard a stunning piece of furniture.
This long chest of drawers comes from a grocery shop in Germany, it was used as the countertop.
The chest is made of a beautiful solid pine, with a beautiful patina and all its original features, the drawers conserve some of its labels showing us what they were used for used they had, About the handles only one came replaced in the unit and we haven’t changed to appreciate the difference with the others.
Axel Christiansen designed this long sideboard for ACO in Denmark in the ‘60s.
The features of this sideboard are the solid frame teakwood, its solid round legs with a beautiful ring where the sideboard body meets the legs, vibrant teakwood grain give a powerful presence, its sliding doors, and organic long handles make this piece a stunning furniture. It gives us also plenty of room with a bank of drawers.
Henry Walter Klein designed this beautiful piece in the ’60s in Denmark for the well-known high-quality cabinet maker Bramin.
The sideboard has a balance designed with a bank of drawers in the middle and two sliding doors enclosing shelves. The top drawer is lined up to store the cutlery. The beauty of the sideboard is for many reasons, mainly the vibrant colour of its teakwood grain with contrast in its highlights. One of the features of this sideboards are the built in handles and the beauty of its joints.
Tom Robertson designed this sideboard in the early ’70s for the well-known brand A.H. McIntosh in Scotland. This time, Tom Robertson made a taller sideboard—this beautiful cabinet with four cupboards and two teakwood drawers. The sideboard has four enclosed cupboards for hinged doors and two drawers; one lined up for the cutlery.
Impressive sideboard designed by Lodovico Acerbis, a quintessential line of seemingly suspended furniture is bathed in illumination by its clever back-lighting system.
The light, diffused through a strip of matte methacrylate in the rear, interior, and base of the sideboard, offers an optical effect of weightlessness, heightened by the semi-transparency of the matte methacrylate base of the cabinet.
Sideboard by René Bouchara for Roche Bobbois. number 92/400
Born in Paris and educated in New York, René Bouchara imagined a sideboard which evoked images of the grace of a butterfly and at the same time the elegance of a sports car. The glossy lacquer highlights the lines both fluid and racy of this limited-edition piece.
PRODUCT DETAIL
Structure in Daquacryl® (3 mm-thick high gloss PMMA veneer on engineered composite wood, several colours available), with 2 lifting thermo-formed doors. Base in lacquered plywood, col. grey. Shelf in 8 mm-thick clear glass.
Model limited to 400 copies, numbered and signed by the designer.
Designed by Tom Robertson for A.H McIntosh and Co., it was made in the 1960s in Scotland.
This Mid-Century piece stands out for its balanced design, designed to create symmetry.
This sideboard has a large storage capacity, with four central drawers, the first of which is adapted for cutlery. In addition, it has closets with two doors on each side; one with a removable tray covered in melamine to be able to prepare your drinks without damaging the wood.
The teak wood used to create this piece is extremely beautiful with an incredible grain (please zoom in on the photos to appreciate the beauty of the shaped grain teak).
English sideboard from the 60s made of walnut with black bakelite handles.
It is divided into 3 modules: a lower one with two sliding doors, an upper right module with drawers, and an upper left module with a hinged door.
Its dimensions make it perfect both for large spaces, where you want to focus attention on a Mid-Century piece, and for smaller interiors, where, in addition to exploiting its stylistic potential, it provides a large storage space.
Original and unusualDanish sideboard designed by Niels Koefoed for Hornslet, made of teak wood that incorporates a food hotplate warmer in its central part.
Being this last detail what makes this piece unique and truly difficult to find nowadays. The beauty of the hotplate is featured by the monochrome print of the Copenhagen harbor in the XVII century.
The hotplate section has a hinged top which is operated by opening the top drawer.
It consists of three modules, a central one with 4 large-capacity drawers and two side modules closed by sliding doors.
This sideboard presents the straight lines typical of Danish furniture, something that brings stability and elegance to the design, making this piece valid for both a home and a workspace.
Mid-Century sideboard from GPlan, designed by Victor Wilkins for his Fresco Collection in the 1960s.
The sideboard is made up of a 4-drawer module in the center, on the right a bar cabinet and on the right a two-door cabinet. Manufactured in teak and afromorsia with a great finish.
G Plan is a British furniture brand. It began as a pioneering range of furniture in the United Kingdom produced by E Gomme Ltd of High Wycombe.
Teak sideboard by GPlan from the Brasilia collection designed by Victor B Wilkins around the 1960s in High Wycombe, UK.
Victor B Wilkins was the designer of the G-Plan brand, being recognized for two of his great collections, Fresco and Brasília. Both collections retained the great influence that Ib Kofod Larsen had exerted on Victor Wilkins.
This sideboard belongs to the Brasília collection and retains a stylized design, with minimalist lines. The curved handles add an organic touch to the sideboard. This sideboard is made up of a central module made up of 4 drawers, a bar cabinet on the right and a two-door cabinet on the left.
G-plan, under E Gomme, hired famed Danish designer K. Larsen to relaunch the brand with his Scandinavian-influenced creations.
G Plan is a furniture brand that is recognized for the high level of finishing detail and the great construction quality of its products.
Mid-Century Danish high sideboard with minimalist and straight lines, typical of Scandinavian design.
As a characteristic of this design, it is worth noting the break in the straight line with its handles, a detail that gives this sideboard movement.
Made with the mastery typical of Danish furniture, the sideboard is finished with great detail. Its presence is increased thanks to the color and a vein of great beauty.
Aparador alto manufacturado con un gran acabado por artesanos Daneses en Palosanto brasileño en los Años 60.
De línea minimalista, con cuatro puertas correderas, las dos puertas centrales esconden su bello bar, los tiradores embutidos ayudan a que nada nos distraiga de la belleza de su madera.
Se distingue de otros aparadores por las imponentes agua de la veta de su Palosanto Brasileño. Sus interiores en limoncillo y espejo para la parte central donde alberga la zona de bar. Sus dos armarios laterales cuentas con baldas que se pueden regular en altura. Y en la parte baja encontramos tres cajones para ayudarnos a mantener muy organizado nuestro espacio interior.
This English teak sideboard brings us the successful duo of JohnHerbert as designer and A Younger Ltd as manufacturer.
The sideboard belongs to the well-known Sequence collection.
Made to be admired by the buyer, this sideboard will last at least another 50 years. Its dark African solid wood frame along with solid handles create a contrast to the walnut wood used for the drawers and cabinet giving it a stunning look.
A Younger Ltd was a high-quality British furniture manufacturer that led style and contemporary taste in the 50s, 60s, and 70s. Younger furniture was low volume, well made, and aimed at the top end of the market. Younger was amongst the first firms to make Scandinavian-style furniture in the fifties. A lot of its success was due to its award-winning designer, John Herbert. The A Younger label is often discretely located on the back of a drawer, as its designs were often retailed by small, up-market furniture shops who didn’t like makers to identify their pieces.
Its symmetry gives the sideboard an elegant look with beautiful solid organic handles.
Mid-Century sideboard in teak designed by renowned designer Johannes Andersen, one of the most active mid-century designers in Denmark.
The sideboard design is featured by symmetry, with a bank of 4 drawers n the center and two cupboards enclosed by sliding doors on each side. All were designed and handcrafted with the mastery of the Danish cabinetmakers of the time.
Johannes Andersen designed this sideboard in Denmark in the Mid-Century, being one of the most active designers from 1950 to 1970.
Andersen worked steadily for his own firm—as well as Swedish, Danish, and Norwegian companies such as Trensum, CFC Silkeborg, Bramin, and Uldum Møbelfabrik—until he closed his shop in his eighties. He passed away in 1991.
John Herbert designed this sideboard in the United Kingdom in the 1960s for the A Younger brand.
This sideboard belongs to the Sequence collection, where the artistic maturity of J Herbert and the influence of the design of the Scandinavian school, so necessary in the 60s, is noticeable.
This piece of furniture consists of two modules, one with four drawers and the other with two doors.
Built with teak and afrormosia, it has a structural frame, legs and handles in solid teak.
Mid-Century teak sideboard designed in the ’60s in Denmark. The cupboard contains all the features of the Danish designs with long handles and lively forms.
The sideboard is shorter than other models we have in stock, and it is an exciting piece of furniture as a tv stand.
Mid-Century teak sideboard designed by White and Newton for McIntosh in the 1960s.
A strong linear form defines the elegant furniture produced by the British manufacturer White and Newton. Under the design direction of the talented Arthur Edwards, the firm produced impressive high-end furniture that is often defined by its clean, modern lines as well as its austere linear form.
Fascinating creation of Tom Robertson, the Scottish firm A.H. McIntosh manufactured in the early ’70s under the name Eden.
The structure is in high-quality laminated teak wood.
The front features three drawers (the upper one with compartments for cutlery) and a double door that reveals two replicated individual modules (except for the fixed shelf, which has a different depth).
Finally, it is worth highlighting the stylised shapes of its handles and the frame of turned legs, joined by a thin crossbar, which raises the structure and cherries to give an outstanding score to this captivating design.
This sideboard brings us the successful duo of John Herbert as designer and A Younger Ltd as manufacturer.
The sideboard belongs to the well-known Sequence Collection.
Made to be admired by the buyer, this sideboard will last at least another 50 years. Its dark African solid wood frame along with solid handles create a contrast to the walnut wood used for the drawers and cabinet giving it a stunning look.
Its symmetry gives the sideboard an elegant look with beautiful solid organic handles.
McIntosh sideboard was designed by Tom Robertson in Scotland for the Dunfermline collection, the most iconic collection of the designer. The sideboard has a beautiful rosewood grain with vibrant Colors the sideboard has central two doors cupboard with a shaped tray to include tall items in our store, another cupboard on the right-hand side with a pull-out tray finished in melamine to permit lean drinks on it, and on the other extreme a bank with three drawers, the first drawer line-up for cutlery.
Dimension 213×45 H75cm
This sideboard designed by Tom Robertson for A.H. McIntosh in Scotland in the late 60’s.
The sideboard has a symmetric designed, with a bank of drawers in the middle and two cupboards on each side. The right hand cupboard side has a pull-out tray to shape the cocktail storage. Top of the drawers with a cutlery tray.
Professionally restored, all the structure is sturdy and tight.
All teakwood sanded, re-polished and finished with a Danish oil.
213×45 Height 75cm
Condition report:
Professionally restored, all the structure is sturdy and tight.
All teakwood sanded, re-polished and finished with a Danish oil.
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