![]() ![]() This was a commercial furniture and display company located on San Pedro Street near downtown Los Angeles. All of the Disney animation furniture was built by the Petersen Show Case & Fixture Co., Inc. The cigarette protector was a two-and-half-inch wide strip of stainless steel that had a quarter-inch lip on it that was screwed to the desk on either side of the drawing board for the regular animation desk and on the right side for the modified or compact animator’s desk.ħ.Ĝontrary to popular belief, the Weber designed animation furniture for Disney was not built on the Studio lot. This was frequent enough that a “Cigarette Protector” was added to the Weber animation desks at the new Burbank studio to prevent burns to the furniture surface. But, sometimes the cigarette burned the top of the desk. In between drawings, they’d pick up the cigarette to take a drag off it and put it back on the edge of the desk or in an ashtray. At the Hyperion Studio, artists frequently would lay a lit cigarette on the edge of their desk as they drew and flipped their animation, which required two hands. It was common for employees to smoke at the office and more than fifty-percent of the U.S. The Studio still has about 125 left, the other 75 may have “walked away” over the years.Ħ. In all, only about 300 of these chairs were ever made. But, when he got the Disney Studio project, Weber was able to convince Walt Disney to purchase 200 of these chairs for his new studio complex. By 1935, Weber had perfected his design but it was the depth of the Great Depression and he could not get traction on selling these chairs to the masses. ![]() He wanted an affordable modern chair that could be carried home in a box and assembled by the consumer in minutes. Weber first started experimenting with the Airline Chair with a 1929 prototype. Some even felt that the patinaed desks emitted an aura of those who had previously occupied the furniture.ĥ. The Weber animation desks took on an almost mythic status with newer artists laying claim to desks that had belonged to Disney animation legends. This was an ingenious way of allowing the artists to customize their desks and it was ahead of its time in terms of modular furniture construction. The Weber animation desks were built in a modular design in which there were several different upper and lower units that could be mixed and matched. Today, of course, there are likely no artists that are keeping liquor in their desk for fear of a visit to the HR representative.Ĥ. Certainly, this came in handy for imbibing in the afternoon, which was socially acceptable at work during that time period. Note the bottle ring in the empty space where the deep draw should be on the lower right of the desk above. But, as studio legend has it, the drawer is the perfect height for a fifth of liquor standing in the drawer when closed. ![]() 14, 19, 1B, 2 and 2A were designed for deep storage. The deep drawers in the lower half of the desks, UNITS No. But, as societal norms have changed such frivolity has been curbed and in some cases frowned upon.ģ. Whether this was by design or a happy accident doesn’t matter as many a beer bottle was opened using them. The metal drawer pulls on the Disney animation furniture are perfect bottle openers. Pictured above is an early concept of the animation desk by Kem Weber. A prototype of the Weber animation desk was built and Thomas animated on it to help work out and refine the design before the desks were mass produced. While the Studio was in production on Pinocchio, Walt asked Kem Weber to work with Frank Thomas, one of his top animators, on designing an efficient animation desk. So, unless you worked at Disney Animation, here is my list of 7 Things That You Didn’t Know About the Disney Animation Furniture:ġ. Just like the pencils and brushes, the tools of the trade, his artists used to create the those animated masterpieces, the desks were in essence the toolboxes of the trade. From the outset, most are unaware that Walt Disney had the most optimal animation furniture designed for use at the new studio he was building in 1939. These are bits of information that, unless you spent years working on this furniture, you likely didn’t know anything about. During the course of researching and writing Kem Weber: Mid-Century Furniture Designs for the Disney Studios, I jotted down some interesting facts about the Disney Animation furniture. ![]()
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