House of Finn Juhl
Finn Juhl Nyhavn Desk, Oiled Oak Edges & Toes, Black Linoleum Tabletop, Black-Painted Steel Base - 54" x 27" - SHOWROOM SAMPLE
- Specifications
- Description
- The Designer
- The Maker
- Brand: House of Finn Juhl of Denmark
- Country: Made in Denmark
- SKU: HFJ-5369-COBBW-FJ-OH
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Material:
- Tabletop: Black Linoleum with Solid Oak Edging
- Base: Black-Painted Steel with Solid Oak Toes
- Care: Care instructions included
- Designer: Finn Juhl
- Dimensions: (LxWxH) 53.5" x 26.7" x 28.5"
During his career, Finn Juhl designed a series of different tables with almost invisible legs in burnished or painted steel with wooden toes. In this way, he introduced an almost floating lightness into his designs.
When Finn Juhl established his first studio at the exclusive address of 33 Nyhavn in central Copenhagen in 1945, he designed a very simple desk with burnished steel legs, a detail which came to shape his furniture design during the 1950s. When Finn Juhl moved his studio to 38 Sølvgade in 1957, these same tables were still used.

Juhl was trained as an all-round building architect, not—as he emphasized—especially as a furniture designer. On several occasions, he pointed out that as a furniture designer, he was purely self-taught.
His early chairs were produced in small batches, eighty at most, because they were created for Guild shows where the work of the artisan was emphasized over the burgeoning industry of mass production. However, they were almost all reissued later in his career.
In 1951 he designed the Trusteeship Council Chamber in the United Nations Headquarters in New York as a gift from Denmark to the UN.
A stability of construction harmonized with a unique expression of form distinguishes his works. His fondness for teak as a material led him to develop new and superior techniques for its use, and he is responsible for the present popularity of teak in Danish furniture.
Finn Juhl had a great influence on the following generation of Scandinavian architects with his use of bold sculptural forms and ultra-refined detailing. Juhl once said: "One cannot create happiness with beautiful objects, but one can ruin quite a lot of happiness with bad ones."

By the time of his passing in 1989, Finn Juhl had become an award winning and highly appreciated furniture designer on the international design stage. To this day, Finn Juhl's sculptural pieces of furniture are celebrated worldwide and he is credited as one of the founding fathers of the Danish Modern movement in America.