Middle eastern scissors chair
Middle eastern scissors chair
Vintage ottoman scissors chair, all handmade and hand carved, embellished with white mother of pearl shell
scissors chair, supported by two crossed and curved supports either at the sides or at the back and front. Because of its basic simplicity it is one of the oldest forms of chair or stool, with examples reaching back to the 2nd millennium BC. The seat, which was originally made of leather or fabric, could be stretched across the upper terminals of the X-shape or inserted at a lower level, just above the intersection, so that parts of the frame could be used as armrests. Because of their scissorslike principle, scissors chairs lent themselves to collapsible construction and thus appeared as folding stools in the early European Middle Ages, when they were used mainly for liturgical purposes. In the 16th century they were also used by sedentary craftsmen such as weavers, and in the 20th they commonly appear as garden furniture and in specialized forms, such as that of sketching stools.