A company we'd not heard of previously, called Hara Chair (not to be confused with the Hara Chair by Kundalini--see Hara Chair, part 1) has been rather prolific in generating different models, spread across four different series.
The sheer number they've got makes them interesting to look at, even if the originality is somewhat lacking--it's as if your college design professor had you study the Aeron, the Freedom, and whatever Ikea had on offer, then had you generate thirty thumbnail sketches combining elements from each.
The split-seat models make us curious to try them out, but the company's website has a half-assed (no pun intended) quality to it, with no prices listed, janky English-as-a-Second-Language-style copy, and a Gmail contact address. Still, it's worth a gander, particularly if you're working on a seating project now and need a crapload of variants to pin to your sketchboard.
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I just stumbled upon this article. I know it is written a while ago, but I just wanted to let you know that the Harachairs are now available to the American market. Please visit our website: www.harachairs.com or our shop: www.shop.harachairs.com to see what it is all about. Let me know if we can help you out.