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Togo Chaise Lounge

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Vintage Michael Ducaroy for Ligne Roset Togo Chaise Lounge
By Ligne Roset
Located in West Palm Beach, FL
Incredible vintage Iconic Togo chaise lounge. Designed by Michael Ducaroy for Ligne Roset. Made In
Category

Late 20th Century French Chaise Longues

Materials

Fabric

Alcantara Togo Chaise Lounge by Michel Ducaroy for Ligne Roset
By Ligne Roset, Michel Ducaroy
Located in Los Angeles, CA
Soft, cozy and comfortable. This Alcantara clad Togo chaise longue by Michel Ducaroy will envelope
Category

2010s American Modern Chaise Longues

Materials

Foam, Upholstery

Pair of Ligne Roset Togo Chaise Lounges in Chartreuse Felt by Michel Ducaroy
By Ligne Roset
Located in Danville, CA
Two Togo chair in Tennis ball green from Ligne Roset, in Very Good condition. Designed from
Category

Vintage 1960s French Chaise Longues

Materials

Wool

Michel Ducaroy for Ligne Roset Brown Houndstooth Togo Chaise Longue
By Ligne Roset, Michel Ducaroy
Located in Basildon, London
true design icon, this Togo chaise longue will add a touch of 70s style to any contemporary living
Category

Late 20th Century French Chaise Longues

Materials

Fabric

50th Anniversary Togo in Limited Edition Houndstooth Alcantara, Ligne Roset
By Michel Ducaroy
Located in Las Vegas, NV
Special 50th Anniversary Togo chaise by Ligne Roset in limited edition houndstooth Alcantara
Category

21st Century and Contemporary French Post-Modern Chaise Longues

Materials

Suede, Foam

XL Togo chaise longue by Michel Ducaroy for Ligne Roset
By Ligne Roset, Michel Ducaroy
Located in BAARLO, LI
Togo chaise longue / daybed / lounger by the French designer Michel Ducaroy for Ligne Roset. The
Category

21st Century and Contemporary French Chaise Longues

Materials

Foam

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Ligne Roset for sale on 1stDibs

With enduring designs like the immensely plush, Pop art–inspired Togo lounge chair and sofa, Ligne Roset has become synonymous with radical luxury furniture. However, when Antoine Roset (1841–93) started the company in 1860 in the small French town of Oussiat, its focus was on wooden umbrella handles.

In 1892, Ligne Roset’s founder expanded with a property in Montagnieu where he set up a wood-processing factory, eventually expanding into manufacturing chairs. After his death, his wife, Marie-Victorine, took over before his son, Emile Roset, began leading the company in the 1910s.

It wasn’t until after World War II that Antoine’s grandson, Jean Roset, would recognize the need for furniture in settings like schools, hospitals and retirement homes and take inspiration from Scandinavian modern design for functional pieces made primarily from affordable beech.

Under Jean, Ligne Roset supplied quite a few European institutions with beautiful wood furnishings. In the 1970s, he shifted the company’s focus again, this time looking to domestic and residential markets. Around this time, Jean’s two sons, Pierre and Michel, joined the company.

Ligne Roset opened its first store in 1973 with one of the most popular collections being designer Michel Ducaroy’s Togo modular sofa and chairs — classics of contemporary French design that look like oversize bent pillows.

After the success of this initial designer collaboration, Ligne Roset brought on more guest designers over the following decades, including Didier Gomez, Pascal Mourgue, Peter Maly, Pierre Paulin, Inga Sempé and Ronan and Erwan Bouroullec. Paulin’s Elysée sofa and Pumpkin chairdesigned in 1971 for Elysée Palace — are among the brand’s most popular pieces. In 1975, the company introduced its Cinna brand, known to collectors for the Sandra sofa designed by Annie Hiéronimus and other alluring seating.

Ligne Roset continues to be run by the Roset family who works on revolutionary furniture in partnership with a variety of collaborators. It has operated in Briord since 1973 where it produces its iconically sleek and innovative pieces.

Find new and vintage Ligne Roset sofas, lounge chairs, tables and other furniture on 1stDibs.

Finding the Right Chaise-longues for You

Sit back, relax and get all of the ergonomic support you could ever need by introducing an alluring antique or vintage chaise longue in your living room or by your outdoor fire pit.

The chaise longue is an upholstered piece of furniture that was made popular in France in the early 16th century. This low reclining seat — a “long chair” in English — boasts an elongated form and low back that extends about half the length of the furnishing, affording the welcome opportunity for a sitter to put their feet up and relax. A comfortable common ground between sofas and daybeds, early iterations of chaise longues were discovered in Ancient Egypt and were later frequently used in both Greece and Rome.

In the late 1700s, the first chaise longues were imported to America, and English speakers have struggled with the name ever since. (In the United States, the term is frequently spelled “chaise lounge.”) So, how do you pronounce chaise longue? It sounds like “shayz lawng,” but limiting it to shayz is perfectly acceptable in the States.

Antique Victorian chaise longues and 19th-century chaise longues bring luxury and perhaps extravagance to your living space while mid-century modern chaise longues, designed by the likes of Adrian Pearsall, Vladimir Kagan or Milo Baughman, can alter an interior with dazzling geometric contours and richly varied textures.

On 1stDibs, find many kinds of chaise longues for your home — from sculptural works by Charlotte Perriand to plush and velvety Louis XVI pieces to minimalist contemporary versions to suit your understated decor.